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“A worthy candidate for the kitchen shelf.” —Star Tribune
“A wealth of information on how the kitchen, and the food Americans prepared there, has changed since 1900..Gdula's scholarly approach will have you amazed at just how far we have come in easing the drudgery of cooking...a worthy candidate for the kitchen shelf.” —Chicago Tribune
“Steven Gdula's The Warmest Room in the House will warm you right up. This whirlwind tour of the past hundred years or so sheds light on how the kitchen was often a reflection of our society at any given time...You'll emerge armed with a wealth of kitchen-related tidbits..From Typhoid Mary to Martha Stewart, Gdula paints a portrait of America's culinary characters and how they fit into our changing sense of how to cook and eat.” —Gothamist
“Forget heart and hearth, argues the author of this inviting study of domiciliary evolution - home is where the stove is. Tracing the American kitchen's century-long rise from lowly back room to glowing center of domestic life, Gdula scours the historical pantry, illuminating the development of food preparation, scullery technology, gastronomic design, and culinary celebrity. The decade-by- decade survey he serves up is a delight, rich but restrained.” —Atlantic Monthly
“[Gdula] demonstrates in ample and fascinating detail. 'The Warmest Room' traces the evolution of the kitchen decade by decade through the 20th century.” —New York Times
“Yes, of course, you are what you eat, but you may well have to cook whatever it is you are eating, and the tools and techniques for doing so can say as much about you as the food itself...[Gdula] is interesting when he outlines the rise of Julia Child, the abiding tension between diet books and cookbooks, and the appearance of appliances as faddish as the fondue pot and as durable as the microwave...[He] does an especially good job on the food-related double consciousness of Americans in recent decades.” —Wall Street Journal
“In a more than 100-year odyssey, writer Gdula documents more than 10 decades of progress (or not) by American manufacturers, food producers, food experts, the government, and, yes, the consumer in the effort to transform the kitchen into the heart of the home...Gdula makes a strong case for the constant and continuing role of food and its associated topics…Fascinating.” —Booklist
“Well-researched and entertaining...Gdula successfully personifies the American kitchen.” —Publishers Weekly
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94% buy the item featured on this page: The Warmest Room in the House: How the Kitchen Became the Heart of the Twentieth-Century American Home $16.47 |
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