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Book Reviews of All the Presidents' Pastries: Twenty-Five Years in the White House, A Memoir

All the Presidents' Pastries: Twenty-Five Years in the White House, A Memoir
All the Presidents' Pastries TwentyFive Years in the White House A Memoir
Author: Roland Mesnier, Christian Malard
ISBN-13: 9782080305596
ISBN-10: 208030559X
Publication Date: 2/13/2007
Pages: 352
Rating:
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
 6

3.3 stars, based on 6 ratings
Publisher: Flammarion
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed All the Presidents' Pastries: Twenty-Five Years in the White House, A Memoir on
All the Presidents Pastries starts off slow with Roland Messnier's humble beginnings and his entry into the pastry world bouncing back and forth between kitchens which was demonstrating his rise to stardom. I started to skim. What I found most interesting about this book was when Mesnier told stories about the 5 Presidents and how they and their families lived at the White House. It was like getting a private peek of the goings on inside. He seemed fair in his descriptions and remained fairly neutral politically which was refreshing. I was surprised when Mesnier wrote about Thomas Jeffersons purchase of the state of Louisiana. His editors obviously need to brush up on American History. A dumb comment he made that blew my mind (no pun intended) was calling the Monica Lewinsky scandal minor. Must be the French in him.

There were times when he could have embellished on a story but dropped it like a lead balloon. For instance, when Mrs. Clinton sent him a Sachertorte asking him his opinion of it. Instead of sharing his response, he goes into a diatribe about good and bad hotels. Sharing the discussion of the cake would have been delightful. My guess is he didnt want to share his negative opinion of the cake with the public.

This book was a huge Horn Toot but I guess he has that right due to his hard work and successes but, I heard myself utter blowhard under my breath a few times while reading it.

With the thousands of desserts he baked, you would think there would have been more photos of them. After a while, I caught myself skimming dessert descriptions. He never used names but I think he was also using this book as an opportunity to call people he didnt enjoy dealing with, a-holes. This was an okay book but I am so glad it is over.
reviewed All the Presidents' Pastries: Twenty-Five Years in the White House, A Memoir on + 189 more book reviews
I really enjoyed this book - as I could identify with the Presidents he served. Sometimes it was a little over-the-top on descriptions of the items served, but on the whole I can truly recommend it.
reviewed All the Presidents' Pastries: Twenty-Five Years in the White House, A Memoir on + 1775 more book reviews
I ordered this for the bookshelf at the old soldiers and sailors' home and it was kindly supplied by Ms. Rivard of Foster, Rhode Island. Although there are few readers there, when normal times return it will be certain to find a grateful reader among visitors or staffers on break and probably by a patient with an hour to kill. I had a pleasant read of some of it while taking the 7AM bus this Sunday to fetch a loaf of bread (only two or three others aboard, distancing is good!).
Mr. Mesnier is rather full of himself (the photos are not much populated by his kitchen mates) but allows readers to learn of the management of professional kitchens. I was surprised that it is not as lucrative as we think ($28,000 per annum when hired by Mrs. Carter in 1980). While he is justifiably proud of his elaborate 'show pieces,' his White House menus featured fresh fruits and low calorie counts. I imagine his fine dining recipes were often the opposite, made to cap a wonderful dinner. Besides his management skills, I believe his success is that he is constantly learning and innovating. Such chefs do carry their favorite pans, etc. with them, such as for a competition that he returned from Bermuda to enter. "My former colleagues were good enough to find me a space to work, where I practiced again and again before the competition. On the morning of the great day, a friend from the George V drove me and all my equipment to Vicennes. There were fifteen candidates in all, and we got to work straight away. I arranged my worktable and calculated the time needed to complete each of the tests. Everything went according to plan."
The author comes to know the occupants of the Excecutive Mansion somewhat and shares asides. For example, President Carter liked enjoyed fishing when at Camp David. The stream would be freshly stocked before he drowned his worm, as when President Coolidge escaped the oppresive Summer heat of D.C. in the Dakotas. A few years ago Mrs. Apperson, whose husband was in the nursing home, told me that her grandfather, a Montana rancher, saw the stream stocked when Mr. Coolidge fished there.
This is not an Ike Hoover-type White House reminiscence (Mesnier does criticize those who sneered at the Carter's as uncouth Southerners), but the absence of an index caused me to deduct one star from my evaluation.