Women in the Kitchen
Twelve Essential Cookbook Writers Who Defined the Way We Eat, from 1661 to Today
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
April 15, 2020
Culinary historian and cooking-school founder Willan (One Souffl� at a Time, 2013) examines the lives of 12 women, all cookbook authors, who contributed to the evolution of home cooking. From Hannah Woolley, who wrote the first cookbook for women in the seventeenth century, to American chef and restaurateur Alice Waters, each chapter is dedicated to one of these women. Willan also includes Julia Child, Marcella Hazan, and Fannie Farmer. More than a collection of biographies, the book provides over 50 recipes that are representative of the profiled women's cooking: corn griddle cakes, ratatouille, brown sugar caramel pie, and polenta with Italian sausages, among many other dishes. In many cases Willan provides both the original recipe and a modernized translation so that readers can replicate the dish at home. The stories of these women are both informative and inspiring, and the book is a reminder that the love of delicious food and the care and preparation that goes into it can create a common bond.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)
May 15, 2020
The founder of La Varenne Cooking School in Paris offers a succinct history of her female predecessors. In this tasty, digestible volume, Willan, a member of the James Beard Foundation Awards Hall of Fame with more than six decades of experience in the world of food and cooking, explores a semialternative narrative of American and British cuisines. Female cookbook authors, she argues, have not only offered sound guidance to the millions of women feeding their families and guests since the 1600s; they have also gained financial independence and prestige, set trends, and paved the way for each other's success. A collector of cookbooks herself, Willan clearly draws from a deep well of knowledge and passion in her biographies of 12 influential female writers. Via their stories, she crafts a clearly written, cohesive chronicle of the evolution of American and British cuisine, complete with colorful anecdotes about the movement and fashion of ingredients, the influence of class and education on women's private and public culinary lives, and the gradual acceptance of cultural diversity into the mainstream palate. Occasionally repetitive--we learn multiple times about how "tomatoes were regarded with suspicion when they were brought to Europe from the New World" or that corn, a staple for Native Americans, "was a challenge for early American cooks"--Willan's accounts of early British and American kitchens will leave contemporary cooks grateful for our modern conveniences and abundant flavor options. Each biography is accompanied by some of their subject's most delectable recipes, first from the original texts and then reinterpreted by Willan. The older recipes are marvelous and entertaining historical documents that rely on the author's translations to make them accessible. By the time she gets to figures like Julia Child and Alice Waters, who wrote rigorously tested recipes in an easily recognizable style, Willan's adaptations contribute little. Approachable and charming, this text allows readers to learn about the lineage of women cooks while participating in it.
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June 1, 2020
James Beard Award–winning author Willan (The Country Cooking of France) winnows centuries of women cookbook authors to an influential dozen whose biographies and recipes form the backbone of this smartly executed book. Drawing from her own 2,000-plus cookbook collection built up over decades of writing about food, Willan notes “most of the active, recipe books, the ones I take into the kitchen, are by women.” She begins with Hannah Woolley, who in 1670 published the first woman’s cookbook, handwritten in 1661, in English, and closes with Alice Waters, who opened her “little French restaurant” Chez Panisse three centuries later and in 1982 shared its lauded recipes in the first of several cookbooks. The other 10 women include the familiar (Fannie Farmer, Irma Rombauer) and the forgotten, among them Lydia Child (better known for the classic rhyme, “Over the river and through the wood”). Recipes vary from unexpected (a 17th-century version of almond milk) and rustic (“Indian Slapjack,” from 1796) to sophisticated (Julia Child’s coq au vin; Marcella Hazan’s polenta con la luganega). Both cooks and historians will eagerly tuck into this cleverly conceived, well-researched collection.
July 1, 2020
James Beard Award-winning cookbook author, culinary historian, and educator Willan profiles 12 cookbook authors, all women, from the past 300 years that she deems essential to the development of American home cooking. Included are profiles of Hannah Wooley, author of The Ladies Directory, a 1661 handbook utilized by women of the expanding English middle class, and Amelia Simmons, the somewhat mysterious author of American Cookery, the first cookbook written by an American. In addition to these early culinary pioneers, Willan also reflects upon the influence of Julia Child (Mastering the Art of French Cooking), Irma Rombauer (The Joy of Cooking), and Edna Lewis (The Taste of Country Cooking). Willan is clearly passionate about her subjects. Moreover, she provides 50 tested and updated recipes from the featured cookbooks that range in difficulty. VERDICT An additional purchase for large collections with culinary histories in high demand.--Emily Patti, Palatine P.L. Dist., IL
Copyright 2020 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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