Grand Rapids Food

Grand Rapids Food
Author: Lisa Rose Starner
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Total Pages: 150
Release: 2013-06-18
Genre: History
ISBN: 1625846517

Grand Rapids' food scene is bursting with local flavor. Farmers, teachers, chefs and activists are taking back their foodways and serving up the fresh, healthful fruits of their labor. Author Lisa Rose Starner captures the essence of the growing food movement in Grand Rapids and the rugged individuals who are tilling the soil, growing food and launching successful food businesses while powering community change--one garden, one backyard, one block, one store, one plate of food, cup of coffee and mug of beer at a time.

The United States of Arugula

The United States of Arugula
Author: David Kamp
Publisher: Crown
Total Pages: 418
Release: 2007-07-17
Genre: Cooking
ISBN: 0767915801

The wickedly entertaining, hunger-inducing, behind-the-scenes story of the revolution in American food that has made exotic ingredients, celebrity chefs, rarefied cooking tools, and destination restaurants familiar aspects of our everyday lives. Amazingly enough, just twenty years ago eating sushi was a daring novelty and many Americans had never even heard of salsa. Today, we don't bat an eye at a construction worker dipping a croissant into robust specialty coffee, city dwellers buying just-picked farmstand produce, or suburbanites stocking up on artisanal cheeses and extra virgin oils at supermarkets. The United States of Arugula is a rollicking, revealing stew of culinary innovation, food politics, and kitchen confidences chronicling how gourmet eating in America went from obscure to pervasive—and became the cultural success story of our era.

Burn the Ice

Burn the Ice
Author: Kevin Alexander
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 386
Release: 2020-07-14
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0525558047

"Inspiring"—Danny Meyer, CEO, Union Square Hospitality Group; Founder, Shake Shack; and author, Setting the Table James Beard Award-winning food journalist Kevin Alexander traces an exhilarating golden age in American dining—with a new Afterword addressing the devastating consequences of the coronavirus pandemic on the restaurant industry Over the past decade, Kevin Alexander saw American dining turned on its head. Starting in 2006, the food world underwent a transformation as the established gatekeepers of American culinary creativity in New York City and the Bay Area were forced to contend with Portland, Oregon. Its new, no-holds-barred, casual fine-dining style became a template for other cities, and a culinary revolution swept across America. Traditional ramen shops opened in Oklahoma City. Craft cocktail speakeasies appeared in Boise. Poke bowls sprung up in Omaha. Entire neighborhoods, like Williamsburg in Brooklyn, and cities like Austin, were suddenly unrecognizable to long-term residents, their names becoming shorthand for the so-called hipster movement. At the same time, new media companies such as Eater and Serious Eats launched to chronicle and cater to this developing scene, transforming nascent star chefs into proper celebrities. Emerging culinary television hosts like Anthony Bourdain inspired a generation to use food as the lens for different cultures. It seemed, for a moment, like a glorious belle epoque of eating and drinking in America. And then it was over. To tell this story, Alexander journeys through the travails and triumphs of a number of key chefs, bartenders, and activists, as well as restaurants and neighborhoods whose fortunes were made during this veritable gold rush--including Gabriel Rucker, an originator of the 2006 Portland restaurant scene; Tom Colicchio of Gramercy Tavern and Top Chef fame; as well as hugely influential figures, such as André Prince Jeffries of Prince's Hot Chicken Shack in Nashville; and Carolina barbecue pitmaster Rodney Scott. He writes with rare energy, telling a distinctly American story, at once timeless and cutting-edge, about unbridled creativity and ravenous ambition. To "burn the ice" means to melt down whatever remains in a kitchen's ice machine at the end of the night. Or, at the bar, to melt the ice if someone has broken a glass in the well. It is both an end and a beginning. It is the firsthand story of a revolution in how Americans eat and drink.

America's First Culinary Revolution, Or How a Girl from Gopher Prairie Came to Dine on Eggs Fooyung

America's First Culinary Revolution, Or How a Girl from Gopher Prairie Came to Dine on Eggs Fooyung
Author: Susan B. Carter
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2011
Genre:
ISBN:

According to culinary scholars, American food retained a strongly British character through most of its history. Chinese food was the exception. Beginning in the early-twentieth century, Chinese restaurants began appearing outside of Chinatowns and the cuisine entered the cultural mainstream. This paper is an effort to explain why only the Chinese were able to take their ethnic food outside their enclaves to the larger American public. It begins with the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which forced the transnational Chinese community to devise new institutions to continue its migration and maintain connections between those in the United States and their families back home. Paradoxically, the new institutions that emerged from the crisis broke traditional family bonds and replaced them with individual relationships in the guise of “paper families.” These new institutions were smaller, more profit-oriented, and better funded than earlier ones. They allowed the Chinese to move out of the low-skilled wage work that had been their primary employment and into self-employment. The first industry they chose was laundry, a competitive industry with low capital requirements that effectively offered a subsistence wage to a seemingly unlimited number of people (viewed from the perspective of Chinese immigrant flows) who were willing to work long hours in remote locations. When Americans became interested in exotic food, the Chinese were perfectly situated to respond. No other ethnic group had developed the same kinds of transnational, business-oriented institutions that allowed them to funnel exotic ingredients and young, eager, hardworking, and loyal workers to America and oversee their deployment across communities around the country. Their singular history provided the Chinese with both the motivation and the capacity to carry out America's first culinary revolution.

A Revolution in Eating

A Revolution in Eating
Author: James E. McWilliams
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 414
Release: 2005
Genre: Cooking
ISBN: 9780231129923

History of food in the United States.

The Last Days of Haute Cuisine

The Last Days of Haute Cuisine
Author: Patric Kuh
Publisher:
Total Pages: 241
Release: 2002-02
Genre:
ISBN: 9780756753030

The story of the liberation of ethnic cuisine and what happened when haute cuisine came to America and its elitist principles met our populist beliefs. Traces the evolution of the 1941 opening of Le Pavillon to rest. such as Le Cirque, Spago, and Danny Meyer's Union Square group. Brings us inside this high-stakes business through its untold anecdotes, its legendary cooks and bright new stars. Old-timers from Le Pavillon recount the rise, glory, and fall of Henri Soule. Chez Panisse originals tell how the Berkeley counterculture propelled its creation. Here are the personalities, the visionaries, and the writers -- from Julia Child to M.F.K. Fisher to James Beard -- who created our modern gastronomic world.

Alice Waters and Chez Panisse

Alice Waters and Chez Panisse
Author: Thomas McNamee
Publisher:
Total Pages: 380
Release: 2011-08
Genre:
ISBN: 9781437978735

In 1971, it was nearly impossible to find a cappuccino or a croissant in this country, and goat cheese and mesclun were virtually unheard of. Then a Francophile named Alice Waters and her motley coterie of dreamers turned an old stucco house in Berkeley into the birthplace of a new food culture -- one that incorporated fresh, local ingredients and progressive ideas in a venue reminiscent of a Marseilles waterfront tavern. It was called Chez Panisse and Waters would eventually be called the mother of American cooking. Based on unprecedented access to Waters and her inner circle, this authorized biography offers an intimate portrait of the maverick who re-educated the American palate.

Start the Fire

Start the Fire
Author: Jeremiah Tower
Publisher: HarperCollins
Total Pages: 246
Release: 2017-04-04
Genre: Cooking
ISBN: 0062498452

AS SEEN IN THE NEW DOCUMENTARY JEREMIAH TOWER: THE LAST MAGNIFICENT Newly revised and reissued to coincide with The Last Magnificent, a documentary feature produced by Anthony Bourdain, the indelible and entertaining memoir from Jeremiah Tower which chronicles life at the front lines of redefining modern American cuisine. Widely recognized as the godfather of modern American cooking, Jeremiah Tower is one of the most influential cooks of the last forty years. In 2004, he rocked the culinary world with a tell-all story of his lifelong love affair with food, and the restaurants and people along the way. In this newly revised edition of his memoir, retitled Start the Fire, Tower shares with wit and honesty his insights into cooking, chefs, celebrities, and what really goes on in the kitchen. Above all, Tower rhapsodizes about food—the meals choreographed like great ballets, the menus scored like concertos. No other book reveals more about the seeds sown in the seventies, the excesses of the eighties, and the self-congratulations of the nineties. With a new introduction by the author, Start the Fire is an essential account of the most important years in the history of American cooking, from one of its singular personalities.