Jay Reifel is a lot of things — simultaneously, always. He’s a historical chef who owns a larding needle and uses it. He’s a catering director feeding pro baseball teams, law schools, and high-end weddings in the same week. He’s a published food writer, a fiction writer with a novel always in progress, a rock climber on unbolted traditional routes, and a chess player who uses the game as a deliberate cognitive reset between creative projects.
He’s also writing a new cookbook — not a recipe collection, but a guide built around technique and logic. His argument: once you understand why braising works, you can walk into any kitchen, open the fridge, and cook something delicious without a recipe. The recipe is training wheels. The technique is the actual skill.
In this episode, Matthew and Jay cover: the logic of cooking vs. the tyranny of recipes · traditional climbing in the Shawangunk Mountains · writing fiction in your head on a six-mile walk · playing chess to clear the creative decks · a therapeutic farm in the country with no cell service and a commercial bakery · what being handed an axe and trusted with it can do for a person at their lowest · and carrying a half pig and a recently deceased rooster onto the New York City subway.
The rooster’s feet smelled terrible. He felt bad about it.
Find Jay at jayreifel.com or @jayreifel on Instagram. He answers cooking questions in the DMs. He means it.
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