Cathy2 wrote:I still search the website using it as a master index. The recipe might be fuzzed over, but I see what month and year the recipe was in the print version. I then grab the copy off the shelf.
Cathy2 wrote:I dropped both the online and print subscriptions. What I am waiting for: at some point this year they will sell the book bound 2011 issues and half price (or is it free?) on 2010. I will have everything in print once more.
sarcon wrote:Cathy2 wrote:I still search the website using it as a master index. The recipe might be fuzzed over, but I see what month and year the recipe was in the print version. I then grab the copy off the shelf.
this is exactly what I do, too.
Some surprising food-media news: Chris Kimball, the founder of Cook's Illustrated and its TV offshoot America's Test Kitchen, is leaving the company he's helmed for two decades, apparently effective immediately. A shake-up's been in the works for months at publisher Boston Common Press, and today the company admitted that top brass and the bow-tie-wearing consummate recipe perfecter whom the Times dubbed "the most influential home cook in America" had run into some differences. "We made every effort to offer Chris a reasonable contract that reflected his significant contributions to the company," a statement explains, "and are disappointed that we could not reach agreement."
i wont miss him- he was boring. and if CI stops claiming every recipe is 'the best' or 'the only way to do it' i'd be very happy.....Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
Chris Kimball is no longer with America's Test Kitchen, Cook's Illustrated, Cook's Country and all per Grub Street.Some surprising food-media news: Chris Kimball, the founder of Cook's Illustrated and its TV offshoot America's Test Kitchen, is leaving the company he's helmed for two decades, apparently effective immediately. A shake-up's been in the works for months at publisher Boston Common Press, and today the company admitted that top brass and the bow-tie-wearing consummate recipe perfecter whom the Times dubbed "the most influential home cook in America" had run into some differences. "We made every effort to offer Chris a reasonable contract that reflected his significant contributions to the company," a statement explains, "and are disappointed that we could not reach agreement."
You know what surprised me? He had a publisher he worked for. I thought this was his own enterprise.
Regards,
Kimball, who in the 1980s had been a co-founder of Cooks magazine before selling it to Condé Nast, used several former Cooks staff members as his core group in helping to found Cook’s Illustrated. He vowed that the magazine would make its money on circulation alone and rejected any advertising on the grounds that it might appear to affect the magazine’s many reviews of products.
Kimball is one of four individual owners who hold stakes in the company, including his cofounder, investor Eliot Wadsworth.
Other partners in ATK’s holding company, Boston Common Press, are George P. Denny III and John D. Halpern, former Bain & Co. consulting executives. Kimball’s ex-wife also is an investor, among other family members.