Yours? Mine? Ours? Yes! We Call It American Cuisine

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Collage of American cuisine books

Other than indigenous peoples, we are a nation of immigrants, those who came by choice and those who came by force. As our country keeps growing and changing with new people arriving all the time, what we eat changes too. Like our country, American cuisine is never static. It is interesting and exciting and reflects the great, rich diversity that makes it yours, mine, and ours. American cuisine is the world—right here on our tables.

A few thoughts about American food come from one of our own queens of cuisine, Julia Child. In one of her last interviews, she was asked about a favorite food, and what a surprise. She raved about a tomato sandwich made from a sliced, flavorful tomato, on white bread thickly slathered with good mayonnaise, and sprinkled with salt and pepper. She and Jacques Pépin, an immigrant from France, presented an entire TV program on the hamburger. After a big bite from a hefty burger piled with tomato, lettuce, and other fixings, Julia declared, “Good American fare.”

For summer holidays and celebrations, many of us will be gathering together in person, or perhaps digitally, and we’ll be sharing all kinds of foods. The following have become a part of traditional foods for summer festivities: hamburgers, hot dogs, potato salad, coleslaw, chips and dips, ice cream, pies, cakes, cookies, watermelon, cold beer, and cold soda. There are many other good things to eat—way more than can be listed. Therefore, we offer a meager list of books about our food history and encourage everyone to check the library’s catalog for more.


The World—Right Here on Our Tables


Cover image for I Hear America Cooking

I Hear America Cooking

Betty Fussell gives us recipes and history about the foods we eat, and some of the people who created them. “This cultural and culinary smorgasbord offers a tasty collection of recipes as well as a great slice of Americana.”

Cover image for Italianamerican: The Scorsese Family Cookbook

Italianamerican: The Scorsese Family Cookbook

Many years ago, I discovered this book while browsing the shelves of our great cookbook collection at Central Library. Not to slight the numerous ethnic contributions to American cuisine, this book is for your amusement and edification. “Catherine Scorsese's tomato-and meat sauce was probably the only recipe ever to receive full billing in the credits of a movie when Martin Scorsese starred the sauce and his parents in Italianamerican, his favorite of all his films. Now, for the first time, all the recipes from the family have been written down for this cookbook, with photos and anecdotes that tell the story of three generations of Scorseses.”

Cover image for Rosie's Riveting Recipes

Rosie's Riveting Recipes

Recipes and ideas from the 1940s, when men went off to war, and women worked men’s jobs and managed to feed their families...The women created balanced meals and desserts with rationed food and limited time.

Cover image for Spirit of the Harvest: North American Indian Cooking

Spirit of the Harvest: North American Indian Cooking

This book covers the specific cuisines of Native Americans of North America. The foods are divided into geographic regions: southeastern coast and woodlands; northeastern coast and woodlands; Great Plains; the southwest; and the west. Lavishly illustrated with color photographs and black and white drawings of symbolic designs.

Cover image for Stand Facing the Stove

Stand Facing the Stove

The Joy of Cooking, in its many editions, is the American bible of cooking. It has changed over the years and is now more than a how-to cookbook. The newer editions encompass and acknowledge the diversity of American cuisine. This is the biography of Irma Rombauer, who wrote the first edition, which almost did not happen.