David Hammond wrote:Not quite sure where to put this post, but...Gourmet magazine is shutting down: http://dinersjournal.blogs.nytimes.com/ ... imesdining
BR wrote:David Hammond wrote:Not quite sure where to put this post, but...Gourmet magazine is shutting down: http://dinersjournal.blogs.nytimes.com/ ... imesdining
Thanks for posting!!! I just renewed for 3 years 4 days ago and quickly called for a refund. Not surprisingly, the woman I spoke to was shocked and had no idea. They're always the last to know.
If I have to guess based on what happens with Rodale magazines, when your subscription ends they give you the remainder on a like magazine (probably Bon Apetit) unless you object and they refund the balance.nr706 wrote:Gourmet is still accepting subscriptions on its website. I subscribed, just to see what would happen.
jpschust wrote:If I have to guess based on what happens with Rodale magazines, when your subscription ends they give you the remainder on a like magazine (probably Bon Apetit) unless you object and they refund the balance.nr706 wrote:Gourmet is still accepting subscriptions on its website. I subscribed, just to see what would happen.
David Hammond wrote:Not quite sure where to put this post, but...Gourmet magazine is shutting down: http://dinersjournal.blogs.nytimes.com/ ... imesdining
LAZ wrote:I'm also wondering what impact on the Epicurious site there will be.
Cathy2 wrote:LAZ wrote:I'm also wondering what impact on the Epicurious site there will be.
I saw Louisa Chu comment elsewhere it would be open until year's end.
aschie30 wrote:Cathy2 wrote:LAZ wrote:I'm also wondering what impact on the Epicurious site there will be.
I saw Louisa Chu comment elsewhere it would be open until year's end.
Only year's end? Odd, given that epicurious contains recipes from Bon Appetit as well as other sources. Seems like it should stay open indefinitely.
I wonder what made them choose to retire Gourmet rather than Bon Appetit.
aschie30 wrote:I decided to give myself a break from CI a little while back. It seemed like it was repeating itself and while there's a certain amusement to be drawn from a cook recounting his or her odyssey in testing the effect of peanut v. canola oil in a recipe which was tested 500 times, the reality is, am I ever going to make Penne alla Vodka? Or Chicken Francese? I realize that, although there are some golden nuggets (like the Vodka Pie Crust), I just couldn't stomach doling out about $44 about every year or less than a year for a subscription when the recipes in general seemed uninteresting. I have my back subscriptions as well as The New Best Recipe to fall back on in the meantime.
Mike G wrote:I mean, can anyone articulate the difference between Gourmet and Bon Appetit?
Matt wrote:aschie30 wrote:I decided to give myself a break from CI a little while back. It seemed like it was repeating itself and while there's a certain amusement to be drawn from a cook recounting his or her odyssey in testing the effect of peanut v. canola oil in a recipe which was tested 500 times, the reality is, am I ever going to make Penne alla Vodka? Or Chicken Francese? I realize that, although there are some golden nuggets (like the Vodka Pie Crust), I just couldn't stomach doling out about $44 about every year or less than a year for a subscription when the recipes in general seemed uninteresting. I have my back subscriptions as well as The New Best Recipe to fall back on in the meantime.
I think we currently get Cook's Illustrated (have not seen an issue for a while and it was a gift, so I'm not sure when the subscription runs out) and I'm generally a fan, but my wife and I sometimes joke that the motto of the magazine should be: "Cook's Illustrated: Taking the Fun out of Cooking Since 1980."
Mhays wrote:Matt wrote:aschie30 wrote:I decided to give myself a break from CI a little while back. It seemed like it was repeating itself and while there's a certain amusement to be drawn from a cook recounting his or her odyssey in testing the effect of peanut v. canola oil in a recipe which was tested 500 times, the reality is, am I ever going to make Penne alla Vodka? Or Chicken Francese? I realize that, although there are some golden nuggets (like the Vodka Pie Crust), I just couldn't stomach doling out about $44 about every year or less than a year for a subscription when the recipes in general seemed uninteresting. I have my back subscriptions as well as The New Best Recipe to fall back on in the meantime.
I think we currently get Cook's Illustrated (have not seen an issue for a while and it was a gift, so I'm not sure when the subscription runs out) and I'm generally a fan, but my wife and I sometimes joke that the motto of the magazine should be: "Cook's Illustrated: Taking the Fun out of Cooking Since 1980."
Yup: I try to watch the show between watching something else and get the nuggets of information. The sad truth is that every food publication puts its recipes through testing, the difference being CI shows you the failures, which can sometimes be really useful information, but more often it isn't. And, yes, I don't think it's geared towards this crowd's tastes, including mine -...
I always joked that it should be "Cook's Illustrated: Putting Two Sticks of Butter in Every Recipe" - where they methodically test every recipe, adding more butter and cream until it finally meets Kimball's exacting standards of rich, creamy, heart-stopping blandness.Matt wrote:...I'm generally a fan, but my wife and I sometimes joke that the motto of the magazine should be: "Cook's Illustrated: Taking the Fun out of Cooking Since 1980."
BR wrote:But let's face it. The entire print industry is in shambles. Newspapers and magazines have been going out of business one after the other. Circulation has been declining for years (particularly among newspapers), which has translated to less revenue from publication sales and declining ad revenue (why spend as much in advertising if circulation is cut by more than 50%). Younger people largely turn to the internet and the print industry has yet to learn how to turn this internet traffic into significant revenue - a major challenge indeed. The recent economic downturn has exacerbated the problem as companies have further cut back on advertising spending. Unfortunately, Gourmet will not be the only food magazine casualty of the recession and I fear which one(s) might be next. Sad times indeed.
rickster wrote:I wonder why they didn't try to sell it? Or maybe they did and there were no takers.
Matt wrote:I'm generally a fan, but my wife and I sometimes joke that the motto of the magazine should be: "Cook's Illustrated: Taking the Fun out of Cooking Since 1980."