Bob
Blumer

Chef, artist and professional bon vivant Bob Blumer is one of today's
most imaginative food personalities. Whether he is taping his Food Network
show in his gleaming Toastermobile, or concocting new recipes in his own
kitchen, Blumer transforms common ingredients into wow-inspiring dishes
through whimsical presentations and unusual cooking methods that have
become his culinary trademark. His artful approach to cooking, confidence-inspiring
instructions, and contagious enthusiasm have endeared him to a loyal following
who tune in to his weekly half-hour show, frequent his cooking classes
and appearances, and collect his books.
Bob's culinary career started like an accidental gas explosion in 1992.
During a break from his job managing and traveling the globe with musicians,
he channeled his passion for cooking and his knack for living well beyond
his means into The Surreal Gourmet: Real Food for Pretend Chefs (Chronicle
Books, 1992). More than just a cookbook, it is a guide to better living,
and the first book to recommend 'music to cook by' for each recipe. The
San Francisco Chronicle called the debut "an instant classic and possibly
the wittiest and most sensible how-to cookbook of the decade". It was
also a year-end recommendation in The New York Times and The Los Angeles
Times Book Review, and was picked by the Book of the Month Club and Better
Homes & Gardens Book Club.
Unceremoniously thrust onto the talk show circuit, Bob made TV appearances
on 3 continents, including all major U.S. network morning shows (to date
he has made over 400 TV appearances). At the same time, he met and was
befriended by some of the country's most respected chefs. Through practice
and osmosis, his cooking skills caught up with his enthusiasm. With his
new-found self-confidence and a license to devote all of his creative
energies to the world of food, Bob embarked on a culinary path of inventing
innovative dishes, demystifying the classics, and converting urban food
myths into functioning recipes, all using ingredients from the local grocery
store.
Three years after the release of his first book, Bob proved that anyone
with a dysfunctional kitchen and mismatched place settings can throw a
killer dinner party with The Surreal Gourmet Entertains: High-fun, Low-stress
Dinner Parties for 6 to 12 (Chronicle Books, 1995). In that same year,
he began writing a weekly column for Salon.com, a monthly column for Men's
Health and a bi-monthly column in WineX (a GenX wine magazine). One of
his favorite jobs 'if you can call it a job' is conducting celebrity cover
interviews of hipster wine oenophiles like Tori Amos and Jason Priestley
for WineX. During many of these interviews, he cooks for the interviewee
and allows the lucky guest to plunder his burgeoning wine collection.
Bob is also a regular contributor to Cuisine (an international award-winning
New Zealand food and wine magazine) and has contributed features to Maxim,
Food Arts, Smoke, Wines & Vines, Canadian Living, and Seventeen.
Bob's third cookbook, Off The Eaten Path: Inspired Recipes for Adventurous
Cooks (Ballantine Books, May 2000) features a blend of practicality and
eccentricity, packed with recipes, anecdotes, culinary adventures and
his own whimsical food-related illustrations and objectes de art. To promote
the book, Bob embarked on an ambitious 30 city, three month odyssey in
a Toastermobile Airstream trailer he customized with a $50,000 stainless
steel professional kitchen, and topped with two eight-foot slices of toast.
The tour was covered extensively in local and national media, including
features on CNN and in People magazine. The book won the most innovative
cookbook award at the prestigious World Cookbook Fair in Perigueux, France.
And the Toastermobile became the mobile kitchen featured on his Food Network
show.
Bob's interest in food and wine pairing drew him deeper into the world
of wine. He has traveled extensively in many of the world's wine-producing
regions, and since 1999 has been a judge at the prestigious Los Angeles
County Fair and the San Francisco wine competitions. He has also written
many wine-related stories, including one documenting his ten days as a
grape picker at the legendary Domaine de la Roman-Conti, and a first-person
account of running the Medoc marathon' 26.2 mile race in Bordeaux, France
that winds past 24 picturesque chateaux, where the pit stops are stocked
with grand cru wines and fresh Atlantic oysters.
Bob's 4th book, Surreal Gourmet Bites: show-stoppers and conversation
starters debuts in October. He is currently taping 26 new episodes of
his Food Network show.
When he is not traveling in his Toastermobile, Bob lives in the shadow
of the Hollywood sign and cycles daily in the canyons near his home.
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