Paul Freedman is a history professor at Yale University. The
author of the highly acclaimed Ten Restaurants That Changed
America, Freedman lives in Pelham, New York.
"Contrary to what sniffy foreign gourmets may believe, the United
States does have its own cuisine, Freedman argues in this sprawling
history. But it’s defined less by ingredients and recipes than by
regionalism, modernity, and variety. Relying on sources that range
from menus and cookbooks to the odd detective novel, he tracks the
interaction among these forces from the colonial period to the
present. . . . Gender and ethnicity figure intriguingly in the
process."
*Lisa Abend - New York Times Book Review*
"In American Cuisine: And How It Got This Way, the Yale University
history professor and culinary scholar eschews the banal,
dish-centric narrative of countless similar titles to propose a
grand theory of the American appetite."
*Rien Fertel - Wall Street Journal*
"In American Cuisine: And How It Got This Way, food historian Paul
Freedman embarks on an ambitious exploration of a seemingly
impossible question: What is American food? Combing through 200
years of cookbooks and archives, Freedman charts a captivating
history of our country told through the meals we make."
*Drew Tewksbury - Los Angeles Times*
"A sweeping, thoroughly researched social and cultural history of
America through its changing food habits and practices. . . . .
Freedman also offers entertaining profiles of many notable chefs,
including Alice Waters, Thomas Keller, and René Redzepi, whose
influences have reformed how many Americans eat. A spirited,
abundantly illustrated food history."
*Kirkus Reviews*
"[A] significant, thoroughly researched survey of food and cooking
in the U.S. . . . Both serious researchers and armchair readers
will find education and amusement here."
*Booklist*
"Well-researched. . . . History buffs will dig into this astute
culinary narrative."
*Publishers Weekly*
"[An] astute, well-researched exploration of American cuisine. . .
. Purchase for medium and large collections where books about food
history are in demand."
*Emily Patti - Library Journal*
"Although it is not easy to define, Yes! there is a genuine
American Cuisine. In this essential book, Paul Freedman leads us
from the food of colonial times to processed industrial food, to
ethnic food, to the farm-to-table revolution of the 70s. American
Cuisine is a brilliant synthesis which organizes the vast,
eclectic, mixed American cooking into a comprehensive, coherent,
credible and unified entity."
*Jacques Pepin*
"Drawing on copious research—and encouraged, clearly, by an
excellent appetite—Paul Freedman has untangled the messy strands of
nostalgia and speculation that spill across culinary history like a
vast helping of spaghetti and come up with a wonderfully engaging
study of Americans at table. Anyone who wants to make sense of our
edible past should start right here."
*Laura Shapiro, author of What She Ate*
"In American Cuisine, Paul Freedman embarks on an epic quest to
locate the roots of American foodways and follow changing tastes
through the decades, a search that takes him straight to the heart
of American identity. It is an enormous, endlessly fascinating
subject, and Freedman makes a wonderful tour guide, scholarly and
wry."
*William Grimes, former New York Times restaurant critic*
"Given the old adage “you are what you eat,” American Cuisine, with
thoughtful assessments combined with marvelous illustrations, is a
mirror reflecting back, helping explain the current abundant yet
problematic landscape of American food."
*Amy Bentley, Professor of Food Studies at NYU*
"Through my fifty years as an Italian chef in America I have
followed the evolution of American cuisine and have always wanted
to know ever more about its origin, flavors and recipes. Paul
Freedman has fulfilled my quest to know more. This is a brilliant
book—extensive and detailed—with in-depth research about the
chronological journey of American cuisine from the pioneers to the
present."
*Lidia Bastianich, author of My American Dream: A Life of Love,
Family, and Food*
"Shattering holy ideas about our national fare, Paul Freedman’s
American Cuisine shows that we have not yet fully emerged from the
unhealthy weight of food industrialization, brutal marketing lies,
and fake “traditions” meant to divide us. Hearty food for
thought."
*Allen Salkin, author of From Scratch: Inside the Food Network54*
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