Storied Dishes: What Our Family Recipes Tell Us About Who We Are and Where We've Been, (9780313381676) — Readings Books

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Storied Dishes: What Our Family Recipes Tell Us About Who We Are and Where We've Been
Hardback

Storied Dishes: What Our Family Recipes Tell Us About Who We Are and Where We’ve Been

$102.99
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We are what we eat-not just physiologically, but culturally. This collection of cross-cultural, generational essays, and accompanying recipes shows the profound importance of food dishes within American women’s lives.

For people of every ethnicity, food provides much more than mere fuel for the body-it contains an invisible component that ties families and generations together with the continuity of shared experience. And for the women who are entrusted with the responsibility of keeping that priceless cultural thread intact, family recipes embody tradition, bridge generation gaps, and erase age differences.

This book is organized around 50 short essays and recipes presented by women from multicultural backgrounds and dissimilar walks of life. The chapters depict the paths of these individuals in their lives and the details of how they acquired their precious family recipes. The stories document how women universally use inherited family recipes to remember and memorialize key women in their lives and to aid and measure their own growth and development. Included are reminiscences of an Egyptian aunt, a poor mother from Australia, a Katrina-flooded New Orleans family, Turkish relations, Chinese mothers, and Indian grandmothers.

Over 40 contributors, including well-known food writers, food historians, scholars, chefs, editors, and other professionals, representing the spectrum of cultural backgrounds and experiences of American women

Presents original, never before published works

Showcases personal photos of contributors, stained and tattered recipes, unique foods, and women who originated dishes

Introduction describes the involving story of the editor’s initial inspiration and the scope of book

Read More
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Format
Hardback
Publisher
ABC-CLIO
Country
United States
Date
18 November 2010
Pages
176
ISBN
9780313381676

We are what we eat-not just physiologically, but culturally. This collection of cross-cultural, generational essays, and accompanying recipes shows the profound importance of food dishes within American women’s lives.

For people of every ethnicity, food provides much more than mere fuel for the body-it contains an invisible component that ties families and generations together with the continuity of shared experience. And for the women who are entrusted with the responsibility of keeping that priceless cultural thread intact, family recipes embody tradition, bridge generation gaps, and erase age differences.

This book is organized around 50 short essays and recipes presented by women from multicultural backgrounds and dissimilar walks of life. The chapters depict the paths of these individuals in their lives and the details of how they acquired their precious family recipes. The stories document how women universally use inherited family recipes to remember and memorialize key women in their lives and to aid and measure their own growth and development. Included are reminiscences of an Egyptian aunt, a poor mother from Australia, a Katrina-flooded New Orleans family, Turkish relations, Chinese mothers, and Indian grandmothers.

Over 40 contributors, including well-known food writers, food historians, scholars, chefs, editors, and other professionals, representing the spectrum of cultural backgrounds and experiences of American women

Presents original, never before published works

Showcases personal photos of contributors, stained and tattered recipes, unique foods, and women who originated dishes

Introduction describes the involving story of the editor’s initial inspiration and the scope of book

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
ABC-CLIO
Country
United States
Date
18 November 2010
Pages
176
ISBN
9780313381676