Popular Culture Review Vol. 18, No. 1, Winter 2007 | Page 15

Chef Appeal 11 The equally recent tendency for more men to watch chefs on the Food Network could be attributed, in part, to the Network’s concerted effort in recent years to market to them by recalibrating its format with more broadly entertaining devices, such as competition. The popularity of Iron Chef among men suggested its effectiveness, and has undoubtedly encouraged the subsequent frequency of Food Network Challenge shows, featuring everything from national barbecue cook-offs to international sugar-sculpture championships. But the increased chef appeal among men, I suspect, has been in the making for several decades. Most probably, it follows the home kitchen’s declining identification with only women. The American kitchen has been gradually degendered by the rising frequency of the dual-income household. In 1940, only 25 percent of American women had full- or part-time jobs away from home. By 1974, almost 50 percent of those married with children did. The ranks of women working outside the home continued to rise, as the climb in the cost of living that began with the inflationary 1970s made the two-income household ever more common. Women became Just as too-busy-to-cook on a regular basis as men. Men became more likely than previously to prepare, microwave, or order out some of their own or their families’ food. By the 1990s, it was not unusual to find any family member at some point doing any one of the household chores, including preparing meals. The normalcy of men in the kitchen is also, however, the product of a counter-trend: the longer spans that both men and women spend single. By the turn of the twenty-first century, the median marriage age had gone up to 27 from 22 among men of the 1950s and to 25 from 20 among women of that decade. Since these figures represent the total American population, it is reasonable to infer that those who have prioritized the completion of higher degrees or career advancement have tended to delay marriage even further. The rising divorce rate, too, has left more men and women on their own. In The Substance of Stymie (2003), Virginia Postrel compellingly suggested that, if men and women are making their own lifestyle decisions over a longer period—and these would have to include choices in food and cooking—it is inevitable that they more fully develop their tastes and competencies in these matters independently. Under these conditions, it is just as likely for a man as for a woman to learn how to cook from cooking shows, and thus to end up admiring chefs. Hence, perhaps, the recent rise of the “metrosexual,” why cooking classes have become the latest in date fads, and the otherwise improbable Enieril Live spectacle of a roomful of dudes cheering for a lasagna. So it became historically possible for the public in question to idolize chefs. By tracing the whens, hows, and whos of chef appeal, it has become evident that the trend coincides with an historically unprecedented disparity between the experiences and conditions of food production and those of consumption. The pattern suggests a broader principle: The less people are required to produce, or are acquainted with the realities of producing what they have an inverse means and desire to consume, the more possible it becomes for