The American Cookbook
A History$35.00
4 in stock (can be backordered)
About the Book
   When colonists arrived in America, their knowledge of cooking sometimes had little in common with available ingredients. Eventually they adapted recipes from the old country for use with native foods and cooking methods. The resulting infusion nourished an enthusiasm for cookbooks, as cooks from all walks of life recorded and exchanged old and new recipes.
   This book serves up the American cookbook as a tasty sampler of history, geography and culture, revealing the influence of political events (e.g. wartime rationing), social movements (temperance), and technological change (new packaging and cooking methods). Skimming antiquity, the author whisks us through history to the first American cookbook, published by Amelia Simmons in 1796. Next she examines the cookbook revolution of the 1800s that was sparked by vigilant interest in household management and fueled by professionals and cooking schools. She heralds the charity and community cookbook, which has roots in the Civil War and thrives today. Regional and ethnic cookbooks merit discussion in their own chapter, which is followed by consideration of themes, product promotion, special collections and unusual formats. Cookbook aficionados will find familiar titles in the final chapter, “Most Influential Cookbooks of the Twentieth Century.” Multiple bibliographies list notable American cookbooks, product cookbooks and booklets, alternative format cookbooks, and culinary books (books about food), as well as the author’s research sources.  A selected list of libraries and archives with significant cookbook and culinary collections is included, and a unique appendix reprints selected pie recipes from American cookbooks published from 1796 through 2000, demonstrating an evolving recipe format.
   Instructors considering this book for use in a course may  request an examination copy here.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Carol Fisher
Format: softcover (7 x 10)
Pages: 270
Bibliographic Info: 152 photos, appendix, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2006
pISBN: 978-0-7864-2342-2
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments         vii
Introduction        1
1. The Beginning of the Great American Recipe Exchange        3
2. Cookbooks in the Colonies: English Cookbooks and Amelia Simmons        6
3. Voices from the Kitchen: Leaders of the Nineteenth Century Cookbook Revolution        17
4. Authors and Cooking School Teachers Join the Ranks        34
5. America’s Favorite: The Charity-Community Cookbook        56
6. America’s Cultural Stew: Regional and Ethnic Cookbooks        75
7. Health and Nutrition Cookbooks in America        109
8. Cookbooks Galore: Promotional/Advertising Cookbooks and Cookbooklets        126
9. USDA Cookbooks        152
10. Cookbooks for Special Audiences        157
11. Chef and Restaurant Cookbooks        177
12. Alternative Format Cookbooks        188
13. Revisiting the Twentieth Century: Cookbook Pot Luck        194
14. Most Influential Cookbooks of the Twentieth Century        213
Appendix: A Sampler of Pie Recipes from America’s Cookbooks        223
Bibliography        229
Index        253
Praise for the Book
• Winner, Walter Williams Award—Missouri Writers’ Guild
• “Fascinating…recommended for all libraries”—Library Journal
• “Interesting…recommended”—Choice
• “Welcome…a ‘must’…lively read”—Midwest Book Review
• “A well-researched history…stories… are fascinating”—Big Muddy: A Journal of the Mississippi River Valley
• “Thorough”—The Oakland Press






 
		 
		 
		