Publication Date:June 1, 2010 Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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ISBN13: 9780061288500
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Condition: New
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In 97 Orchard, Jane Ziegelman explores the culinary life that was the heart and soul of New York's Lower East Side around the turn of the twentieth centurya city within a city, where Germans, Irish, Italians, and Eastern European Jews attempted to forge a new life. Through the experiences of five families, all of them residents of 97 Orchard Street, she takes readers on a vivid and unforgettable tour, from impossibly cramped tenement apartments down dimly lit stairwells where children played and neighbors socialized, beyond the front stoops where immigrant housewives found respite and company, and out into the hubbub of the dirty, teeming streets.
Ziegelman shows how immigrant cooks brought their ingenuity to the daily task of feeding their families, preserving traditions from home but always ready to improvise. While health officials worried that pushcarts were unsanitary and that pickles made immigrants too excitable to be good citizens, a culinary revolution was taking place in the streets of what had been culturally an English city. Along the East River, German immigrants founded breweries, dispensing their beloved lager in the dozens of beer gardens that opened along the Bowery. Russian Jews opened tea parlors serving blintzes and strudel next door to Romanian nightclubs that specialized in goose pastrami. On the streets, Italian peddlers hawked the cheese-and-tomato pies known as pizzarelli, while Jews sold knishes and squares of halvah. Gradually, as Americans began to explore the immigrant ghetto, they uncovered the array of comestible enticements of their foreign-born neighbors. 97 Orchard charts this exciting process of discovery as it lays bare the roots of our collective culinary heritage.
Food in our cultureAugust 29, 2010 jane brinker 97 Orchard is an engaging book that shows how "American" culture has appropriated food from all the various generations and cultures that came here in the late 19th and early 20th century. Great read.
Lower East SideAugust 29, 2010 Gerald H. Dessner(Santa Monica, California) Thoroughly enjoyed reading this true tale of life on the lower east side including recipies and data about years of meals. I really couldn't put it down and recommend it, especially for someone from New York City.
ExcellentAugust 27, 2010 Maureen Mitton A wonderful read. This is an innovative, social history, that is very well written. Excellent for those interested in food, immigrant culture, history and/or New York City.
Loved it!August 24, 2010 Chelsea Girl(New York, New York) Reading this book brought back so many wonderful memories of my grandparents. It was a true reminder of how brave they were to set out for a new land and how they willingly endured myriad hardships in order to reap America's rewards of freedom and opportunity.
This is my family's story told via foodAugust 19, 2010 shanarufus(Asheville, NC) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
My grandfather came from Russia (now Belarus), my grandma from Romania (then spelled Roumania). They lived on the Lower East Side from 1900 to early 20s when my grandma had the means to move 'uptown'. My grandma came alone at age 15, the first of 17 family members brought over one by one including the aging parents, and had to attach herself to a family because there was no male to come and fetch her at Ellis Island. My grandfather fled to avoid 25 years of conscription in the Czar's army--and this was typical of thousands upon thousands of young men. (An alternative was for mothers and fathers to cripple their barely pubescent sons so when the Cossacks rode into town, these lame and limping boys would be passed by.) My grandfather abandoned my grandmother with 4 children under the age of 10--he liked to drink and gamble and play honky tonk piano. Just like the thousands of abandoned wives, my grandma also became the janitor of her tenement and had a little seamstress and dressmaking room. My father was run over by a horse-drawn vehicle at the age of 11 or 12 and my grandma, who spoke no English, screamed and tore her hair out and wouldn't let the doctor amputate my father's leg. This is all in the book (except for being run over) -- my family's story is absolutely typical.
I am probably boring you! The book, however, is not boring. The only trouble I had was reading all the pork, veal, beef recipes--I'm a devoted vegan and stuffing food down a goose's throat during its last two weeks of life, etc., made me sick. The French still do it, it's called pate.
What wonderful research went into this utterly original social history. The author is the culinary director of the New York City Tenement Museum. Talk about a dream job for a foodie. I'm trying to figure out what I can recreate given my food restrictions. Kasha varnishkes without the schmaltz. Really enjoyed this book. I love this kind of history and not only Jewish. The Irish and German and Italian sections were equally alive, just not my own story.