Where to Start with Bill Buford: A Reading Guide
Where to start with Bill Buford — how to approach Heat, his account of leaving the New Yorker to apprentice in Mario Batali's kitchen and then tracing Italian cuisine to its origins in Tuscany and Emilia-Romagna. A complete reading guide.
Bill Buford (born 1954) is an American journalist and author who spent twenty years as fiction editor of The New Yorker, editing some of the most significant American short fiction of the 1990s and 2000s, before leaving to apprentice in professional kitchens. Heat (2006) is his account of what followed: months as an unpaid apprentice at Mario Batali’s Babbo in New York, and then a longer, more obsessive journey to Italy to find the origins of the cuisine he was learning. The book was published to wide acclaim and established Buford as one of the most distinctive writers in American food literature.
Where to Start: Heat (2006)
The essential Bill Buford — and the best food memoir about learning to cook written in the past two decades. Heat begins with a premise that is simultaneously absurd and entirely believable: a middle-aged New Yorker editor, with no professional cooking experience, decides to apprentice in one of New York’s most demanding restaurant kitchens. He arranges to work for free at Babbo, Mario Batali’s Greenwich Village restaurant, and discovers immediately that he is the least competent person in the room.
The Babbo section is an immersion in the specific culture of a professional kitchen. Buford is not idealising this world; he is documenting it with the precision of a journalist who has spent his career paying close attention. The physical demands are real — twelve-hour days on your feet, hands in hot water, burns accumulating — and the hierarchy is absolute. As an unpaid apprentice with no kitchen skills, Buford occupies a position below any paid employee, and the book is honest about what that feels like.
What he is learning, slowly and through repetition and failure, is that cooking at this level requires a form of knowledge that cannot be acquired from recipes. A recipe tells you the ingredients and the sequence of operations; it cannot tell you when something has reduced enough, or what “correct seasoning” means, or how a properly kneaded dough feels different from an under-kneaded one. This knowledge lives in the body — in hands and eyes and smell — and can only be transmitted through sustained proximity to people who already have it.
This observation drives the book’s second movement: Italy. If this knowledge is traditional and embodied, Buford wants to find where it lives in its most concentrated form. He locates two such people. The first is Dario Cecchini, a fifth-generation butcher in Panzano, Tuscany, who recites Dante while breaking down a carcass with hands that have done this work every day of their adult lives. The second is a grandmother in Emilia-Romagna — the region that gave the world Parmigiano-Reggiano, Prosciutto di Parma, and the particular egg pasta that bears the name of its city — who makes pasta in a way that Buford can watch but initially cannot reproduce.
The pasta chapters are Heat’s finest writing. Buford’s attempt to understand what Betta Battistini’s hands are doing — and his gradual, partial, physically demanding acquisition of something approaching the same skill — is as precise an account of craft apprenticeship as exists in English food writing. What he learns is that Italian culinary tradition is not a set of dishes that can be learned from cookbooks but a way of engaging with material — dough, heat, time, salt — that is older than any written recipe and more specific than any written recipe can capture.
Reading Bill Buford
Heat is Buford’s essential and most widely read book. Readers who want more should seek out Dirt (2020), his companion memoir about learning French cooking in Lyon — the same obsessive, apprenticeship-driven approach applied to the other great European culinary tradition.
For the full Bill Buford bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Bill Buford author page on Editors Reads.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Where should I start with Bill Buford?
Heat: An Amateur's Adventures as Kitchen Slave, Line Cook, Pasta-Maker, and Apprentice to a Dante-Quoting Butcher in Tuscany (2006) is Buford's essential book — a memoir that follows him from his career as fiction editor of The New Yorker through months of unpaid apprenticeship in Mario Batali's New York restaurant Babbo, and then to Italy, where he apprenticed with a fifth-generation Tuscan butcher and learned pasta from a grandmother in Emilia-Romagna. The Italy sections are among the finest food writing published in English.
What is Heat about?
Heat is a book about craft apprenticeship and the nature of culinary knowledge. Buford's central finding — which he arrives at through increasingly uncomfortable physical experience rather than through theory — is that traditional Italian cooking is not a cuisine in the recipe sense but a living tradition that exists in human hands and accumulated practice, transmissible only through physical proximity and repetition. The book covers the professional kitchen as a specific culture, the gap between recipe knowledge and actual cooking skill, and the depth of tradition underlying what Americans experience as Italian food.
Is Heat mainly about Mario Batali?
The first half is significantly about Batali — Buford's account of Babbo covers the specific culture and hierarchy of a high-pressure professional kitchen, and Batali is central to that account. The more lasting sections of the book are the Italy chapters, which are less about celebrity and more about the specific craft knowledge of Italian culinary tradition. Readers who approach the book primarily as a Batali profile will find the Tuscany and Emilia-Romagna chapters more rewarding than they expected; readers who come for the Italian cooking will find the Babbo section interesting for what it reveals about how that cooking arrives in an American restaurant.
What should I read after Heat?
After Heat, Anthony Bourdain's Kitchen Confidential is the obvious companion — a darker, funnier, more anarchic account of professional kitchen culture that covers complementary ground. Samin Nosrat's Salt Fat Acid Heat provides the practical Italian cooking framework that Buford's book illuminates through narrative. For more Italian culinary depth, Pellegrino Artusi's Science in the Kitchen and the Art of Eating Well is the nineteenth-century Italian cookbook that codified the tradition Buford traced to its regional sources.
