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In 1784, passengers on the ship Empress of China became the first
Americans to land in China, and the first to eat Chinese food.
Today there are over 40,000 Chinese restaurants across the United
States--by far the most plentiful among all our ethnic eateries.
Now, in Chop Suey Andrew Coe provides the authoritative history of
the American infatuation with Chinese food, telling its fascinating
story for the first time.
It's a tale that moves from curiosity to disgust and then desire.
From China, Coe's story travels to the American West, where Chinese
immigrants drawn by the 1848 Gold Rush struggled against racism and
culinary prejudice but still established restaurants and farms and
imported an array of Asian ingredients. He traces the Chinese
migration to the East Coast, highlighting that crucial moment when
New York "Bohemians" discovered Chinese cuisine--and for better or
worse, chop suey. Along the way, Coe shows how the peasant food of
an obscure part of China came to dominate Chinese-American
restaurants; unravels the truth of chop suey's origins; reveals why
American Jews fell in love with egg rolls and chow mein; shows how
President Nixon's 1972 trip to China opened our palates to a new
range of cuisine; and explains why we still can't get dishes like
those served in Beijing or Shanghai. The book also explores how
American tastes have been shaped by our relationship with the
outside world, and how we've relentlessly changed foreign foods to
adapt to them our own deep-down conservative culinary preferences.
Andrew Coe's Chop Suey: A Cultural History of Chinese Food in the
United States is a fascinating tour of America's centuries-long
appetite for Chinese food. Always illuminating, often exploding
long-held culinary myths, this book opens a new window into
defining what is American cuisine.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
"Pirate's Gold" is story of a great American fortune, a man with
the Midas touch, and his descendants who inherited more money than
was good for them. A small-town boy from Massachusetts, Henry
Huttleston "Hell-Hound" Rogers helped build Standard Oil into the
world's largest oil company, gaining renown as a notorious Wall
Street "pirate." After he died, his children inherited
$49,000,000--billions in today's money. None of his descendants
lived so large as Rogers' son, Colonel Henry Rogers Jr., and his
two children, Millicent and Harry. During the 1920s, the public was
fascinated by the saga of Millicent's ill-fated marriage to Count
Salm, the Austrian tennis champion with matinee idol good looks. In
the 1930s Harry's involvement in the death of an actress at a
drunken party was front page news in every city in the country.
"Pirate's Gold" looks beneath the headlines to uncover the roots of
these stories: the struggles over money and love, and the
difficulties of living up to one's famous family name.
From the author of the acclaimed 97 Orchard and her husband, a
culinary historian, an in-depth exploration of the greatest food
crisis the nation has ever faced--the Great Depression--and how it
transformed America's culinary culture.The decade-long Great
Depression, a period of shifts in the country's political and
social landscape, forever changed the way America eats. Before
1929, America's relationship with food was defined by abundance.
But the collapse of the economy, in both urban and rural America,
left a quarter of all Americans out of work and
undernourished--shattering long-held assumptions about the
limitlessness of the national larder.In 1933, as women struggled to
feed their families, President Roosevelt reversed long-standing
biases toward government-sponsored "food charity." For the first
time in American history, the federal government assumed, for a
while, responsibility for feeding its citizens. The effects were
widespread. Championed by Eleanor Roosevelt, "home economists" who
had long fought to bring science into the kitchen rose to national
stature.Tapping into America's long-standing ambivalence toward
culinary enjoyment, they imposed their vision of a sturdy,
utilitarian cuisine on the American dinner table. Through the
Bureau of Home Economics, these women led a sweeping campaign to
instill dietary recommendations, the forerunners of today's Dietary
Guidelines for Americans.At the same time, rising food
conglomerates introduced packaged and processed foods that gave
rise to a new American cuisine based on speed and convenience. This
movement toward a homogenized national cuisine sparked a revival of
American regional cooking. In the ensuing decades, the tension
between local traditions and culinary science has defined our
national cuisine--a battle that continues today. A Square Meal
examines the impact of economic contraction and environmental
disaster on how Americans ate then--and the lessons and insights
those experiences may hold for us today.A Square Meal features 25
black-and-white photographs.
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