The Taste of America
An updated and delightful tour through gastronomic America
Paper – $28
978-0-252-06875-1
Publication Date
Paperback: 01/01/2000
About the Book
This classic barbeque of our foodways is as valid and as savory today as when it first tickled ribs a generation ago. Based on the superlative authority of John L. Hess, onetime food critic of the New York Times, and Karen Hess, the pioneering historian of cookery, The Taste of America is both a history of American cooking and a history of the advice smiling celebrity cooks have asked Americans to swallow.The Taste of America provoked the cooking experts of the 1970s into spitting rage by pointing out in embarrassing detail that most of them lacked an essential ingredient: expertise. Now "Kool-Aid like Mother used to make" has become "Kool-Aid like Grandmother used to make," and a new generation has been weaned on synthetic food, pathetic snobbery, neurotic health advice, and reconstituted history. This much-needed new edition chars Julia Child ("She's not a cook, but she plays one on TV"), chides food maven Ruth Reichl, and marvels at a convention of food technologists (whose program bore the slogan "Eat your heart out, Mother Nature"). Delectable reading for consumers, reformers, and scholars, this twenty-fifth anniversary reissue of The Taste of America will serve well into the new millennium.About the Author
John L. Hess, long-time journalist and former food critic for the New York Times, is the author of The Grand Acquisitors, Vanishing France, and other books. Karen Hess, the author of The Carolina Rice Kitchen: The African Connection and the editor of numerous historical cookbooks including Martha Washington's Booke of Cookery, And Booke of Sweetmeats, was hailed by Newsweek as "the best American cook in Paris."Reviews
"A passionate and sweeping philippic . . . a spectacular collection of faults found, chances missed." -- New York Times Book Review"A peppery, zestful jeremiad about the rape of our taste buds by industrial civilization."--Village Voice"An entertaining diatribe on the diet of the tribe. It should be read and pondered."--Bookletter
"The Hesses' zest for debate has not waned in the 25 years since the book was first published -- wow! Julia Child and Ruth Reichl (and, of course, The New York Times) are hammered flatter than baking foil. . . . . Great stuff."--Petits Propos Culinaires