Condé Nast to Close Gourmet, Cookie and Modern Bride

Condé Nast will close Gourmet magazine, a magazine of almost biblical status in the food world, it was announced on Monday. Gourmet has been published since January 1941. Also being shut down are the Condé Nast magazines Cookie, Modern Bride and Elegant Bride, according to an internal company memo that also was sent to reporters on Monday.

Gourmet magazineGourmet magazine has been published since 1941.

The magazine has suffered a severe decline in ad pages, but the cut still comes as a shock. There was speculation that Condé Nast would close one of its food titles — Gourmet or Bon Appétit — but most bets were on the latter. Gourmet has a richer history than Bon Appétit, and its editor, Ruth Reichl, is powerful in the food world.

Cookie is a relatively new introduction, started in 2005, while the bridal magazines were seen as offshoots of the bigger Brides magazine, which Condé Nast also owns.

The cuts come at the conclusion of a three-month study by McKinsey & Company, which conducted analysis of Condé Nast’s costs, and told several magazines to cut about 25 percent from their budgets. These are the first closings announced by the company since the McKinsey study.

The moves are significant for the publisher. It has never been quick to close titles, and in the last year or so has closed only newer titles, Condé Nast Portfolio and Domino, along with folding Men’s Vogue into Vogue.

Condé Nast tends to hold tight to its prestigious titles, making the Gourmet closing all the more startling. In an interview in February, even Paul Jowdy, publisher of the in-house rival Bon Appétit, said that such a closing was unlikely. (To be fair to Mr. Jowdy, the economy has plummeted, and Condé Nast has been hit particularly hard since then. Its magazines have lost more than 8,000 ad pages, excluding its bridal titles, so far this year.)

“They would never do that,” Mr. Jowdy said in February. “They’re both very important magazines in the culinary world, and they’re very different magazines, and they’re both very healthy. So there’s all these rumors that are just ridiculous. I try not to pay attention to them, but you have to know — if you think of two of the most prestigious, credible, trusted magazines in the industry, you’re going to say Bon Appétit and Gourmet.”

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Sad…

curious to know what RR will do now.

Gourmet Magazine seems to have been the last to catch on to the fact that cooking magazines (even for gourmets) should have readily available ingredients, a food analysis, and step by step instructions that can be read at a glance.

They’re keeping Bon Appetit? Gourmet is more than recipes…it’s food culture and literature and politics. What a void this will leave.

This is indeed a shock. Can it really be that bad? What’s next Vanity Fair?

I’m shocked. Choosing McKinsey over Gourmet?

Honestly, it’s surprising that Gourmet hasn’t done at least acceptably given the explosion of interest in good food and cooking.

Wow!!! A world without Gourmet is a sadder place. Thank goodness I still have my Thanksgiving turkey/stuffing recipe from 1987. PB

I’m shocked! I’ve never been a subscriber, but I’ve bought many issues of Gourmet over the years, and I’ve recently been using their website a lot, both for recipes and general reading. I guess that makes me part of the problem, huh?

RIP, Gourmet. Thanks for Ruth Reichl, Laurie Colwin, and Hodding Carter, among others.

This breaks my food loving heart.

I have subscribed to Gourmet since 1982.

This is not only sad, it’s silly. As more people are eating and cooking at home, it hardly seems like the time to kill off a widely recognized and respected cooking magazine.

No surprise here. Ever since ms Reichl took over the magazine ceased being for people who actually want to cook as opposed to foodies. Foodies are not particularly loyal customers the way the old clientele was. I subscribed for 20 years before giving it up in disgust, and still have stacks of Gourmets in my kitchen dating back to the 80’s.. Surely hope she doesn’t take over at Bon Appetit.

My family is heartbroken. Isn’t there some way we can put Bon Appetit on the chopping block instead?

Laura E. in Kansas City October 5, 2009 · 10:28 am

Nooo!! I love Gourmet magazine! This is so sad.

Omigod. This is HORRIBLE news on the culinary front.

I have every issue of Gourmet since 1987. The only issue I didn’t keep was Gourmet’s one and only attempt at a low-fat issue. I unceremoniously tossed it into the trash.

Ruth Reichl brought the magazine into the 20th — and now 21st — centuries. A brilliant transformation.

What’s more, I have a professional chef’s diploma and Gourmet is the only magazine that could rise to the level of professionals and keen amateurs without alienating its enthusiastic — and well-educated — base.

While this is quite sad, I have to wonder if this is just the market correcting itself.

Three bridal magazines, two spun off from an original property, operated by a single publisher? Is that really necessary? Haven’t they been competing not only against blogging upstarts and online magazines, but each other as well?

I used to go to the Army store in Germany back in the seventies to buy my Gourmets, and then subscribed when I moved back to the US, and have loved getting my monthly infusion of food and travel ever since.
I am in shock. Agree with those who suggest substituting another periodical on the chopping block – NOT Gourmet!!

Saveur is better.

This is ridiculous. First Domino and now Gourmet? These were two of their best magazines!!

This is unbelievable!! Gourmet has been a part of my life for 25 years. I’ve tried Bon Appetit, and it has always paled in comparison. Conde Nast needs to seriously reconsider this horrendous decision.

much prefer Gourmet over Bon Appetit. Neither are for the daily, ‘average’ cook. Bon Appetit has become much less user friendly over the years. I still enjoyed Gourmet. Too bad.

This is one magazine my husband and I read thoroughly every month. The recipes are wonderful and you can trust that they will be good. Please, please bring it back.

Shocking. Bon Apetit should go, not Gourmet. Good grief, the magazine with the better recipes and wider world view lost out to its poorer sister? Who is doing the thinking at Conde Nast? Clearly not someone who cares about the more informed and affluent reader.

Gourmet will be back. It has to.

i am devastated. my grandmother was one of the original subscribers and she my mother and i have collectively received ever issue published. i agree with MS..Bon Appetit should bite it, instead.

I am in shock and can’t imagine how this void will ever be filled. I was a loyal subscriber and HUGE fan of Ruth Reichl. Ruth, I hope you find another way to continue the important conversations you and your staff have provoked.
Thanks for all the inspiration.
Alina Lee