Towards the end of Rodgers' time at Stanford, a friend introduced her to
Alice Waters' Berkeley restaurant,
Chez Panisse, where she rapidly graduated to taking single-handed charge of lunch service. Waters' stress on the importance of eating food in its season was shared to the full by Rodgers. Her style was further influenced by the books of
Richard Olney,
Elizabeth David and
Waverley Root and a French apprenticeship with Pepette Arbulo of the restaurant l'Estanquet in Les Landes. Later visits to Italy also helped form her taste and style. On returning to the United States, Rodgers worked for
Marion Cunningham, cooking "homey, American fare" at the Union Hotel in
Benicia, California. One of the dishes on the menu was Caesar salad, a "benchmark version" of which was to become a permanent fixture on the menu of Zuni Café. In 1987, Rodgers was asked by the two owners of a Mexican café, Zuni Café, on Market Street in San Francisco to become its chef. Shortly after her arrival, a brick oven was constructed in the middle of the dining room and Rodgers' famous roasted chicken for two with its accompanying bread salad soon joined the Caesar salad as one of the restaurant's standards. ''The Zuni Cafe Cookbook: A Compendium of Recipes and Cooking Lessons from San Francisco's Beloved Restaurant'' in which Rodgers' recipes and extensive instructions on the importance of tasting ingredients and dishes as they are being cooked were complemented by
Gerald Asher's wine suggestions was published in 2002. After her death,
Jonathan Gold described the book in the Los Angeles Times as "possibly the greatest, most generous cookbook ever written by a working American chef". Rodgers died of cancer of the appendix at age 57, in 2013 in Berkeley, California. She was remembered in the
New York Times as creating a dining experience that "helped transform the way Americans think of food through its devotion to local, seasonal ingredients meticulously prepared." ==Awards==