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Cellar Rat: My Life in the Restaurant Underbelly
Cellar Rat: My Life in the Restaurant Underbelly | Hannah Selinger
3 posts | 1 read | 1 reading | 3 to read
Kirkus Reviews's Most Anticipated Nonfiction of Spring 2025 What happens when a career you love doesn't love you back? As Hannah Selinger will tell you, to be a good restaurant employee is to be invisible. At the height of her career as a server and then sommelier at some of New York's most famed dining institutions, Selinger was the hand that folded your napkin while you were in the bathroom, the employee silently slipping into the night through a side door after serving meals worth more than her rent. During her tenure, Selinger rubbed shoulders with David Chang, Bobby Flay, Johnny Iuzzini, and countless other food celebrities of the early 2000's. Her position allowed her access to a life she never expected; the lavish parties, the tasting courses, the wildly expensive wines - the rare world we see romanticized in countless movies and television shows. But the thing about being invisible is that people forget you're there, and most act differently when they think no one is looking. In Cellar Rat, Selinger chronicles her rise and fall in the restaurant business, beginning with the gritty hometown pub where she fell in love with the industry and ending with her final post serving celebrities at the Hamptons classic Nick & Toni's. In between, readers will join Selinger on her emotional journey as she learns the joys of fine fine dining, the allure and danger of power, and what it takes to walk away from a career you love when it no longer serves you.
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JenniferEgnor
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To asses your own value—to determine whether you were worthy by the metrics determined by a restaurant—you had to set aside everything else. You didn‘t have to be a good person to be good at restaurant work. You didn‘t have to be nice, or forgiving, or ethical, or kind. You only had to be willing to show up and dig into the work that was before you, even if that work was brutal and unfair and traumatic and mean. You did this all, much of the⤵️

JenniferEgnor time, for a breathlessly small paycheck, given the number of hours you spent doing the actual work (I challenge both tipped and salaried restaurant workers to spend time calculating how much money they make per hour, after all is said and done). After this, to know that even something as simple as eating a piece of bread could be met with derision was almost more than a person could bear. 2d
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JenniferEgnor
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Cellar rat is the colloquial term used in the industry to describe the people who spend time stocking the wine cellar. It was where my wine education officially began. 🍷🍇🥂

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Amor4Libros
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I love a food industry memoir. And this was a great one! Hannah‘s writing is engaging from the first paragraph and the only thing I found myself skimming were the recipes (some of which I want to make…someday).

In this memoir, Hannah recounts how she fell in love with restaurants, rose through the ranks to become a sommelier, but the industry continuously broke her heart.

Read it!

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ #arc Pub Date: 3/25/25

JenniferEgnor Love stuff like this. I devoured the monthly issue of Gourmet magazine when it was still published. No pun intended. 4d
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