Bastard Cookbook
Bastard Cookbook
Bastard Cookbook
Bastard Cookbook
Bastard Cookbook
Bastard Cookbook
Bastard Cookbook
Bastard Cookbook
Bastard Cookbook
Bastard Cookbook
Bastard Cookbook

Bastard Cookbook

Rirkrit Tiravanija & Antto Melasniemi

Regular price $54.00 Sale

After years of making food together in gallery settings and art institutions around the world, ‘bastard brothers’ Rirkrit Tiravanija and Antto Melasniemi release their first collaborative cookbook. The Bastard Cookbook, co-published by Garret Publications and the Finnish Cultural Institute in New York, brings together new texts from scholars and journalists in food studies, interviews with the chefs and fifty or so odd recipes. The dishes and their ingredients are illustrated by photographer Janne Tuunanen as he follows the bastards on a culinary adventure from a fish sauce farm in Thailand to the Archipelago of Finland.

 

The Bastard Cookbook offers a range of bastardized recipes that are both delectable and truly incongruous. The starting point for many dishes, such as Fish Sauce Ice Cream, Panang Curry Pizza and “Kind of Nordic Khao Soi Soup”, are traditional ingredients and techniques (if not Grandma’s own televised repertoire). Through their unabashed, un-precious and unapologetic approach to cooking, the chefs put on a show, and remind us that culture is a process.

 

A mix of intermittent texts and interviews open up the topics of hospitality and cosmopolitan thinking. Contributing writer Krishnendu Ray, editor of the critical food journal Gastronomica and Chair of the Food Studies Program at New York University, reflects on the idea of ‘bastard cooking’ through the lens of domestic labor. While Sara Kay, Lola Kramer and Pauliina Siniauer each contribute with texts that are distinctly journalistic in flavour. 

Rirkrit Tiravanija and Antto Melasniemi have a shared appreciation for breaking the rules, so this book is less of a “coffee table cookbook” and more like its twisted sister. It comprises a collection of texts, exhortations, culinary scenarios, and ingredients and preparations, and is intended to liberate the modern gourmand from essentialism. The authors offer what one could refer to as an “adulterated” fare to its purist counterpart, with over 50 preposterous recipes. Through a collaborative exploration into the realms of food and cosmopolitanism, the cookbook proposes that the key to appreciating the idiosyncrasies of an unfamiliar culture is perhaps through a hybridised form.

 

Co-published with the Finnish Cultural Institute in New York
Editors: Kaarina Gould and Lola Kramer
Photography: Janne Tuunanen
Contributors: Sara Kay, Krishnendu Ray, and Pauliina Siniauer
Copy editing: Anna Heyward
Design: Stefan Engblom and Johanna Lundberg
Language: English
Printing: Rotolito Lombarda, Milan
Binding: Swiss 
Dimensions: 170 x 240 mm
Pages: 224
ISBN: 978-952-7222-10-2