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Garden variety : the American tomato from corporate to heirloom / John M. Hoenig.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Arts and traditions of the tablePublisher: New York : Columbia University Press, [2018]Description: x, 270 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9780231179089
  • 0231179081
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • SB349 .H64 2018
Contents:
1. The Early American Tomato -- 2. The Tomato On The Farm: Culinary And Agricultural Advancements, 1820 -- 1900 -- 3. A Tomato For All Seasons: The Development Of The Twelve-Month Fresh And Processed Tomato Industries, 1880 -- 1945 -- 4. Consuming Tomatoes: Culinary Creativity And Expansion In The Age Of Industrialization -- 5. "A Poor Tomato Is Better Than No Tomato": The Harvester And The Commodification Of The Tomato -- 6. Meet The Farmer Or Become One: Challenging Commercial Food Culture.
Summary: Chopped in salads, scooped up in salsa, slathered on pizza and pasta, squeezed onto burgers and fries, and filling aisles with roma, cherry, beefsteak, on-the-vine, and heirloom: where would American food, fast and slow, high and low, be without the tomato? The tomato represents the best and worst of American cuisine: though the plastic-looking corporate tomato is the hallmark of industrial agriculture, the tomato's history also encompasses farmers' markets and home gardens. Garden Variety illuminates American culinary culture from 1800 to the present, challenging a simple story of mass-produced homogeneity and demonstrating the persistence of diverse food cultures throughout modern America. John Hoenig explores the path by which, over the last two centuries, the tomato went from a rare seasonal crop to America's favorite vegetable. He pays particular attention to the noncorporate tomato. During the twentieth century, as food production, processing, and distribution became increasingly centralized, the tomato remained king of the vegetable garden and, in recent years, has become the centerpiece of alternative food cultures. Reading seed catalogs, menus, and cookbooks, and following the efforts of cooks and housewives to find new ways to prepare and preserve tomatoes, Hoenig challenges the extent to which branding, advertising, and marketing dominated twentieth-century American life. He emphasizes the importance of tomatoes to numerous immigrant groups and their influence on the development of American food cultures. Garden Variety highlights the limits on corporations' ability to shape what we eat, inviting us to rethink the history of our foodways and to take the opportunity to expand the palate of American cuisine. --Jacket.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Lending Books Elisabeth C. Miller Library Tall Shelves SB349 .H64 2018 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 39352800173163
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

1. The Early American Tomato -- 2. The Tomato On The Farm: Culinary And Agricultural Advancements, 1820 -- 1900 -- 3. A Tomato For All Seasons: The Development Of The Twelve-Month Fresh And Processed Tomato Industries, 1880 -- 1945 -- 4. Consuming Tomatoes: Culinary Creativity And Expansion In The Age Of Industrialization -- 5. "A Poor Tomato Is Better Than No Tomato": The Harvester And The Commodification Of The Tomato -- 6. Meet The Farmer Or Become One: Challenging Commercial Food Culture.

Chopped in salads, scooped up in salsa, slathered on pizza and pasta, squeezed onto burgers and fries, and filling aisles with roma, cherry, beefsteak, on-the-vine, and heirloom: where would American food, fast and slow, high and low, be without the tomato? The tomato represents the best and worst of American cuisine: though the plastic-looking corporate tomato is the hallmark of industrial agriculture, the tomato's history also encompasses farmers' markets and home gardens. Garden Variety illuminates American culinary culture from 1800 to the present, challenging a simple story of mass-produced homogeneity and demonstrating the persistence of diverse food cultures throughout modern America. John Hoenig explores the path by which, over the last two centuries, the tomato went from a rare seasonal crop to America's favorite vegetable. He pays particular attention to the noncorporate tomato. During the twentieth century, as food production, processing, and distribution became increasingly centralized, the tomato remained king of the vegetable garden and, in recent years, has become the centerpiece of alternative food cultures. Reading seed catalogs, menus, and cookbooks, and following the efforts of cooks and housewives to find new ways to prepare and preserve tomatoes, Hoenig challenges the extent to which branding, advertising, and marketing dominated twentieth-century American life. He emphasizes the importance of tomatoes to numerous immigrant groups and their influence on the development of American food cultures. Garden Variety highlights the limits on corporations' ability to shape what we eat, inviting us to rethink the history of our foodways and to take the opportunity to expand the palate of American cuisine. --Jacket.

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