"This body of work, these 30 years of reviews of dining in North Dakota, is in a sense a history of dining in America." âAnthony Bourdain
In Grand Forks, North Dakota, a small town where professors moonlight as farmers, farmers moonlight as football coaches, and everyone loves hockey, one woman covered the culinary scene for more than twenty-five years: Marilyn Hagerty. In her weekly Eatbeat column in the local paper, Marilyn gave the denizens of Grand Forks the straight scoop on everything from the best blue-plate specialsâbeef stroganoff at the Pantryâto the choicest truck stopsâthe Big Sioux (and its lutefisk lunch special)âto the ambience of the town's first Taco Bell. Her verdict? "A cool pastel oasis on a hot day."
No-nonsense but wry, earnest but self-aware, Eatbeat also encouraged the best in its readersâreminding them to tip well and whyâand served as its own kind of down-home social register, peopled with stories of ex-postal workers turned cafĂŠ owners and prom queen waitresses. Filled with reviews of the mom-and-pop diners that eventually gave way to fast-food joints and the Norwegian specialties that finally faded away in the face of the Olive Garden's endless breadsticks, Grand Forks is more than just a loving look at the shifts in American dining in the last years of the twentieth centuryâit is also a surprisingly moving and hilarious portrait of the quintessential American town, one we all recognize in our hearts regardless of where we're from.
"A fascinating picture of dining in America, a gradual, cumulative overview of how we got from there . . . to here." âNPR "A book of no-nonsense restaurant reviews." âThe Washington Post
"This body of work, these 30 years of reviews of dining in North Dakota, is in a sense a history of dining in America." âAnthony Bourdain
In Grand Forks, North Dakota, a small town where professors moonlight as farmers, farmers moonlight as football coaches, and everyone loves hockey, one woman covered the culinary scene for more than twenty-five years: Marilyn Hagerty. In her weekly Eatbeat column in the local paper, Marilyn gave the denizens of Grand Forks the straight scoop on everything from the best blue-plate specialsâbeef stroganoff at the Pantryâto the choicest truck stopsâthe Big Sioux (and its lutefisk lunch special)âto the ambience of the town's first Taco Bell. Her verdict? "A cool pastel oasis on a hot day."
No-nonsense but wry, earnest but self-aware, Eatbeat also encouraged the best in its readersâreminding them to tip well and whyâand served as its own kind of down-home social register, peopled with stories of ex-postal workers turned cafĂŠ owners and prom queen waitresses. Filled with reviews of the mom-and-pop diners that eventually gave way to fast-food joints and the Norwegian specialties that finally faded away in the face of the Olive Garden's endless breadsticks, Grand Forks is more than just a loving look at the shifts in American dining in the last years of the twentieth centuryâit is also a surprisingly moving and hilarious portrait of the quintessential American town, one we all recognize in our hearts regardless of where we're from.
"A fascinating picture of dining in America, a gradual, cumulative overview of how we got from there . . . to here." âNPR "A book of no-nonsense restaurant reviews." âThe Washington Post