Experiences, like fine wine, can get better with age.
That’s why it took author George Sorensen decades before he wrote his fifth book, “Hot Dish Confidential: That Year My Friends Taught Me to Cook,” which chronicles his journey from campfire cook to gourmet chef, all in a year’s time.
“Often when you have an experience, it takes a while to digest it and think about it,” said Sorensen, who spent years in the Twin Cities before moving to Oregon. “So it took a while to get old enough, to get some perspective. And the world of cooking has just gotten more interesting as years have gone by.”
Up to that point, Sorensen’s cooking experience had been gleaned from monthly Boy Scout camping trips. “My parents hardly ate vegetables, and when they did they were canned,” he said. “And they were usually something like string beans that everybody hated, and then they would boil them for days and insist you eat it because it’s good for you.”
While living in Minneapolis, where he worked in corporate communications, Sorensen was inspired by Peter Mayle’s 1989 book “A Year in Provence” to recruit culinary-minded friends for monthly dinners. Each one featured a different cuisine in an effort to, as he writes, “finally learn my way around the kitchen.”
The book is filled with delicious anecdotes, fact-finding missions, morel hunting tales, lessons in wine collecting and recipes from each month’s dinners. There were soufflés, quiches, rattlesnake sour cream enchiladas and tunic (not toga) parties. And there were plenty of other adventures, culinary and otherwise. A backyard neighbor taught him about herbs, trips to mushroom and chestnut farms gave him encyclopedic knowledge of both, and along the way he met his future wife, with whom he conquered and perfected the art of preserving apricots. (Their debut apricot jam won a blue ribbon at the Minnesota State Fair.)
He still keeps up with members of the Sorensen Gourmet Dinners group, and several will be at his upcoming Twin Cities book events. We caught up with Sorensen ahead of his visit and talked about his famous college classmates, the dinner that prompted a call to poison control and that State Fair blue ribbon. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Q: You were very methodical in planning the dinners in your book. Do you have a research background?