Repast : dining out at the dawn of the new American century, 1900-1910 / Michael Lesy and Lisa Stoffer.

What we ate, how we ate, and how eating changed during America’s first real food revolution, 1900–1910. Before Julia Child introduced the American housewife to France’s cuisine bourgeoise, before Alice Waters built her Berkeley shrine to local food, before Wolfgang Puck added Asian flavors to classi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lesy, Michael, 1945-
Other Authors: Stoffer, Lisa
Language:English
Published: New York : W.W. Norton & Company, 2013.
Edition:First Norton edition.
Subjects:
Physical Description:257 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 25 cm
Format: Book
Description
Summary:
What we ate, how we ate, and how eating changed during America’s first real food revolution, 1900–1910. Before Julia Child introduced the American housewife to France’s cuisine bourgeoise, before Alice Waters built her Berkeley shrine to local food, before Wolfgang Puck added Asian flavors to classical dishes and caviar to pizza, the restaurateurs and entrepreneurs of the early twentieth century were changing the way America ate. Beginning with the simplest eateries and foods and culminating with the emergence of a genuinely American way of fine dining, Repast takes readers on a culinary tour of early-twentieth-century restaurants and dining. The innovations introduced at the time—in ingredients, technologies, meal service, and cuisine—transformed the act of eating in public in ways that persist to this day. Illustrated with photographs from the time as well as color plates reproducing menus from the New York Public Library’s Buttolph Menu Collection, Repast is a remarkable record of the American palate.
Call Number:TX633 .L533 2013
Bibliography Note:Includes bibliographical references (pages 235-247) and index.
ISBN:9780393070675
0393070670