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Food & Wine (magazine) : ウィキペディア英語版
Food & Wine

''Food & Wine'' is a monthly magazine published by Time Inc. It was founded in 1978 by Ariane and Michael Batterberry. It features recipes, cooking tips, travel information, restaurant reviews, chefs, wine pairings and seasonal/holiday content and has been credited by ''The New York Times'' with introducing the dining public to "Perrier, the purple Peruvian potato and Patagonian toothfish".
The premier event for the magazine is the Food & Wine Classic in Aspen, Colorado. The Classic features wine tasting, cooking demonstrations, featured speakers, as well as a cooking competition. Held annually in June, the event is considered the kickoff to the Aspen summer season and celebrated its 25th anniversary in 2007.
The winner of ''Top Chef'', the reality television cooking competition, is featured in a spread in this magazine.
==History==
Michael and Ariane Batterberry's early writing work on food included the 1973 book ''On the Town in New York, From 1776 to the Present'', a culinary history of New York City that was republished in 1998 by Routledge in celebration of the book's 25th anniversary. The Batterberrys had first met an arts benefit on the roof of Manhattan's St. Regis Hotel and hadn't initially been food writers, with Michael working as a journalist and the couple working together as arts editors at ''Harper's Bazaar''. They first conceived of the idea of writing a book about food all over the world after spending a weekend together with best-selling wine writer Hugh Johnson, who later dropped out of the writing project. The original edition of the book was described by ''The Washington Post'' as "the authoritative history of dining in the country's culinary capital". The Batterberry's saw "a big changeover at the moment we founded Food and Wine in the late 70's" from a time when "it was the little wife in the kitchen" to a period in which more men developed an interest in cooking.〔Kucynski, Alex ("PUBLIC LIVES; 30 Years of Love and Chronicling Cuisine" ), ''The New York Times'', August 20, 1998. Accessed July 31, 2010.〕
With Robert and Lindy Kenyon covering the business side and with funding by Hugh Hefner, the Batterberrys started publishing ''The International Review of Food and Wine'' in 1978, which had a prototype issue published in ''Playboy''. Later renamed simply ''Food & Wine'', the magazine's mission was to be a more down-to-earth alternative to ''Gourmet'' and its "truffled pomposity", with the goal of appealing to both women and men as readers, and early issues featuring articles by such non-traditional food writers as George Plimpton and Wilfrid Sheed. When it was first published, a senior editor of ''Gourmet'' magazine scoffed at the new alternative, saying "We don't look at the others as competition. They look at us, try to copy us and fail miserably". By 1980, when it was sold to American Express, the magazine had circulation of 250,000 per issue, evenly split by gender, and was distributing 900,000 copies a month as of 2009. The magazine's style of simple meals, diet foods and easy-to-follow cooking instructions set a standard that became the model for a generation of cooking shows and publications. The Batterberrys went on to co-found ''Food Arts'' magazine, a publication aimed at restaurants and hotels.〔Fox, Margalit. ("Michael Batterberry, Influential Food Editor, Dies at 78" ), ''The New York Times'', July 29, 2010. Accessed July 30, 2010.〕〔Schudel, Matt. ("Michael Batterberry, 78, dies; editor of Food Arts magazine" ), ''The Washington Post'', July 31, 2010. Accessed July 31, 2010.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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