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The Brooklyn Cookbook (Knopf Cooks American) [Hardcover]

Lyn Stallworth (Author), Rod Kennedy Jr. (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Knopf Cooks American September 10, 1991
Brooklyn has been called the fourth largest city in America, and it is the Borough's claim that one out of every seven United States citizens has roots here. Brooklyn is also America's most celebrated hometown. Everybody knows where it is (across that bridge), and almost everybody has an opinion about it: don't the people say "boid" and "toity-toid," and act argumentative, brassy, and sassy? Sure they do -- at least some of them. They also say what they mean in other tongues, for groups from all over the world call Brooklyn home.

Brooklynites are fiercely loyal to neighborhood, family, and the food that nourishes them, body and soul. That is what this book celebrates ... I can hear you asking, What is Brooklyn food? What makes it special? No one claims that we have the kind of food that characterizes a region, such as Boston baked beans, Maryland crab cakes, or Philadelphia cheese steak. What defines our food is, in short, attitude and memory. The Brooklyn attitude is, "You respect me, I'll respect you; but believe me -- my neighborhood, and my food. is best." Memory ensures that the stories of good times, and the food that made them so, are passed along to younger family members.

The neighborhoods are distinct, but they are ever changing. Where most immigrants once came largely from Europe, they now arrive from the Caribbean and Asia. Formerly Scandinavian Bay Ridge is now home to Greeks, Chinese, and the fastest-growing group of Middle Easterners anywhere. Brooklyn is by no means all blue collar (it never was); Wall Streeters and other executive types appreciate the wonderful houses and tree-lined streets. They have their foodways, too.

Thomas Wolfe, a writer who once lived in Brooklyn, was wrong: you can go home again, home to the Brooklyn that lives in the rich memories and cherished recipes of the sons and daughters of the Borough. As we who live on the eastern side of the Brooklyn Bridge say, come on over!

to feeding the Dodgers and the Polar Bear swimmers who brave the icy waters of the Atlantic all winter -- with wonderful nostalgic photographs. Family, tradition, and neighborhood are at the heart of Brooklyn life. And it is the food -- reflected in the kinds of recipes gathered here -- that expresses these values.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Brooklyn is a melting pot unto itself. Settled by the Dutch and then home to waves of immigrants, including the Irish, Jews, Scandinavians, Italians, Germans, Poles, Hispanics, African Americans, Greeks, and Middle Easterners, the borough is rich in culinary history. Lauding that history, Lyn Stallworth and Rod Kennedy Jr.'s The Brooklyn Cookbook explores in 250 recipes Brooklyn's "hometown" cooking. Replete with nostalgic photos, it also chronicles, in the words of Brooklynites themselves, a larger cultural heritage. Readers who enjoy social-culinary history, and those who relish the diverse, nurturing dishes of everyday urban life, will embrace the book.

Dividing its recipes and recollections among chapters such as Resorts and Neighborhoods, Nationalities, and Brewed, Made, Sold, and Served in Brooklyn, the book reminds us constantly that food is inseparable from the people who prepare and eat it. Here are Mrs. Stahl's Potato Cocktail Knishes, which she sold on the Boardwalk during the Depression; Lundy's Manhattan Clam Chowder, the peerless brew of Brooklyn's famed Sheepshead Bay seafood house; Dee Dee Daily's Pigeon Peas and Rice, a Caribbean-Black American specialty; and Joe Romanelli's mamma's Pizza Rustica, prepared while "pappa and my brothers would sit around drinking homebrew and playing pinochle." The recipes work for all cooks, but it is the stories behind them--"An Italian-American Dinner in 1960," for example, or "A Pail of Beer and Sauerbraten"--that make the book a true culinary treasure. --Arthur Boehm

From Publishers Weekly

"What defines our food is . . . attitude and memory. The Brooklyn attitude is, 'You respect me, I'll respect you; but believe me--my neighborhood, and my food, is best," quips Stallworth. The only flaw in this delightful book is that readers may get distracted poring over the authors' accounts of the once and future Brooklyn, N.Y., forget what they're cooking and have to start over again. Which actually wouldn't be a bad thing, since the choice of fare here is exceptionally broad, from Flatbush-born opera star Beverly Sills's "air cookies" (chocolate meringue) and Brooklyn Heights novelist Norman Mailer's stir-fried broccoli coupled with gin and tonic to "Josie's pork chops," courtesy of Carroll Gardens, and the Sephardic vegetable pickles surrendered by Syrian Jews in Flatbush. Brooklynites Kennedy and Stallworth evoke the borough's neighborhoods comprehensively but crisply in recipe and reminiscence. And though Brooklyn can't claim a definitive mainstay like Maryland's she-crab soup, its splendid ethnic variety will speak for itself. This is a book for anyone who ever went to Ebbets Field, wants to try tahini or to recreate the hallowed chocolate blackout cake of Ebinger's bakery. Photos not seen by PW. BOMC alternate.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; 1 edition (September 10, 1991)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0394584171
  • ISBN-13: 978-0394584171
  • Product Dimensions: 9.8 x 6.7 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #839,854 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Nostalgic Walk Through My Borough, September 12, 2000
By 
Anthony Cuozzo (Fairfield, CT United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Brooklyn Cookbook (Knopf Cooks American) (Hardcover)
In addition to the fact that the recipes work and are delicious, the best thing about this book was that it traced the ethnic roots of the many diverse cultures that made Brooklyn a true melting pot. I grew up in Fort Greene/Clinton Hill and that book brought me back home for a little while longer. Reading the stories that accompanied each of the recipes, I was again transported to the experiences and landmarks of my childhood and that of my parents - football weddings, the Botanical Garden, Junior's, Jahn's Ice Cream Parlor,Ebinger's Bakery, Bamonte's Restaurant, the Garden Room at Abraham and Straus, weekend picnics at Crestwood Lake. I could almost hear Aunt Jennie and my mother arguing over whose cooking most closely resembled their mother's (it was my mother,although Aunt Jennie wielded a mean fusilli rod!!) More importantly, I found myself immersed again in the sense of family and community that are my home borough - a sense that transcends every ethnic background. It was fun, poignant and tasty! I have given this book to friends as gifts over the past few years and everyone loved it. Only one criticism. In the section on Cammereri's Bakery, with the references to the movie Moonstruck, Gilberto Godoy (the real life bakery owner), did not play Ronnie Cammereri. Nicolas Cage played Ronnie, one of the starring roles. Given the popularity of the movie,that was probably the one item that should have been absolutely correct.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I Want to Relive Brooklyn!, December 18, 2001
This review is from: The Brooklyn Cookbook (Knopf Cooks American) (Hardcover)
My youth was spent in Cleveland, Ohio with excellent family cooks that made their own noodles, doughnuts, Christmas cookies, and superb roast pork-sauerkraut dinners. When, as a cook book collector, I began reading this book, I was transferred to the melting pot of America, back to my French/German background of cooking traditions. When I would "come up for air", I was almost sad to return to my present day setting as the Brooklyn neighborhoods and traditions warmed my heart. This is a beautiful slice of another part of the ethnic mix of America when people shared customs with their children. I wanted to move to Brooklyn back to those days as beautifully delineated in the Brooklyn Cookbook. Most of the recipes are ridiculous, like the thought of hanging something in a cheesecloth off the back porch. It's a history book filled with love and amazing, old-fashioned recipes. We'd never make them today so don't buy it strictly for the recipes!It's Brooklyn during a lovely time in America, and I would love to have been there! (Wonderful for a holiday read!) Madge Bruner
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Nostalgia and comfort food recipes make this book a winner, January 29, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Brooklyn Cookbook (Knopf Cooks American) (Hardcover)
This is a wonderful book, especially for any babyboomer who originally hails from Brooklyn or even just the New York City area. The stories are heartwarming and paired with marvelous photos that capture the essence of Brooklyn culture from the 40s through the 80s. Some of these recipes are right out of my childhood and food that I haven't thought of in years. Although many of the recipes are not compatible with today's more health conscious cooking, they are wonderful to try once in a while for a treat. It's a comfort just to have this book around.
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