4 Things You Might Not Know About the New Yorker's Wolvesmouth Profile
If you happen to take a look at this week's issue of The New Yorker, you'll find a rather lengthy of profile of chef Craig Thornton and his underground dining experience Wolvesmouth, written by Dana Goodyear, the L.A.-based New Yorker staffer who also penned award-winning profiles of James Cameron and food critic Jonathan Gold. In my opinion, it's a spectacular piece, and a must-read for anyone even remotely interested in the city's shifting haute-dining scene -- but then again, I'm probably a little biased. 
G. Snyder Veggie Course at Wolvesmouth
In my free time spent away from the Weekly, I work as a part-time member of the Wolvesmouth crew (I've done so for about a year) mostly trying to do whatever grunt tasks are needed and staying out of the way of more intricate kitchen work. It's been an indescribably revelatory experience to say the least, and I like to think my knife skills have improved to the point when quickly brunoise-ing celery root into tiny cubes won't risk me losing a thumb.
Around six months ago, Dana Goodyear began to shadow Craig on a near-daily basis, with plans to write a piece on underground chefs in Los Angeles. Goodyear quickly fell down the rabbit hole of Thornton's life, though, and what was planned to be a rather short piece unfolded into one of the longest profiles she has ever written for the New Yorker. She delved into Thorton's personal life in ways no one had before; nothing seemed off limits.
Weeks later, after Goodyear had finished, a New Yorker photographer arrived at a private dinner to shoot art; I remember she was bizarrely obsessed with the beheading of spot prawns for a seafood course. Fact-checkers made their calls soon after. The closer the date of publication became, the greater the stakes of such a high-profile exposé became. Everyone involved in Wolvesmouth waited with baited breath. What would be said? What would the reaction be? Husk chef Sean Brock, who catapulted to national prominence after his 2011 profile in the New Yorker, contacted Thornton with a few helpful words -- something to the effect of (paraphrasing) "It's going to get real very fast after this comes out."
But even such a sprawling 6,000+ word piece can't capture all the best details of Wolvesmouth's journey. Here are a few interesting observations shared from a behind-the-scenes view.
4. Dana Goodyear was in the late stages of pregnancy for much of her reporting.
The hectic dinner at Gonpachi? The Long Beach farm during a thunderstorm? A very pregnant Goodyear was there for all of it, complete with notepad and pencil resting on her extended belly (maternity leave be damned). Did she finishing the story or give birth first? I'm not sure, but either way she's now the proud mother of a healthy newborn.
3. The Wolvesmouth kitchen is a menagerie of awesome ingredients.
One of Thorton's other passions is travel, and specifically, picking up cool shit from those travels. His refrigerator and kitchen pantries are fascinating menageries, overfilled with wondrous and bizarre ingredients from across the globe. There was a point a while ago when his favorite thing to top plates with was a hard-to-find boiled cider syrup made in Vermont, which was one of the most intensely delicious things I've ever tasted.


































