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E-raamat: Cornbread Nation 7: The Best of Southern Food Writing

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  • Formaat: 288 pages
  • Sari: Cornbread Nation
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-May-2014
  • Kirjastus: University of Georgia Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780820346953
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  • Formaat: 288 pages
  • Sari: Cornbread Nation
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-May-2014
  • Kirjastus: University of Georgia Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780820346953
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"Edited by Brett Anderson, the food critic at the New Orleans Times-Picayune, Cornbread Nation 6 collects the best in southern food writing from the previous two years, with a few classic or rediscovered pieces included. The essays are organized in six chapters: "Menu Items," which is the first and longest section; "Messing with Mother Nature," which looks at the relationship between food and the environment; "Southern Characters," which includes personality pieces; "Southern Drinkways"; "Identity in Motion," which examines change in the southern food world; and "The Global South," which includes some essays that came out of last year's SFA symposium. Anderson collects a who's who of food writing--nationally prominent names like Molly O'Neill, Calvin Trillin, Michael Pollan, Kim Severson and Martha Foose to SFA perennials John T. Edge, Jessica Harris, Bill Addison, Matt & Ted Lee and Lolis Eric Elie. Two classic pieces include Frederic Douglass' "Blood-Bought Luxuries," written in the 1830s and reprintedlast year in Lapham's Quarterly, and Edward Behr's profile of Eula Mae Dore, who died in 2008. Notable essays include Paul Greenberg's "Reconsidering the Oyster"; "Wendell Berry's Wisdom" by Michael Pollan; "Home Grown" (about Chef Sean Brock) by Jane Black; "I Was a Texas Rib Ranger" by Brett Martin; Besha Rodell's "An Open Letter to Kim Severson"; Calvin Trillin's "No Daily Specials"; and "Putting Food on the Family" by Jack Hitt. The book includes one photo essay by David Grunfeld documenting the Collins Oyster Family"--

Arvustused

Cornbread Nation 7 is American regionalism at its finest. Its a splendid collection of tales of Southerners traveling abroad, immigrants journeying to the South, and children of immigrants living in the South and then reflecting on their heritage. Through the meticulous efforts of guest editor Francis Lam, on behalf of the Southern Foodways Alliance and general editor John T. Edge, we have been bestowed with this gem. -- Shyam K. Sriram * PopMatters * 'Love' and 'home' (including homes far from the South) show up more than once in this book, but please don't fear Crock-Pots of sentimentality. The subjectthis great complicated subject of Southern food, Southern food history and chefs, the habits and humor and rules that go in and around and behind our foodis here described and analyzed and eulogized by some of the South's finest writers. -- Clyde Edgerton * Garden & Gun * The writings in Cornbread Nation 7 are as varied as the South itself. Some of the authors were born Southern, some come from away, but their love for and connection with the South and its food bring them all together. . . . Their works show how the South is changing with outside influences, while keeping its own identity. Even if youre not a die-hard foodie, anyone with an interest in food or Southern culture can enjoy this book. -- Zinia Randles * Tennessee Libraries *

Introduction 1(6)
Francis Lam
COME IN AND STAY AWHILE
We Waited as Long as We Could
7(1)
Daniel Patterson
The Homesick Restaurant
7(17)
Susan Orlean
Stuffed, Smothered, Z'herbes
24(6)
Sara Roahen
What I Cook Is Who I Am
30(5)
Edward Lee
God Has Assholes for Children
35(5)
Eddie Huang
You Have to Fall in Love with Your Pot
40(1)
Ida MaMusu
Around the World in Eight Shops
40(6)
Kathleen Purvis
That's Your Country
46(3)
Argentina Ortega
Friends and Families
49(6)
Nikki Metzgar
The Perfect Chef
55(16)
Todd Kliman
PROVISIONS AND PROVIDERS
Nature's Spoils
71(19)
Burkhard Bilger
I Had a Farm in Atlanta
90(6)
John T. Edge
The Price of Tomatoes
96(5)
Barry Estabrook
Working in the Shadows
101(7)
Gabriel Thompson
The Celebrity Shepherd
108(6)
Besha Rodell
The Triumph of Jamie Oliver's "Nemesis"
114(3)
Jane Black
Grabbing Dinner
117(6)
Bill Heavey
Hogzilla
123(8)
Dan Baum
A Taste for the Hunt
131(3)
Jonathan Miles
Eat Dessert First
134(5)
Robb Walsh
Anyone and Everyone Is Welcome
139(6)
Sue Nguyen
FIVE WAYS OF LOOKING AT SOUTHERN FOOD
The Great Leveler
145(4)
Julia Reed
The Post-Husk Era
149(5)
Robert Moss
Ode to Gumbo
154(4)
Kevin Young
Mother Corn and the Dixie Pig: Native Food in the Native South
158(7)
Rayna Green
Every Ounce a Man's Whiskey? Bourbon in the White Masculine South
165(14)
Sean McKeithan
THE SOUTH, STEPPING OUT
When the Queso Dripped Like Honey
179(4)
Sarah Hepola
Willie Mae Seaton Takes New York
183(7)
Lolis Eric Elie
Mississippi Chinese Lady Goes Home to Korea
190(11)
Ann Taylor Pittman
An Oyster Named Dan
201(7)
Jack Pendarvis
Coconut: The Queen of Cakes
208(6)
Jeffrey Steingarten
The Vicksburg Lebanese Supper
214(3)
Mary Louise Nosser
Soul Food? What Is That?
217(4)
Langston Hughes
We Shall Not Be Moved
221(4)
Jessica B. Harris
Fixing on the Next Star
225(1)
Patricia Smith
The Brixton: It's New, Happening, and Another Example of African American Historical "Swagger-Jacking"
226(5)
Stephen A. Crockett Jr.
SOUTHERNERS GOING HOME
I Placed a Jar in Tennessee
231(6)
John Jeremiah Sullivan
A Love Letter to North Carolina's Red Bridges Barbecue
237(6)
Monique Truong
The Missing Link: Donald Link Opens Second Cochon in Lafayette
243(7)
Brett Anderson
Of Pepperoni Rolls and Soup Beans: On What It Might Mean to Eat like a West Virginian
250(4)
Courtney Balestier
Pasquale's Hot Tamales
254(3)
Joe St. Columbia
Cutting Greens
257(1)
Lucille Clifton
Remembering Pitmaster Ricky Parker
258(2)
Joe York
Grace
260(3)
Jake Adam York
Contributors 263(4)
Acknowledgments 267
FRANCIS LAM is editor-at-large at Clarkson Potter. He appears at the Critics Table in the fifth season of Top Chef Masters (Bravo). He was features editor at Gilt Taste, which was awarded six IACP awards and four James Beard award nominations in its first two years. His own writing has been nominated for a James Beard award and three IACP awards, winning one. He has served as senior writer at Salon.com and a contributing editor at Gourmet, and his work has appeared in the 200613 editions of Best Food Writing.