Mimi Sheraton

Mimi Sheraton
Born Mimi Solomon
Flatbush, Brooklyn
Residence Greenwich Village
Education New York University
Occupation Food Critic, Author, Lecturer
Employer Seventeen Magazine, New York Times
Home town New York City

Mimi Sheraton is an influential food critic born in Flatbush, Brooklyn, NY (circa 1926).[1] Her mother, Beatrice, has been described as an excellent cook and her father, Joseph Solomon, was a commission merchant in a wholesale produce market.,[2][3]

Education and early career

Sheraton attended the NYU School of Commerce, majoring in marketing and minoring in journalism. She went to work as a home furnishing copywriter. That led her on a path to becoming a certified interior designer. While traveling often as the home furnishing editor at Seventeen Magazine, she began to explore her interest in food. Her food career continued and in December 1975, she became the food critic for the New York Times, where she stayed for eight years.[4] Sheraton was the first female restaurant critic at the Times.[5]

Food critic career

After leaving the Times in 1983, Sheraton worked for a variety of magazines, including Time, Condé Nast Traveler, Harpers Bazaar, and Vogue. She has lectured at the Cornell University School of Hotel Administration as well as the Culinary Institute of America in St. Helena, California.[6]

Bibliography

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

Books

From My Mother's Kitchen, 1977

Articles

Honors and awards

Personal life

Married to Richard Falcone, she has one son.[10]

References

  1. Who's Killing The Great Chefs of France
  2. Starchefs.com bio
  3. At Lunch with Mimi Sheraton: Undisguised Pleasures of a Former Critic
  4. Starchefs.com bio
  5. 7 Life Lessons We Can All Learn From Legendary Food Writer Mimi Sheraton
  6. Starchefs.com bio
  7. cloister.com Profile
  8. Mimi Sheraton | 2014 NYCWFF | OCT 16-19, 2014
  9. 2000 James Beard Foundation Award
  10. Starchefs.com bio
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.