seriousness, the writer hints at her willingness to go ahead and try new things, to take on new goals.
The essay is a display of subtle hints at a person through the revelations of food.
However, the immediacy with which she dives into food and the total separation of her nonfoodie
self leaves a very focused view of who she is. Though the overall effect of an essay that sounds like it
could appear in
Bon Appétit is tempered by a personal writing style, dotted with parentheticals and
soft humor, the overall feel of large portions of the essay is decidedly not personal nor revealing.
With
a little less detail, particularly in the next-to-last, French-laden paragraph, the writer could have
preserved the intimacy of revealing her tastes and culture in a subtle way.
But overall, the essay presents a likable, thoughtful person with a strong sense of who she is.
Christiane succeeds at expressing herself as a bicultural individual with a taste for good cooking.
—Sara Kantor