Ebook: Bitter Greens: Essays on Food, Politics, and Ethnicity from the Imperial Kitchen
Author: Anthony Di Renzo
- Tags: Memoirs, Biographies & Memoirs, Culinary, Professionals & Academics, Biographies & Memoirs, Cookbooks Food & Wine, Asian Cooking, Baking, Beverages & Wine, Canning & Preserving, Celebrities & TV Shows, Cooking Education & Reference, Cooking Methods, Cooking by Ingredient, Desserts, Entertaining & Holidays, Italian Cooking, Kitchen Appliances, Main Courses & Side Dishes, Outdoor Cooking, Professional Cooking, Quick & Easy, Regional & International, Special Diet, U.S. Cooking, Vegetarian & Vegan
- Series: SUNY Series in Italian/American Culture
- Year: 2010
- Publisher: Excelsior Editions/State University of New York Press
- Language: English
- pdf
Despite the inclusion of six classic recipes, Bitter Greens is not an ethnic cookbook but a Roman banquet of political satire, cultural criticism, and culinary memoir. Set primarily in the Empire State and arranged like the courses of a traditional Italian meal, Anthony Di Renzo s wide-ranging essays meditate on Italian food at the noon of American imperialism and the twilight of ethnicity, exploring such issues as the Wegmans supermarket chain s conquest of Sicily; assembly-line sausages; the fabled onion fields of Canastota, New York; the tripe shops of postwar Brooklyn; Hunts Point Market and Andy Boy broccoli rabe; and the fatal lure of Sicilian chocolate. Is the new global supermarket a democratic feast, Di Renzo asks, or a cannibal potluck where consumers are themselves consumed? Sip an aperitif, toast Horace and Juvenal, and enjoy Chef Di Renzo s catered symposium. It will feed your mind, tickle your ribs, and heal your spleen."
Download the book Bitter Greens: Essays on Food, Politics, and Ethnicity from the Imperial Kitchen for free or read online
Continue reading on any device:
Last viewed books
Related books
{related-news}
Comments (0)