Melissa Clark


Melissa Clark is an American food writer and cookbook author. Since 2007, she has been a food columnist for The New York Times. She has written more than 40 cookbooks and in 2018 won a James Beard Award.

Early life and education

The daughter of two psychiatrists, Clark is a third-generation Brooklynite, growing up in the Ditmas Park neighborhood. Her parents were avid home cooks, influenced by Julia Child. As a child, Clark spent the month of August with her family each year in Provence, France. Clark is Jewish.
Clark attended Stuyvesant High School and then Barnard College, where she studied English and history and wrote a thesis on the role of food in Don Quixote. She graduated in 1990, then in 1994 earned an MFA from Columbia University, where she took a food-writing class taught by Betty Fussell.

Career and works

In her early career, Clark was a freelance writer for various publications, including the New York Times, and worked in "front of house" jobs at restaurants. In 2007, she began her weekly "A Good Appetite" column at The New York Times, She became a full-time staff writer at the Times in 2012, writing about 65 recipes each year for the newspaper. Clark has frequently described herself as "an advocate for the home cook" and "the voice of the home cook" in interviews.
In 2015, Clark gained attention for a recipe for guacamole with green peas that she had reported on a few years earlier ; the piece was re-tweeted by The New York Times and attracted viral feedback, including tweets from President Barack Obama and former Governor of Florida Jeb Bush, who all disapproved of her addition of peas to the traditional recipe ingredients. Clark's most favored ingredient is anchovies, which she praises for their versatility.
Clark has written more than 40 cookbooks, including Braise: A Journey Through International Cuisine, with Daniel Boulud; East of Paris with David Bouley; The Last Course: The Desserts of Gramercy Tavern with Claudia Fleming, the former pastry chef at Gramercy Tavern in New York; and Cook This Now, which focuses on seasonal cooking. Clark's cookbook Dinner: Changing the Game won an award in 2018 from the International Association of Culinary Professionals. For The New Essentials of French Cooking, which was published in print and as on NYT Cooking, Clark won the 2018 James Beard Foundation Journalism Award for innovative storytelling.
In 2019, Clark hosted a podcast series, Weeknight Kitchen with Melissa Clark, produced by The Splendid Table.

Personal life

Clark is married to Daniel Gercke, and they have one child, their daughter, Dahlia. The family lives in a brownstone in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn.