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Rachael Ray

, TV Personality

  • Born: 25 August 1968
  • Birthplace: Cape Cod, Massachusetts
  • Best Known As: Peppy host of TV's 30 Minute Meals

Rachael Ray is the ultra-peppy hostess whose 30 Minute Meals program on the Food Network made her one of the best-known cooks on TV. A background in restaurants and grocery stores earned Ray a job selling gourmet goods and teaching cooking classes in Albany, New York. Her specialty was putting meals together in a hurry, and in 1998 she published her first cookbook on making 30 Minute Meals. The success of the book led to a gig on local television, and by 2001 Ray had signed on for a national show with the Food Network. A former high school cheerleader, Ray is a bubbly chatterbox whose middlebrow cooking incorporates packaged, prepared foods and other short-cuts; she is sometimes called "the anti-Martha Stewart," an insult from critics embraced as a compliment by fans. Her other shows on the Food Network include the travel-for-cheap program $40 a Day, the cooking-with-celebrities show Inside Dish and Rachael Ray's Tasty Travels. Her 30 Minute Meals series of books have sold millions of copies, and in 2005 she launched a magazine, Every Day with Rachael Ray. In addition to her Food Network duties, she started her own syndicated daytime talk show in 2006.

Ray is known for coining cutesy terms in the kitchen, including "sammies" for sandwiches and "EVOO" for extra virgin olive oil... She raised eyebrows in 2003 with a lingerie photo spread in the men's magazine FHM... Like Dr. Phil, Ray got a leg up in the talk show business from Oprah Winfrey's production company.

 
 
Wikipedia: Rachael Ray
Rachael Ray
Born August 25 1968 (1968--) (age 39)
Glens Falls, New York, U.S.
TV Show(s) 30 Minute Meals
$40 a Day (production ended)
Inside Dish
Rachael Ray's Tasty Travels
The Rachael Ray Show

Rachael Domenica Ray (born August 25, 1968 in Glens Falls, New York[1][2]) is an Emmy-award winning television personality and author, who currently hosts the syndicated talk/lifestyle program Rachael Ray and two Food Network series, 30 Minute Meals and Rachael Ray's Tasty Travels. Ray has also written a series of cookbooks based on the 30 Minute Meals concept, and launched a successful magazine, Every Day with Rachael Ray, in 2005.

Prior to the launch of her talk show, Ray hosted two other Food Network shows, $40 a Day and Inside Dish.

Personal life

Ray is partially of Sicilian ancestry; her maternal grandparents were Sicilian. Her relatives on her father's side are Cajun from Louisiana. She was born in Glens Falls, New York. Her family owned a restaurant on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, while her mother managed restaurants in upstate New York. She grew up in Lake George, New York.

Her first job was at the candy counter at Macy's in New York City, where she eventually managed the fresh foods department. She later helped open a New York City market. Moving back to upstate New York, Ray managed Mister Brown's Pub at The Sagamore, a famous hotel on Lake George. From there, she became a buyer at Cowan & Lobel, a gourmet market in suburban Albany. Ray credits the concept of 30 Minute Meals to her experience working at the store where she met people reluctant to cook. She began teaching a cooking course there showing people how to make meals in thirty minutes or less. With the success of her "30 Minute Meals" classes, WRGB, the local CBS TV affiliate, asked her to appear in a weekly segment on their newscasts. This, along with a public radio appearance and the publication of her first book, led to a Today Show spot and her first Food Network contract in 2001. Later appearances on the Today Show followed, and she and Katie Couric became very good friends.

She also appeared in a few commercials for Schenectady-based grocery chain Price Chopper, which stocks all her books at their stores and retains her as an occasional spokesperson. Ray owns homes in Lake Luzerne, New York and Manhattan's Greenwich Village.[3][4] On September 24, 2005 in Montalcino, Tuscany, Italy, Ray married John M. Cusimano, the lead singer of the band The Cringe.

Career

Cooking

Ray teaches simple recipes that she claims can be prepared in 30 minutes or less. She uses garlic and chicken stock as simple ways to boost flavors. She often uses recipes that include her Italian, French, and American heritage, and Ray emphasizes using fresh herbs whenever possible. She believes that measuring "takes away from the creative, hands-on process of cooking" and instead favors approximations such as "half a palmful" and "eyeball it." On her television programs she has used catchphrases such as "E.V.O.O. (extra-virgin olive oil)", "yum-o," "so delish," "G.B." (garbage bowl), "Oh my gravy!", "stoup" (cross between a soup and stew), and "how good is THAT?"[5] She often refers to sandwiches as "sammies."

She states she cannot bake (because you have to measure ingredients), and is notorious for burning bread under the broiler. Ray says her Sicilian maternal grandfather, Emmanuel Scuderi, served as a strong influence on her cooking. To critics of her shortcut techniques, Ray responds, "I have no formal anything. I'm completely unqualified for any job I've ever had."[6]

The retro look of the set she uses on the Food Network features a yellow 1950's Model C Chambers stove. While this stove is rarely used on her program, it is noticed by viewers so much so that people selling them often refer to Chambers ranges as "the Rachael Ray stove". This has led to an increased interest in saving and restoring these stoves, inspiring two online discussion forums and fan websites, as well as numerous references to them in the media.[7][8]

On November 12, 2006 Mario Batali and Rachael defeated the team of Bobby Flay and Giada De Laurentiis on an episode of the program Iron Chef America which featured the use of cranberries as the secret ingredient.

On March 18, 2007, Food Network debuted a Rachael Ray episode of its special Chefography series.

In 2007, The Oxford American College Dictionary announced the addition of the term EVOO, short for Extra Virgin Olive Oil, to its dictionary, a term which Rachael Ray has helped popularize.[9]

Television

In late 2005 Ray signed a deal with Oprah Winfrey and King World Productions to host a syndicated daytime TV talk show.[10] The show, Rachael Ray premiered on September 18, 2006. Recurrent appearances on The Oprah Winfrey Show were used to fuel the launch, much like Dr. Phil's show was spun off based on his own frequent visits to Oprah.[11] The show tapes in New York City. Ray said, in coordination with the syndication announcement, "People know me for my love of food, but I have so much more I want to share."

In addition to Oprah, Ray has appeared on The View, The Today Show, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, The Late Show with David Letterman, Late Night with Conan O'Brien, and Larry King Live.

For Sesame Street’s 38th season, Ray appears in an episode to present "pumpernickel" as the word of the day.

Magazines

In 2003, she posed for the men's magazine FHM. The New York Times wrote, "The shots feature Ray in short-shorts with an exposed midriff, licking chocolate off a big wooden spoon, eating a strawberry and sitting in a sink, laughing as suds cascade down her thighs."

Reader's Digest launched Ray's eponymous magazine, Every Day with Rachael Ray on October 25, 2005. The magazine featured seven issues in 2006. It will increase to ten issues in 2007.

Product endorsements

Ray has endorsed products for Price Chopper supermarkets, and promotes a "Best in Fresh with Rachael Ray" recipe section on the company's website.[12]

Ray has endorsed for Burger King, and has appended her name to a line of cookware and cutlery. Her knife of choice was the Wüsthof santoku, and as a result, Wusthof's sales rose dramatically. She now endorses her own line of modified santoku knives made in China by Australian based cutlery company Füritechnics.[13]

In November 2006, Ray became a spokesperson for Nabisco crackers. She appears in commercials and on boxes for the many Nabisco products. Many boxes with Ray's picture have recipes written by her.

In February 2007, WestPoint Home launched sheets, blankets, and coverlets designed by Ray.[14] Within six months, WestPoint expanded Ray's bed and bath line to include the Moppine, a two-in-one dish towel/oven mitt, as Ray is often seen with a kitchen towel over her shoulder that doubles for her as an ersatz mitt.[15]

In March 2007, Dunkin Donuts announced Ray is its new pitchwoman.[16] Ray describes Dunkin Donuts' coffee as "fantabulous".

In May 2007, teamed with LimeLife, Inc and AT&T Inc., formerly Cingular Wireless. AT&T subscribers can now download Rachael Ray recipes on their cellular phones thanks to the new "Rachael Ray Recipes on the Run" feature.[17]

Awards, recognition, charity work

Criticisms

Some have criticized Ray's "perky" demeanor as well as her lack of a formal chef's education and perceived lack of seriousness about cooking. Celebrity chef and Travel Channel personality Anthony Bourdain, who graduated from the Culinary Institute of America, has referred to her as a "bobblehead".[21]

In a Slate article defending Ray, Jill Hunter Pellettieri summarized some of these criticisms by writing:

Ray's ditzy demeanor also makes her easy to dismiss. She giggles off-cue and constantly praises her own cooking. "Smells awesome already!" she says, making her Snapper in a Snap. "I am so psyched about that." She employs cute abbreviations—EVOO means "extra virgin olive oil", and gives her dishes nicknames, such as "You-Won't-Be-Single-for-Long Vodka Cream Pasta". The acknowledgments in her $40 a Day cookbook read like a high-school yearbook: "Don …You are the tallest man we've ever had on crew, and yet you pack the smallest bag—ever! Cool." And, it didn't boost her credibility when she posed for pinup shots in FHM. (One featured Ray licking chocolate off a spoon.) When the magazine hit newsstands, she said, "I think it is kinda cool for someone who is goofy, and a cook, just a normal person to be thought of in that way.[13]

The 30 Minute Meals concept has also been criticized because Ray doesn't account for certain preparation times in the signature half-hour cooking time. Many of these preparations, such as pre-washing herbs and vegetables, are not meal-specific, and Ray counsels they should be done ahead of time. In the Slate article that otherwise mostly complimented her, author Pellettieri went through several of Ray's "30 Minute Meals" recipes and was unable to complete any meal in under half an hour.[13]

Ray has indicated on her cooking show that it may take others over 30 minutes but the point being that it's still fast and simple. The New York Times Magazine has noted that one of the prices of her popularity has been an "anti-fan site," a LiveJournal community titled "Rachael Ray Sucks." The community's founder acknowledges that it was created partially in jest, and Ray herself has laughed it off. Posters in the community regularly discuss annoyance and disgust at topics such as Ray's constant spasmodic hand motions, her fixated smile, her overused catch phrases and the perceived inedibility and poor aesthetics of many of her recipes.[22]

Bibliography

  • 30 Minute Meals (1999)
  • Rachael Ray's Open House Cookbook (2000)
  • Comfort Foods (2001)
  • Veggie Meals (2001)
  • 30-Minute Meals 2 (2003)
  • Get Togethers: Rachael Ray 30 Minute Meals (2003)
  • $40 a Day: Best Eats in Town (2004)
  • Rachael Ray's 30-Minute Meals: Cooking 'Round the Clock (2004)
  • Rachael Ray's 30-Minute Meals for Kids: Cooking Rocks! (2004)
  • Rachael Ray's 30-Minute Get Real Meals : Eat Healthy Without Going to Extremes (2005)
  • Rachael Ray 365: No Repeats: A Year of Deliciously Different Dinners (2005)
  • Rachael Ray 2, 4, 6, 8: Great Meals for Couples or Crowds (2006)
  • Rachael Ray's Express Lane Meals (2006)

References

  1. ^ Keel, Beverly (10/9/2005). Rachael Ray's Recipe for Success. AmericanProfile.com. Retrieved on 2007-01-15.
  2. ^ Hiltbrand, David (October 22, 2006). "One fast foodie". Charlotte Observer. Retrieved on 2007-01-18. 
  3. ^ Experts Media (October 19, 2005). "Being Rachael Ray: How Cool Is That?". Experts Media. Retrieved on 2007-01-15. 
  4. ^ Hill, Michael (January 27, 2006). "Rachael Ray expands her reach". Press of Atlantic City. Retrieved on 2007-01-15.  (registration required)
  5. ^ Rachael-isms (from Every Day with Rachael Ray) (November-December, 2005). Retrieved on 2007-01-15.
  6. ^ Severson, Kim. "Being Rachael Ray: How Cool Is That?", New York Times, October 19, 2005. Retrieved on 2005-08-04. 
  7. ^ "Television Q&A: Your questions", The Dallas Morning News, 2004-05-09. 
  8. ^ "Cook Like Rachel Ray With A Vintage Chambers Range", Austin American-Statesman, 2005-12-13. 
  9. ^ Adding a Little EVOO...to the Dictionary!. RachaelRayShow.com (December 5, 2006). Retrieved on 2007-03-02.
  10. ^ Barnes, Brooks (September 21, 2006). "TV Syndication's Ray of Hope?". The Wall Street Journal. 
  11. ^ Benson, Jim (December 4, 2005). "King World OKs Production on Ray". Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved on 2007-01-15. 
  12. ^ If you're going to Do It, Do It Better!. Retrieved on 2007-09-05. “"Price Chopper can help you do breakfast, lunch, dinner, snacks and desserts, burgers and barbecues, sushi and salads, and do it better. With Price Chopper, you can do more, because we do more."”
  13. ^ a b c Pellettieri, Jill Hunter (July 13, 2005). "Rachael Ray—Why food snobs should stop picking on her". Slate Magazine. Retrieved on 2007-01-15. 
  14. ^ "Rachael Ray Debuts at WestPoint", Home Textiles Today, February 2007. Retrieved on 2007-09-05. 
  15. ^ "WestPoint helps Rachael Ray mop up", Home Textiles Today, 2007-08-09. Retrieved on 2007-09-05. 
  16. ^ Reidy, Chris. "The new face of Dunkin' Donuts", The Boston Globe, 2007-03-09. Retrieved on 2007-09-05. 
  17. ^ "AT&T and LimeLife Launch New Mobile Application 'Rachael Ray Recipes on the Run'", AT&T Corporate News Room, 2007-05-23. Retrieved on 2007-09-05. 
  18. ^ Batali, Mario (2006). "Rachael Ray". Time Magazine. Retrieved on 2007-01-15. 
  19. ^ Top 100 Celebrities - Rachel Ray (2006). Forbes. Accessed 2007-06-26.
  20. ^ Hirsch, J.M.. "Rachael Ray launches charity and teams with Bill Clinton to get kids eating healthier", North County Times, 2007-04-25. Retrieved on 2007-09-05. 
  21. ^ Rockwell, Page (June 26, 2006). "Bite Me!". Salon.com. Retrieved on 2007-01-15. 
  22. ^ Walker, Rob (November 26, 2006), "Anti-Fan Club", The New York Times Magazine: Section 6, Page 26, <http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/26/magazine/26wwln_consumed.html?ex=1322197200&en=53d7340a229ca54f&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss>. Retrieved on 2007-04-21 “What is the opposite of a fan club? The answer is the Rachael Ray Sucks Community. Gathering by way of the blogging and social-networking site LiveJournal, ….”

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