FIND A RESTAURANT

Great Deal of the Day!

Red Sox Giveaway

Win 2 Luxury Box tickets and more to see the Red Sox vs. Tampa Bay.
Today's Deal
 

Dining Features Article

Burying the Hatchet Job

English hugs it out with his fiercest critic.

Photo by Ben Baker.

In September 1997, GQ published "The Boston Glob," a hilariously scathing takedown of the city's food scene by restaurant critic Alan Richman, a one-time Globe scribe. In it, Richman blamed the faults he perceived squarely on Todd English's Olives, which he credited with launching "a deviant food trend that threatens to engulf New England." In honor of Olives' 20th anniversary, we got English and Richman to sit down for a postmortem. (Though first, we hid all the knives.) A.T.

English: Okay, "The Boston Glob."

Richman: Wasn't that a great headline? Here's what happened. First of all, it was impossible to get into the restaurant. I can't remember a place harder to get into than Olives. It took me about a year. And out comes this ridiculous food, this clam with cornbread and bacon. There are seven things on the plate, everything's on top of everything else…and I thought, This can't be good. But it was spectacularly good. I think you probably have perfect pitch for flavors. But there were no other role models in Boston at the time—I guess nobody was copying Lydia [Shire], I don't know why—and everybody was copying you. And nobody could do it. You'd go to every restaurant and they were piling stuff on the plate and it was garbage.

I really liked that dish! It was New England on a plate: We took the quahog and baked a creamy corn spoon bread pudding in the shell and it would overflow. Okay, it was a little globby—but it was cool!

All these other restaurants were imitating your style and it ruined Boston food. It took another 10 years for the restaurant scene to come out of it.

I certainly don't want to take credit for that. I'd like to take credit for the idea that maybe it put Boston on the map…

Which it did.

And that's not to take away at all from Lydia and Jasper [White], who were certainly pioneers. We had an all-star kitchen. I ran it from the gut. I didn't know what labor costs were. I didn't know what my food costs were. I just ran it.

I want you back there. I want you in the kitchen, poor and forgotten and unknown, and I want you to suffer for my food.

I had some of the best days of my life in the kitchen, grinding it out. It was a beautiful time. But anything that you do on that level for that long will beat you up. So I expanded; I couldn't be stuck in a kitchen for the rest of my life.

But what about people who ask, "Is this your food, Todd English?"

When I came out of culinary school, I got the idea that we should expand what we do, that it was our responsibility to make America a better place to eat on all levels. Not to say that I have this great cross to bear, but I felt like we should drive that. Julia [Child] used to ask, "Why couldn't there be something good out there, Todd?"


When you put it that way, it even convinces me. I'm sure in a day or two, I'll come to my senses. People like me who have never worked in a restaurant, we're entranced by the romance of something that isn't romantic. We're like people who watch the ballet and see the beautiful ballerinas and don't see the bloody feet.

To read an extended version of Todd English's sit-down with food critic Alan Richman, click here.

Originally published in Boston magazine, April 2009
 

Change text size
Print

Email

Write a comment
 
 

User comments

No users have posted comments on this article.

Post a comment

(* = required field.)
  • Please check to make sure that your referer is not blocked.


Subject line of your comment*
Your comments (200 words max)*
Email*
First name*
Last Name*
Enter the code shown below.
Visual CAPTCHA
This helps prevent automated form submissions.
 
Boston Buzzworthy

Boston Magazine Daily

Follow Boston Magazine tweets on twitter.com/bostonmagazine
 
 

Travel Club Newsletter

Sign-up for our Travel Club email to receive special New England getaway packages.
 
 

Boston magazine Readers' Choice Awards

It's our first annual Readers' Choice Awards, presented by JetBlue, and we want to hear from you! We've selected ten categories - now it's up to you to cast a...
 
 

Great Seasonal Drinks.

Hit the town and check out some of these amazing cocktails!