Stephen & Evie Colbert offer a cookbook that's also a window on their
lives
Send a link to a friend
[September 24, 2024]
NEW YORK (AP) — Many years into their marriage, Stephen and Evie
Colbert suddenly became co-workers. And that is why, in a roundabout
way, we have their first cookbook.
During the pandemic, Evie helped keep her husband's “The Late Show with
Stephen Colbert” on the air at CBS while the couple hunkered down in
their South Carolina home.
“Evie was my crew and my only audience and my only guest. And it turned
out we worked together well,” Stephen Colbert says. “We said, ‘We’ve
always wanted to do something together. I think the thing to do would be
a cookbook.'”
What emerged is “Does This Taste Funny?: Recipes Our Family Loves,” a
collection of tried-and-true Colbert clan dishes like Spicy Lemon
Chicken Thighs or Panfried Spot Tail Bass that also opens a window into
their lives.
“It had to be a personal story because we’re not professional cooks.
It’s all about our personal experience,” says Stephen Colbert.
The dishes range from a simple teriyaki-flavored pork loin — good for
busy parents on a weekday for dinner — to an extravagant Beef
Wellington, a fillet steak with mushrooms and prosciutto, wrapped in
puff pastry, then baked.
It is a cookbook that also charts a love affair, celebrates extended
family and rejoices over places visited — idiosyncratic and yet
universal. There are four different recipes for fudge — each boasts it
is the definitive one — submitted by the Colbert siblings.
A trip to a San Francisco restaurant in late 2007 inspired the recipe in
the book for a clam chowder that is brothy, vegetable-forward and has
plenty of clam meat.
“I don’t even know if the soup was as good as I remember it. We were
just young parents with a moment away and big frosty glasses of sancerre,”
says Stephen with a laugh. “Everything was tasting pretty good."
Friends and family were tapped for their favorite dishes, like deviled
eggs from Evie's dad and chicken l'orange from Stephen's mom. There are
also photos and stories of their three children.
“For Stephen's career, we purposefully kept our children out of the
limelight, and when we sat down to do this, we realized, ‘Oh, we’re
involving a lot of family. How do we feel about that?’ And it felt like
a wonderful way to be personal,” says Evie. “It felt very much like a
collective project that way.”
Many of the dishes lean on the South, which is natural since both grew
up in Charleston, South Carolina. There are Lowcountry recipes for
pickled shrimp, pork belly sliders and red rice, a dish Stephen says he
enjoys making the most.
“At my little elementary school growing up, we had it just about every
day. And it was fantastic. And this recipe comes closest to that really
jammy, salty, smoky red rice I grew up with.”
Going back even further is Stephen's Kindergarten Soup, which he learned
to make helping the cook at Martin Luther Kindergarten. It calls for
celery, carrot, onion, tomato, okra, corn, butter beans, green beans,
peas and beef. The cookbook includes a photo of 5-year-old Stephen's
drawn recipe.
[to top of second column]
|
Stephen Colbert, left, and Evelyn McGee-Colbert arrive at the 76th
Primetime Emmy Awards on Sunday, Sept. 15, 2024, at the Peacock
Theater in Los Angeles. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP)
“It is the first recipe I ever
learned. And my mom did hang up that recipe in her kitchen and take
it down and make it every so often,” he says. He now laughs at its
plainness, a yesteryear where it was “iceberg lettuce and salt and
pepper for flavor.”
The Colberts have upped their sophistication levels since then, of
course, including in the cookbook a recipe for duck breast with
fig-orange sauce.
“People are afraid of duck, but it is really, really simple. Start
in a cold pan, render it out. Save that duck fat for the potatoes
you’re going to want with this later. Throw in some fig jam or any
jam in with a little orange juice. It’s fantastic,” Stephen says.
Making the cookbook reconnected the couple to their roots. “It put
us back in touch with all the food we grew up with and the people
who taught us how to make these recipes,” says Evie, who still
refers to recipes as receipts, the way her mother did.
One of her favorites is the flounder stuffed with crab meat that she
grew up with. “I was really happy to rediscover that recipe. It was
one that I had sort of forgotten about. And when I worked on the
cookbook with my mother, we talked about that recipe. And so we had
to get her approval on when we made it.”
Jokes Stephen: “Some of these recipes had to be released from their
national security designation.”
The book ends with breakfast recipes. “If the party goes well,
hopefully you’re spending the night,” he says. “The breakfast is the
reward.”
While the pair clearly enjoy each other's company, things in the
kitchen weren't always so smooth. They both point to the “spoon
story.”
When they were married in 1993, someone gave them a nonstick
Calphalon pan. Evie hadn't grown up with non-stick cookware and used
a metal spoon with it.
“So Stephen and I are married, and he walks into the kitchen one day
and he says, ‘You’re using a metal spoon on a nonstick pan.’ I
really thought he was going to say, ‘I’m sorry, we have to get
divorced,’” Evie says.
“I believe I offered you a wooden spoon,” says Stephen.
“That didn’t go over well,” she replies.
“Boy, the look on her,” he says, laughing. “She’s almost over it.
She’s so close to forgiving me.”
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved
|