Joe Yonan | |
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Born | Joe Yonan Albany, Georgia |
Occupation | Vegetarian and plant-based food writer and cookbook author |
Alma mater | University of Texas at Austin; Cambridge School of Culinary Arts |
Subject | Journalism Cookbooks |
Notable works | Mastering the Art of Plant-Based Cooking: Vegan Recipes, Tips, and Techniques.(2024) Cool Beans: The Ultimate Guide to the World's Most Versatile Plant-Based Protein, with 125 Recipes. (2020) |
Notable awards | James Beard Awards Recipient |
Website | |
www |
Joe Yonan is an American vegetarian/plant based food writer and cookbook author who currently serves as the Food and Dining Editor for The Washington Post, where he writes the Weeknight Vegetarian column. [1] He has said he is "90% vegan," and he primarily writes about vegan food. [2]
Yonan was born in Albany, Georgia, [3] and is the grandson of Assyrian refugees. [4] He grew up in San Angelo, Texas, [5] [6] [7] the youngest of eight children. [8] He graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with a BA in Journalism in 1989, [6] [9] and from the Cambridge School of Culinary Arts in 2000. [10]
Yonan initially worked as a reporter for Boston media outlets. [8] After many years in "hard news," however, and not receiving a promotion from The Boston Globe, Yonan explored a career change. [11] He read What Color Is Your Parachute? [8] and realized that he wanted to focus on food writing. [8] [11] He recalls that, “I knew I didn’t want to become a chef... I just wanted to combine my biggest passions and that was writing, journalism and food.” [11] Realizing that he needed a culinary background, Yonan joined the Cambridge School of Culinary Arts in 1999, [8] [11] and graduated in 2000. [12] In 2006, he joined The Washington Post as a food writer, where he wrote the "Cooking for One" column for five years. [10]
Although Yonan grew up on a diet of "T-bones" and "the first thing he remembers learning to make as a kid was chicken-fried steak," [6] he publicly "came out" in 2013 as a vegetarian via a column in The Washington Post. [13] He was living on his sister's and brother-in-law's homestead in Maine in 2012 when he became a vegetarian. The homestead grows vegetables, mushrooms, beans, walnuts, rye, wheat, and fruit. [14] He states that he made the switch for health and environmental reasons, [15] and credits growing up in San Angelo as vital towards his interest in beans, due to his constant consumption of Tex-Mex. [5] Some of his favorite vegetarian cookbooks are Ten Talents (1968), Moosewood Cookbook (1977), and Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone (1997). [16]
Yonan currently writes the Weeknight Vegetarian column. [10]
Winner
Yonan is the recipient of two James Beard Foundation Awards. [20]
Winner
Nominee
Yonan's first book, Serve Yourself: Nightly Adventures in Cooking for One (2011), was born out of his monthly column for The Washington Post, Cooking for One, to help "single folks to realize that they don’t have to resort to takeout all the time, or processed food." [21] Later, when describing his 2013 book, Eat Your Vegetables: Bold Recipes for the Single Cook, written as he was transitioning to a vegetarian diet, Publishers Weekly, argued that the "greatly appealing dishes in this collection open up a whole new culinary world for veggie lovers." [22] Tasting Table included Cool Beans: The Ultimate Guide to the World's Most Versatile Plant-Based Protein, with 125 Recipes (2020) in its list of “The 14 Best Vegetarian Cookbooks That Even Meat Eaters Will Love," [23] and Food & Wine listed it as one of their "Favorite Vegetarian Cookbooks." [24]
VegNews included Yonan's 2024 cookbook, Mastering the Art of Plant-Based Cooking in its list of "The Best Vegan Cookbooks of 2024," [25] Food & Wine lists it as one of "The Best Cookbooks of 2024, According to Food & Wine Editors," [26] columnist Avery Yale Kamila lists it among "The year’s best vegan cookbooks" in the Portland Press Herald, [27] T. Susan Chang of NPR lists it on "Cooks We Love: 11 cookbooks from 2024 recommended by NPR critics and staff," [28] Chowhound lists it as one of the "15 Best Vegetarian Cookbooks Of 2024," [29] and The New York Times lists it among "The 16 Best Cookbooks of 2024." [30]
Yonan lives with his husband and their son in Washington D.C. [10]
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