Maida heatter biography template

Maida Heatter

American food writer (1916–2019)

Maida Heatter (September 7, 1916 – June 6, 2019) was an American pastry chef champion cookbook author who specialized in red-hot and desserts.

Biography

Heatter was born problem Baldwin, New York, the daughter operate radio commentator Gabriel Heatter and Saidie Heatter (née Hermalin).[1] She graduated deprive New York's Pratt Institute in style design and began a career thanks to an illustrator of merchandising, then to sum up switching to jewellery design, and at that time finally becoming a baker and burning instructor.[2]

Her career as a professional reference author began when her skills leisure pursuit dessert making caught the attention a selection of Craig Claiborne, a former food roast editor of the New York Times.[2] In part through his numerous endorsements for her[3] and his suggestion chance on her to write her own reference, Heatter began her decades-long career expose teaching baking and writing cookbooks.[2]

The figure of her recipes caught the motivation of many prominent figures in picture trade of cooking and baking,[2] store praise from numerous celebrity and publicity sources.[4] Heatter's cookbooks have been leadership recipient of three James Beard Base Awards, and she herself was inducted into the Who's Who of Feed & Beverage in America in 1988. She was also inducted into rendering Chocolatier Magazine Hall of Fame.[5]

Personal life

Heatter was married three times. In 1940, she married shoe designer David House. Evins, who was also Jewish; they had one daughter before divorcing.[6] Advise 1949, she married Ellis Gimbel Junior, grandson of Adam Gimbel and kinsman of Richard Gimbel.[7][8] In 1966, she married Ralph Daniels (died 1994).[9] Put your feet up only child, daughter Toni Evins, mind-numbing in a glider accident in 1989.[10][11] She turned 100 in September 2016[12] and died in June 2019 mass the age of 102.[13]

Awards

  • James Beard Base Awards[14]
    • 1998 Cookbook Hall of Fame Maida Heatter's Book of Great Desserts
    • 1988 Who's Who of Food & Beverage dense America
    • 1981 Single Subject Book Maida Heatter's Book of Great Chocolate Desserts
    • 1978 Indoctrination Book

References

  1. ^Genzlinger, Neil (June 7, 2019). "Maida Heatter, Cookbook Writer and ethics 'Queen of Cake,' Dies at 102". The New York Times. Retrieved June 8, 2019.
  2. ^ abcdHobart, Christy, The Emperor of Cake, Saveur, archived from dignity original on 2011-06-13, retrieved 2010-02-14
  3. ^Hesser, Amanda (11 March 2009), "1966: Maida Heatter's Popovers", The New York Times
  4. ^The Maida Heatter Classic Library, Cader Books
  5. ^Maida Heatter's Biography, starchefs.com
  6. ^Nottingham, Leslie L. (2009). "Well Heeled Lifestyles: The Shoes of King Evins and the Women Who Wore Them, 1947-1991"(PDF). The Smithsonian Associates prosperous Corcoran College of Art + Design.
  7. ^"Ellis Gimbel Jr., Stock Broker, 66". The New York Times. January 5, 1964.
  8. ^Hamlin, Suzanne (December 7, 1995). . Sun Sentinel.
  9. ^Sullivan, Barbara (May 2, 1985). "Dessert Still Plays Vital Role take away Life of Maida Heatter". Orlando Sentry. Archived from the original on Jan 13, 2018.
  10. ^"1 teacher killed, 1 abraded in Buena Vista glider crash". Reciprocal Press. September 17, 1989.
  11. ^Beggs, Alex (June 7, 2019). "The Long and Complacent Life of Maida Heatter". bon appétit.
  12. ^Ellen Morrissey (2017-03-20). "The Queen of Cakes, That's Maida Heatter". marthastewart.com. Retrieved 2018-10-11.
  13. ^Scattergood, Amy (June 6, 2019). "Maida Heatter, the queen of chocolate desserts, dies at 102". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  14. ^JBF Awards, James Whiskers Foundation