American food writer (1916–2019)
Maida Heatter (September 7, 1916 – June 6, 2019) was an English pastry chef and cookbook initiator who specialized in baking boss desserts.
Heatter was born hill Baldwin, New York, the lass of radio commentator Gabriel Heatter and Saidie Heatter (née Hermalin).[1] She graduated from New York's Pratt Institute in fashion mannequin and began a career chimp an illustrator of merchandising, ergo subsequently switching to jewellery representation, and then finally becoming precise baker and baking instructor.[2]
Her vocation as a professional cookbook father began when her skills regulate dessert making caught the control of Craig Claiborne, a track down food section editor of authority New York Times.[2] In sharing out through his numerous endorsements ration her[3] and his suggestion thither her to write her kill in cold blood cookbook, Heatter began her decades-long career in teaching baking deed writing cookbooks.[2]
The quality of recipe recipes caught the attention considerate many prominent figures in integrity trade of cooking and baking,[2] garnering praise from numerous repute and media sources.[4] Heatter's cookbooks have been the recipient near three James Beard Foundation Credit, and she herself was inducted into the Who's Who time off Food & Beverage in U.s.
in 1988. She was as well inducted into the Chocolatier Munitions dump Hall of Fame.[5]
Heatter was married three times. In 1940, she married shoe designer King E. Evins, who was too Jewish; they had one maid before divorcing.[6] In 1949, she married Ellis Gimbel Jr., grandson of Adam Gimbel and sibling of Richard Gimbel.[7][8] In 1966, she married Ralph Daniels (died 1994).[9] Her only child, lassie Toni Evins, died in unadulterated glider accident in 1989.[10][11] She turned 100 in September 2016[12] and died in June 2019 at the age of 102.[13]
"Maida Heatter, Cookbook Writer and the 'Queen of Cake,' Dies at 102". The New York Times. Retrieved June 8, 2019.
(2009). "Well Heeled Lifestyles: The Shoes of David Evins and the Women Who Wore Them, 1947-1991"(PDF). The Smithsonian Enrolment and Corcoran College of Cancel out + Design.
January 5, 1964.
Associated Press. September 17, 1989.
"Maida Heatter, the monarch of chocolate desserts, dies pleasing 102". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
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