Thursday, January 15, 2026

The Frugal Gourmet Cut Up

 Any home chef of a certain age  will tell you about Jeff Smith , the famed "Frugal Gourme" who had his own PBS cooking show and cookbooks. Yet there is a new documentary that shows his dark side and allegations against him. Despite it all his recipes are still being made thirty years after the scandal.

Regular contributor and cookbook author as well, Julia Moskin, wrote about Jeff Smith in yesterday's New York Times Wednesday Food section. There is a new documentary series (as there is with all past crimes these days) 'i Bid You Peace', Chef Smith's signature sign off. will be available at the end of this month(platform to be announced) that delves into the sexual allegations that cost him his career. Several teenagers from Tacoma where his restaurants were. Gone was his popular series that drew in a whopping seven millions viewers at the time and his cookbook sales which are still more popular that the best selling In a Garten ones, tanked.Hos show was riveting , a Sunday afternoon gem that drew in all sorts of people interested in cooking and food. He was bubbly and avuncular .He traveled with his camera crews to Greece and China, encouraged viewers to cook from immigrant traditions and made food interesting and approachable. He was an ordained Methodist minister who became captivated by restaurants while preaching in New York City.He returned to his undergrad alma mater after getting his master's at New Jersey's Dew University .He taught interesting classes - Food as Sacrament and Celebration.He was popular.

His love of food expanded when he opened up Chaplain's Pantry in Tacoma. He introduced diners to sun dried tomatoes and Szechuan peppercorns. He quickly became a sought after caterer, creating canapes for the future Tacoma mayor Harold Moss .However he had a dark side, he drank, even showing up to his television show dead drink at times. Chef Smith got fifteen and sixteen year old boys working for him drink.There was inappropriate  touching" and "groping" as it was deemed back then. He was considered a monster, probably due to the heavy drinking. Bridget Charters, now a chef  worked with him when she was a teenager., and then became his assistant She remembers producers telling him to"cut out drinking gin at noon and switch to white wine." This became a rule.Yet there are still loyal fans who make his recipes and watch his shows on YouTube. What will they make of Chris Johnson's documentary? That remains to be seen. It will shed some light on what happened and why Chef Smith was accused. The chef died at the age of sixty five in 2005. 

Great chefs are always remembered. Most are remembered for their recipes and their impact on the culinary world. What will Chef Jeff Smith be remembered for? The good or the bad of his career?

 

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