
Dear Me of Ten Years Ago,
Letβs see if I can remember the moment. Youβre in your room of the apartment you share in Atlanta, Georgia with your friend Lauren, avoiding the stack of law school homework on your desk, and trying out potential blog names on Typepad. A week earlier, you posted a question on Ask Metafilter: βHow do I become an internet phenomenon?β You asked that question in a manner that was both tongue-in-cheek and sincere. In a few months youβll graduate law school, and then what? A career as a lawyer? Litigating toxic torts for the law firm where you spent your previous summer in L.A.? The folks on Ask Metafilter offer advice, but this nugget from Aaorn stands out: βHaving a single, narrowly-focused topic (assuming itβs an interesting single topic) will draw people more consistantly than a hodgepodge of random things that interest you.β Until you read that, you considered just doing an Adam Roberts blog with bits about musicals and books and the occasional recipe; but, really thinking it over, you realize that foodβa subject thatβs fascinated you ever since, two years earlier, you started watching Sara Moulton and Mario Batali on the Food Networkβis something youβd enjoy blogging about on a regular basis. You type the words βamateur gourmetβ into the HTML box and hit publish. A few minutes later, you write your first postββThe Birth of An Amateur Iconββand send it out into the ether. You then frantically wait for your first comment. It comes from your friend Josh who, along with his wife Katy, urged you start the blog in the first place. Katy, Iβd soon learn, would be my first troll, with comments like: βOMG!!!! You are HILARIOUZZZ!!! Are you singel seriously because I LOVE GUYZ WHO ARE FUNNY AND ALOS I LOVE FOOD!!!!β
The blog takes a while to get going. You make Martha Stewart White Chocolate Chunk Cookies and donβt include the recipe. You debate your friend Lisa about olives. You write your first restaurant βreview,β of The Silver Skillet, saying of the biscuits: β[They] melt in your mouth and stay there in your dreams.β Itβs an inauspicious beginning, you donβt really win a new following (Josh, Katy, and your parents are your biggest commenters) until Janet Jackson shows her boob at the Superbowl and you make your, now notorious, Janet Jackson Breast Cupcakes.

CNN comes over and does a story. The post is featured on CollegeHumor and Instapundit. Your traffic surges.
Then it wanes. It picks back up again with Condoleeza Rice Pudding with Berries of Mass Destruction; also, the ur-blogger, Jason Kottke links to you and that helps too. Meanwhile, youβve written a play that you submitted to grad schools and, lo and behold, NYU accepts you to its dramatic writing program. Right before you leave, John Kesslerβthe food critic for the Atlanta Journal Constitution and one of the countryβs best food writersβpublishes a profile of you in the AJC. The picture, taken with a fisheye lens, makes you look like a walking nose with glasses. Still, itβs exciting. Soon after, you move to New York and start blogging about New York things. Like bagels.
Then in November of 2005, it happens. You meet a literary agent (Michael Ruhlmanβs literary agent, at the time), develop a proposal and sell a book! Suddenly youβre an actual, real-life food writer. Two weeks later, Google drops you off its search results and your traffic plunges. You canβt figure it out. Then you do: people are Googling βcupcakes,β and Janet Jacksonβs nipple is a top result. You erase the nipple from the top of your post and all is well.
In December of 2005, you journey with your friend John to Paris and eat everything in site. You go to a Parisian market and a bistro with the one and only David Lebovitz. You have a sophisticated Parisian dinner with Clotilde of Chocolate and Zucchini.


Back in New York, you attend a taping of Iron Chef America and, soon after, move with your friend Diana to Brooklyn. (These things are unrelated.)

Also, around this time, you meet an NYU film student named Craig, who you start dating, and you casually slip that into a post. Your readers are all like, βWe knew you were gay.β

Soon, your blog (and book deal) give you some credibility. You go to lunch with one of your heroes, Ruth Reichl. You get to interview Mario Batali for Serious Eats. Best of all, you somehow score tickets to Calvin Trillinβs βCome Hungryβ tour; heβs the food writer that got you interested in food writing in the first place.

In September of 2006, you have your first controversy: your parents take you to Le Cirque and youβre all treated like chumps. You write a post, Only A Jerk Would Eat At Le Cirque, and start a whole fracas. Sirio Maccioni writes your mom an apology letter. You go back. Itβs not that great. You say as much.
That November, Restaurant Alain Ducasse (no longer in existence) begins pestering you with e-mails about their white truffle menu; an obscenely expensive white truffle menu. At some point you reply, βI can only write about it if we can experience it for free.β (Now we know better, but you were still pretty green back then.) To your shock, they write back and say: βCome on in!β So you and Craig go and, afterwards, you craft a comic book post about it. That post ends up winning an award for Best Food Blog Humor and Guy Kawasaki calls it βone of the best blog postings Iβve ever seen.β

In April of 2007, you travel to San Francisco for the first time as a food person and eat your heart out with lots of your favorite bloggers. And then, in August of 2007 your first book comes out.
You go to a book storeβthe Barnes & Noble in Union Squareβand stalk the table with your book on it. You hide behind greeting cards and make a rule for yourself that you canβt leave until someone buys your book. You soon change that rule to βuntil someone lifts up my book.β That becomes βuntil someone glances at my book.β Finally, someone does and you go.
A month after your book comes out, someone from the Food Network asks if youβd be interested in blogging about the Next Iron Chef for the Food Network website. You say, βSureβ because thatβs a lot of eyeballs looking at your writing. That goes well and soon leads to a meeting with a producer whoβs launching a new web show on FoodNetwork.com called The FN Dish and she asks if youβd like to host it. You donβt bat an eye. This is big time (or as close to the big time as youβve ever been). βUm, yes,β you say.
It all begins with the taping of a pilot on an actual Food Network soundstage with an actual Food Network crew. Michael Symon is flown in from Cleveland to be your guest. The night before, youβre so nervous, all you can do is watch βMary Poppinsβ to console yourself. The day of the taping (back when the show had a Daily Show style format), you sail along with all the jokes, though you flub one of your monologues. And flub it again. And flub it again. The crew gives each other looks. You start to worry.
Then a month later, you see the first cut of the pilot. Itβs totally awful. You think, βWell, thatβs itβ¦no Food Network show for me!β But instead of firing you, the whole concept is changed; now itβll be you on the fly, interviewing Food Network celebrities at big events. In fact, a big one is coming up pretty fast: the South Beach Food and Wine Festival. Soon youβre on a plane with your new director, Matthew Horovitz, and then youβre in Miami and itβs go go go. Paula Deenβs poker night, Rachael Rayβs burger bash. On your last night there, you decide to take it easy with Matthew at Danny Devitoβs restaurant, only when you spy Giada DeLaurentis going into the kitchen, you decide to follow her; there you discover Jamie Oliver, Mario Batali, Rachael Ray, andβmost notable of allβAnthony Bourdain. You ask Bourdain if heβd like to trash the Food Network on camera. He says, βGladlyβ and gives you a killer interview.
That video causes a controversy at Food Network: the higher-ups are up-in-arms about it; the web people are like: βThis is what goes viral.β Immediately, you start to realize the tough position youβre in. Your 23 Awkward Seconds with Rachael Ray doesnβt help.
Everything comes to a head in Las Vegas. Youβre there for Vegas Uncorkβd and the entire thing is surreal. Youβre treated like a βcelebrityβ and pitted against Lorraine Bracco and Todd English in a cactus-cooking competition judged by Andrew Knowlton and Alan Richman.

At a βV.I.P. Cocktail Partyβ youβre the guest of honor with a drink named after you. You suddenly realize how arbitrary food fame is: if people tell other people youβre famous, youβre famous. And just as quickly youβre not. When you get back, your show is kaput.
Meanwhile, you continue meeting fascinating food people. You go to dinner with Frank Bruni while heβs still the food critic for the New York Times. You go to lunch with the irascible Regina Schrambling. You discover that Pulitzer-prize nominated playwright Jon Robin Baitz is a reader of your blog and you join him for lunch at Brooklyn Fish Camp.
You do your first cooking demo at the Baltimore Book Festival. Your book comes out in paperback. Then, in November of 2008, you toss a recipe on to your blog with the hyperbolic title: The Best Broccoli of Your Life.

Even though youβve used that phrasing before (notably with The Best Cookies of Your Life), this post catches on like crazy. Itβll be Pinterested (youβll soon learn what that means) over a million times and remain a top result when people search βbroccoli recipe.β In any given year, it comprises over 50% of your traffic.
Every year, sort of as a joke, you apply for a table at one of the hardest-to-score-reservations in the world: El Bulli. Every year you get rejected. But in December of 2008 you find out that you have somehow attained a table for two in July 2009 at 8 PM. You go nuts. Grub Street makes fun of you. When you do go, several months later, you start out in Barcelonaβeating your way through itβand work your way up to Roses for one of the most extraordinary dinners of your life. You also document it as a comic book-style post. Slate makes fun of it. But it remains one of your favorite posts youβve ever done.

Various projects come and go. You host two more web shows for Food Network. You try to develop a book about food and religion and travel to Elberton, Georgia with your friend Shirin for an Eid-Al-Adha feast. You eat a chicken cooked in a pigβs bladder at Daniel and make asparagus with another one of your food heroes, Amanda Hesser.

Then, something huge happens. Your friends Matt and Renato, who own Baked, introduce you to their cookbook agent Alison Fargis of the Stonesong Agency. She helps you develop a cookbook proposal that you pitch to various publishers, including Artisan which publishes all of Thomas Kellerβs cookbooks. To your total shock and surprise, theyβre interested; you go into a meeting and there develop the concept for a different book, one where youβd travel the country and cook with 50 chefs and adapt their recipes for the home cook. A deal is reached. Youβve sold your second book.
Fun things continue to happen. You cook dinner for The Big Gay Ice Cream Truck guys:

You start a web series called βSomeoneβs In The Kitchen Withβ and interview the likes of Ed Levine, Ludo Lefebvre and Anita Lo in your West Village apartment (oh, I skipped the part where Craig and you move to the West Village and paint the kitchen orange).
In April of 2010, Craigβs parents come to town and your parents come to town to meet them. You write about that night as an It Gets Better post and Dan Savage reaches out to you to ask if he can include the essay in the It Gets Better Book. Of course, you say yes.

In June 2011, you travel to New Orleans with a bunch of bloggers and eat like crazy. You also go to Puerto Rico. Then, around that time, Craig is offered a job at 20th Century Fox in L.A. and you let the cat out of the bag: youβre moving to the west coast. You cross the country in August and go food shopping for the first time in California.

In December of 2011, you have an article published in Food & Wine. Then, in May of 2012, you surprise your friend Diana for her 30th birthday with dinner at the French Laundry. Another comic book post ensues:

A few months later (in fall 2012), your cookbook, SECRETS OF THE BEST CHEFS, arrives on shelves.
Youβve worked like a maniac to make this book happen, traveling all across America with your fearless photographer Lizzie Leitzell, and testing over 150 recipes in your kitchen with the help of various friends and neighbors. Then, you go on a book tour. Your first big event is a dinner at Eataly with Lidia Bastianich (pictured at the top of this post) thatβs pretty much the most amazing night of your life. You host a panel with Jonathan Waxman and Amanda Hesser at the Greenlight Bookstore:

You go to Austin and San Francisco and Seattle and host all kinds of dinners and events. You do a Google Talk and wear a dorky bow tie. You even cook on T.V.
Meanwhile, while all this is happening, Craig directs his first featureβTRUE ADOLESCENTSβwhich debuts at SXSW to great acclaim. Then, in 2013, he shoots his second feature, THE SKELETON TWINS (with Kristen Wiig and Bill Hader), which in the fall of 2013 is accepted into the Sundance Film Festival.
Which brings us to the present moment, ten years after you hit that βpublishβ button. Youβve recently traveled to Australia as a guest of the Eat Drink Blog conference. Oh, and you and Craig got engaged at a restaurant called Rustic Canyon. As you sit and type these words, youβre two days away from flying to Utah for the big movie premiere.
And what of your blog? This thing thatβs taken you on so many strange, unlikely journeys over the past decade? Thatβs introduced you to so many unforgettable people? Thatβs given your life shape and meaning?
Well you start to question things when Jason Kottke, the previously mentioned ur-blogger, publishes a post: βThe Blog Is Dead, Long Live The Blog.β The tag on the toe of blogging is dated December 19th, 2013. You are writing these words on January 14th, 2014 and youβve done a lot of soul-searching.
At dinner with your friend Zach Brooks of Midtown Lunch, you talk about the inevitable decline that awaits us and our fellow bloggers. The end is nigh. Soon, weβll all be spending our days on Snapchat and dating our computers like in the movie Her. Bloggers will be embalmed for all to study at the Museum of Natural History.
Still, while typing these words, you resign yourself to this knowledge: as much as the world might be moving on without you, those initial instincts that led you to start the blog in the first placeβthe desire to connect with a bunch of strangers over a shared enthusiasm for food and cookingβare the same instincts that will motivate you to keep it going. You wonβt be able to resist the urge to share pictures of the spicy chicken soup you made recently to fight a cold or the escargot with a puff pastry topping that you ate at Republique.
Or maybe, inevitably, you will. Itβs hard to say. But I can promise you this: as you hover your finger over the mousepad, ready to click βpublishβ on this new blog of yours, youβre about to set yourself on a course thatβs far superior to any other course you have available to you at this point in your life. Ten years later youβll look back and be unable to fathom a life where you donβt hit that button. So go ahead and click: a great adventure is in store.
Sincerely,
Me Ten Years Later







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