Small Batch: Pickles, Cheese, Chocolate, Spirits, and the Return of Artisanal Foods: Bloomsbury Studies in Food and Gastronomy
Autor Suzanne Copeen Limba Engleză Hardback – 10 oct 2014
Suzanne Cope sumptuously surveys the collective history of the production of cheese, pickles, chocolate, and alcoholic spirits, and brings this narrative to the present by incorporating interviews with over fifty modern artisans. Cope details the influences, challenges, and evolving identity of these modern craft industries-and places them in context within the recent resurgence and growth of the artisanal segment of the market. Readers interested in craft foods, and what it means to be an artisan, will find here a fascinating history and updating of both.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781442227347
ISBN-10: 1442227346
Pagini: 244
Ilustrații: 20 BW Illustrations
Dimensiuni: 146 x 224 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Seria Bloomsbury Studies in Food and Gastronomy
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1442227346
Pagini: 244
Ilustrații: 20 BW Illustrations
Dimensiuni: 146 x 224 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Seria Bloomsbury Studies in Food and Gastronomy
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
1 Artisanal Foods: From Here to There and Back Again
2 Pickles: Artisans, Craftsmen, and Hip Entrepreneurs
3 Cheese: The Power of the Post-Pastoral
4 Chocolate: The Localness of Exotics
5 Spirits: Looking to the Past to Create the Future
6 Defining the Movement, One Bite at a Time
Notes
Bibliography
About the Author
1 Artisanal Foods: From Here to There and Back Again
2 Pickles: Artisans, Craftsmen, and Hip Entrepreneurs
3 Cheese: The Power of the Post-Pastoral
4 Chocolate: The Localness of Exotics
5 Spirits: Looking to the Past to Create the Future
6 Defining the Movement, One Bite at a Time
Notes
Bibliography
About the Author
Recenzii
Earnest and anecdotal yet scientific, this exploration of revived forms of artisanal entrepreneurialism tries to capture the sense of value and nostalgia that accompanies the creation of handmade foods. Now residing in Brooklyn, the heart of the artisanal food 'incubator,' writing teacher and scholarly journalist Cope tracks down numerous examples of the new artisan class to elicit their take on the virtues of craft as they rigorously define themselves in contrast to what is mass-produced and industrial-scale. For each product, such as the humble pickle beloved of Dutch, German, and Jewish immigrants, Cope offers a brief history of its apotheosis in America. She also explores how the introduction of the Mason jar in 1858 invited home picklers to preserve food in smaller portions and with more consistent results. According to her research, these new artisans are fairly well educated, youngish urbanites across the country, most of whom were faced with job uncertainty in the mid-2000s and inspired-usually by family knowledge or a passion for personal or environmental health-to make a go at homemade production as a way to make a living. Indeed, the value of each product is increased by its story-a narrative about provenance and terroir, a sense that the farmer knows the goats that make her chèvre or the anthropologist turned chocolate maker who employs Oaxacans in Mexico to grow his cacao beans for sustainable, fair sourcing. Cope offers much that is pertinent and thought provoking.
Small Batch is one large feat! We have so many words buzzing around our food world nowadays: locavore, lacto-fermented, artisanal, carbon footprint, GMO, sustainable, and more. Suzanne Cope's excellent book is the ultimate map out of the woods and into the light with these extremely meaningful and timely discussions with our fellow residents of what R. Buckminster Fuller sagely called 'Spaceship Earth.'
Small Batch will make you yearn to eat pickles that really crunch and mozzarella that isn't 'just for melting.' Suzanne Cope's thoughtful take on the American artisanal food movement traces its evolution from frugal grandmothers canning peaches to DIY picklers and distillers in Brooklyn. Cope's fresh and delightful book shares the idealism of these craft producers, who want to change the world 'one bite at a time.'
Anyone interested in today's artisanal movement will appreciate the depth of research, historical context, and anecdotes of modern day small-scale producers that Suzanne Cope has so deftly compiled in Small Batch. From how the United States moved away from craft production, to the technologies and processes behind some of our favorite foods, and the socio-economic movement that brought us back to our artisanal roots, Cope's account will inspire and inform, compelling us, if we haven't already, to seek out pickles (or cheese, or chocolate, or spirits) that come with a story.
Small Batch is a fascinating investigation into the contemporary American artisan food revival. It situates this growing movement in broader historical and social contexts, and reflects on the question of what exactly makes a food artisanal.
Small Batch is one large feat! We have so many words buzzing around our food world nowadays: locavore, lacto-fermented, artisanal, carbon footprint, GMO, sustainable, and more. Suzanne Cope's excellent book is the ultimate map out of the woods and into the light with these extremely meaningful and timely discussions with our fellow residents of what R. Buckminster Fuller sagely called 'Spaceship Earth.'
Small Batch will make you yearn to eat pickles that really crunch and mozzarella that isn't 'just for melting.' Suzanne Cope's thoughtful take on the American artisanal food movement traces its evolution from frugal grandmothers canning peaches to DIY picklers and distillers in Brooklyn. Cope's fresh and delightful book shares the idealism of these craft producers, who want to change the world 'one bite at a time.'
Anyone interested in today's artisanal movement will appreciate the depth of research, historical context, and anecdotes of modern day small-scale producers that Suzanne Cope has so deftly compiled in Small Batch. From how the United States moved away from craft production, to the technologies and processes behind some of our favorite foods, and the socio-economic movement that brought us back to our artisanal roots, Cope's account will inspire and inform, compelling us, if we haven't already, to seek out pickles (or cheese, or chocolate, or spirits) that come with a story.
Small Batch is a fascinating investigation into the contemporary American artisan food revival. It situates this growing movement in broader historical and social contexts, and reflects on the question of what exactly makes a food artisanal.