Robert Sietsema

Photograph by Kevin Demaria

Robert Sietsema grew up in Illinois, Minnesota, and Texas, and began writing about food while living in New York City’s East Village and playing bass in a band called Mofungo (a misspelling of a beloved Puerto Rican dish of mashed plantains). Circulated among musicians and food writers he admired, his food fanzine, Down the Hatch, detailed the rise of ethnic eateries in New York and around the globe and could be considered a forerunner to the food-blog phenomenon. For the last 12 years, he’s been the restaurant critic for The Village Voice and a regular contributor to Gourmet. Sietsema lives in Greenwich Village with his wife and has a daughter currently studying engineering.

Robert Sietsema on gourmet.com

chefs + restaurants

Eight Great Italian Markets in New York City

Successive waves of Italian immigration beginning a century and a half ago have blessed New Yorkers with the country’s best collection of Italian markets.
06.23.09
chefs + restaurants

Smoked Meat vs. Pastrami

I recently ate the famed smoked meat at Schwartz’s in Montreal, then flew back to New York and had the pastrami at Katz’s later that day. Which was better?
03.24.09
food + cooking

The Hidden Beauty of Winter Herbs

Despite their bedraggled appearance, herbs grown outdoors this time of year can be even more delicious than their summer counterparts.
03.04.09
food + cooking

Cooking Stars

Before the age of celebrity chefs, there were chef-celebrities. What creations did Humphrey Bogart and Charlton Heston dream up?
12.26.08
chefs + restaurants

Crunching on Grasshopper Tacos

This Mexican delicacy is meaty, crispy, and strangely addictive. Just close your eyes, and the filling isn’t so different from pork carnitas.
12.22.08
food + cooking

Central Italy’s Infinitely Variable Recipe

How a taste of rich chicken-liver crostini can transport you to the heart of Italy.
12.17.08
chefs + restaurants

First Taste: 10 Downing

This new restaurant has the makings to be a classic: It hits that sweet spot between comfort food and more ambitious dishes.
11.21.08
food + cooking

Eat Like a Roman, Part 4: Baking Placenta

No! Not that kind of placenta! Are you kidding?
10.23.08
chefs + restaurants

First Taste: Porchetta

Nowadays, less is more. Porchetta resembles a bare-bones food stall, but it serves a glorious pork roast.
10.08.08
food + cooking

Minutes of the Institute for Oleic Research, Part 4: Up-to-the-Minute Oils

Which oil is fit for frying and which falls flat? The Institute investigates a wide range of specialty oils.
09.26.08
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