Culture

We are what we read: three new books about food

Take your pick from tomes about the rising popularity of Italian cooking, the virtues of 'eating in,' or the transformation of a Capitol Hill restaurateur into a rural farmer and cheesemaker.

We are what we read: three new books about food
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Ronald Holden

Take your pick from tomes about the rising popularity of Italian cooking, the virtues of 'eating in,' or the transformation of a Capitol Hill restaurateur into a rural farmer and cheesemaker.

Three recent books provide  us with quite different ways of looking at the most fundamental element  of life: what we eat. This is especially relevant as we approach Earth  Day (April 22) and as we consider that everything we eat comes from the land. The  most ambitious book tells the story of America's slow romance with Italy,  the most frustrating grew out of a blog about eating at home, and the  most satisfying is the memoir of a Seattle restaurateur turned farmer.

* * *

Italian food, says John Mariani, has conquered the world. Maybe not the entire globe, but there's little  doubt that pizza has become as American as apple pie. Not since Waverly  Root wrote The Food of Italy in 1953 has there been such  a comprehensive look at the contribution Italian cuisine has made to  the American way of eating. Mariani's How Italian Food Conquered  the World probably overstates the geography of the conquest (Italian  cuisine is popular in Japan, but has made few inroads in the rest of  Asia, Africa, or South America).

Still, there's no denying that Italian  food has become enormously popular in Europe and North America, and  very quickly, too, considering that 100 years ago pasta was considered  street food prepared by peasants, to be eaten with the fingers. (Don't  believe it? The book has pictures!)

Of the 5 million immigrants who came through Ellis Island in the  30 years before the First World War, 80 percent came from southern Italy.  At the end of the war, one of every four immigrants who lived in the  U.S. had been born in Sicily, having left to escape the grinding poverty  of farm life as contadini.

Booker T. Washington, visiting  Sicily in 1910, found children working in the mines like slaves, while  millions of Italian emigrants, most of them ex-farmers, were lucky  to make $10 a week in hostile American cities. Despite the terrible  conditions in their homeland, half who tried life in America would return. Those who remained  would transform those tenement enclaves into Little Italys.

By 1929, there were more pasta factories in the U.S. than any other country  outside of Italy. The first canned sauces were Italian marinara, the  classic red tomato sauce. Still, not until 1905 was there a pizzeria  in New York, and newspapers in the late 1930s were still explaining  that pizza pie wasn't pie.

Seattle, for its part, never had a true “Little Italy” neighborhood,  but it did have “Garlic Gulch,” the Rainier Valley, of which  Remo Borracchini's bakery is the last remaining vestige. Vito's and  the Rosellini restaurants were located closer to downtown. An immigrant  named Angelo Merlino opened Seattle's first Italian grocery store; his  grandson Armandino Batali would open Salumi after retiring from Boeing.  And Armandino's son Mario Batali — well, Mario's version of Italian cooking  conquered New York.

Mariani is considered something of a throwback, an old-fashioned, magazine-feature  food writer (Esquire's annual Best New Restaurants list,  for example). Gossipy, chummy with his subjects, he also does extensive,  footnoted research (though occasionally inaccurate; the Roman vomitariums  were amphitheater exits, not facilities for purging banquet overdoses).  He catalogs the Italian names of California wine makers (Gallo, Italian  Swiss Colony, Martini, Sebastiani, Trinchero, Mondavi), Italian wines  sold in the U.S. (Lambrusco, Riunite, Chill-a-Cella), and Italian-American  purveyors of processed food (Hector Boiardi, who became known as Chef  Boy-Ar-Dee, along with Rice-A-Roni, Spaghetti Os).

There's  a fascinating condensed history on Esquire's blog. Some of the highlights:

There was no Italian pavilion  at the 1964 World's Fair, even though “La Dolce Vita” had, four  years earlier, begun a half-century media campaign orchestrated by the  Italian Trade Commission to glamorize the Italian way of life. Julia  Child never mentioned olive oil, but Rachael Ray has made the acronym  EVOO part of the language. Fed Ex eventually made overnight delivery  of real Parmigiano cheese and Prosciutto di Parma possible. The book and movie Under  the Tuscan Sun whipped up fresh appetites for the Italian experience;  Olive Garden even promised dinners prepared by chefs who had studied  in the village of Riserva di Fizzano.

In Chicago, a travel agent named  Karen Herbst put together a loose network of home-based cooking schools  in Italy under the name of The International Kitchen, creating a new  category of leisure activity for American vacationers. (Disclosure: I'm the  company's director of wine tours.) The carbohydrate phobia induced by  the Atkins diet was barely a speed bump in America's love affair with  pasta. “Ciao Italiano,” on PBS with Mary Ann Esposito, is the longest-running  cooking series on American television. Playwright Neil Simon says that  the love of Italian food is a law of the universe. Calvin Trillin suggests  replacing the Thanksgiving turkey with spaghetti carbonara.

* * *

Cathy Erway is the opposite of Mariani, throwing herself into a first-person blog, NotEatingOutInNY.com.  While not as sappy and pretentious as Julie Powell's "The Julia  Project," its premise is no less annoying: "Look at me, I'm  going to do something no one like me, who has a decent job and lives  in New York, has ever done before: I'm not going to eat out, I'm not  going to order in, I'm going to cook all my meals at home for the next  two years."

She dutifully types out recipes,  doubts and triumphs, concerns about her social life, and, mission accomplished,  writes a book about her experience: The Art of Eating In: How I Learned  to Stop Spending and Love the Stove. How do you not eat out if you're  on a date? Make dinner together at home, and organize supper clubs.

Early on, Erway quotes Mariani's claim (in America Eats Out) that  American restaurants all seem to have a gimmick (or, more likely, a  recognizable theme). But staying home is Erway's own gimmick. She doesn't  exactly "dumpster-dive," but she comes close, calling her quest  "urban foraging."

She gets off a couple of good lines along  the way: "The world is our oyster bar" and "Little lamb  meatball, who made thee?" But overall, Not Eating Out suffers from a tedious writing style and a treacly moralism, part Thoreau  and part Holden Caulfield. Is this a coming-of-age memoir, an anti-materialist  manifesto, or a chirpy cookbook? Erway's many admirers claim it's all  three (SeriousEats.com even named it one of 2010's top 10 cookbooks),  but that's asking a lot more than this delivers. Better by far is her  new blog, LunchAtSixPoint.com, about urban gardening and "reviving  the working class lunch." It's still a bit too chirpy and self-conscious  for my taste, but Erway has lost the preachy tone.

* * *

What does deliver is Kurt Timmermeister's The Growing of a Farmer.

Anyone who's lived in Seattle  for the past couple of decades has seen the evolution of Capitol Hill,  has watched Broadway transform itself from a battle-scarred no-man's  land and freak show to an increasingly gentrified thoroughfare. Anchoring  Broadway for much of that time was Café Septième, which its owner,  Kurt Timmermeister, had moved up the hill from Belltown (where it was  replaced by Marjorie's and then Buckley's).

Septième became a Capitol  Hill institution, whether for morning coffee and pastries or nighttime  drinks and steaks. The usual complaints: One customer's leisurely dinner  would be another's nightmare, but Septième also provided work for a  squad of servers who would later move into full-time writing, chief  among them Dan Savage.

The best parts of Timmermeister's book read like “procedurals,”  in the same way that the first look at Anthony Bourdain's Kitchen  Confidential (excerpted as "Annals of Gastronomy, Hell's  Kitchen") made such an impact in The New  Yorker exactly 11 years ago this week. (And how far  we've all come since those innocent, pre-Food Channel days!)

Consider, for example, the  chapters on killing chickens or slaughtering pigs. Farming isn't just  about deracinating vegetables or tugging at udders; it's about slitting  throats, too. We may buy pork chops on styrofoam trays wrapped in plastic,  but Timmermeister knows better. “I feel that food is intrinsically  good. Food is from the earth. It provides us with nutrition to live.  It is the source of all life, it has the power to make us healthy.”

Standing in opposition, symbolically  and practically, are the public-health authorities. “Their view,” he writes, “is that food is intrinsically dangerous.” Rather  than fight the federal Food and Drug Administration and the Washington  State Department of Agriculture, he stops selling raw milk and raw butter.

How did Timmermeister get from Broadway to a self-sufficient, 12-acre  farm, two-thirds of it pastureland, on Vashon Island? The journey unfolds  over two decades as the urbanite becomes, first, a suburban homesteader then a cautious gardener, before selling Septième and acquiring, in  its stead, a Jersey cow named Dinah. His days become defined by the  bookends of a farm — morning chores and evening chores. The four dozen  birds and beasts (chickens, ducks, cows, sheep, pigs, dogs) on his property  have to be milked, watered, and fed. He has no farmhouse wife to help,  no farmhouse kids, only a Mexican laborer (without whom, it's clear,  the place would fall apart).

Craigslist is a huge help (for  used tractor parts, for baby pig “weaners”). Two-day-old chicks  come by U.S. Mail. When it's time for the chickens to be dispatched, the  wings get fed to the pigs, “smart, attentive, aggressive, stubborn  and charming.” Before Timmermeister brings himself to the painful  business of killing a pig, he takes the reader through the agony and  the joy of buying a gun. The dairy prospers as Kurtwood Farms, as it's  now known, begins to produce a highly regarded, creamy cows-milk cheese  called Dinah.

And once a week, Timmermeister  opens his kitchen table to a dozen visitors for a farmhouse dinner,  a multicourse feast produced almost entirely from his own land (exceptions  made for flour and salt). And yes, there's plenty of farmhouse butter.

The books:

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Ronald Holden

By Ronald Holden

Ronald Holden is a regular Crosscut contributor. His new book, published this month, is titled “HOME GROWN Seattle: 101 True Tales of Local Food & Drink." (Belltown Media. $17.95).