It's All American Food - Cookbook Review
The Best Recipes For More Than 400 New American Classics
by
David Rosengarten
(Little, Brown and Company, 2005)

What
exactly is American food these days? Is it spaghetti
and meatballs or Southern fried chicken? Maybe it's
empanadas, Baltimore crab fluffs and chicken satay
with peanut sauce. How about bibimbap? David Rosengarten's
answer is yes to all of the above and a lot
more.
Before
they fell from grace, do you remember those bubbly-skinned
crunchy egg rolls you'd get with your chow mein? You'd
dunk them in some duck sauce or hot mustard and
they were bursting full of steaming hot napa cabbage,
water chestnuts, tiny shrimp and sometimes a little
pork. Rosengarten will teach you how to make them,
and they'll taste just like they used to.
Expectations
are high when a food authority like Rosengarten writes
another book. His Dean & DeLuca Cookbook (with Joel Dean and Giorgio DeLuca) and its exhaustive
collection of "new classics," did not skimp
on patient instruction, background stories and thoughtful
narrative. His next, Taste, was not quite the
epic but still a substantial book in which Rosengarten
shared his favorite foods from around the world. It's All American Food is another big effort that covers so much
territory I'm beginning to wonder if this guy ever
sleeps.
In It's All American Food, Rosengarten tells us
he "set out to write this book with the intention
of discovering America all over again." He certainly
did that, and more, with more than four hundred recipes
that travel across the country and over the Pacific
to Hawaii. But this is not your ordinary collection
of American recipes. It is an introspective study
of the ethnic, regional and classic foods we eat in
this county how they got here, how they evolved
and how they are best prepared.
As
always, Rosengarten gives us plenty to chew on with
his honest opinions, intellect and natural wit. He
debunks food snobbery immediately. Imagine the venerated Alain Ducasse going gaga over a plate of Southern
barbecued ribs. It happened in Queens in front of
Rosengarten. He is not afraid to engage in serious
conversations about (horrors!) the finer qualities
of Hellmann's mayonnaise, Heinz ketchup and margarine.
After all, they have a place in the American kitchen
and they add value to the right foods.
Rosengarten
is wickedly intelligent and witty. He is a prolific
writer, competent teacher and somehow humble at the
same time. He is also a likeable guy who can sniff
out the finest truffle and still appreciate, with
honest enthusiasm, a simple tuna salad sandwich. You
won't use truffles in this book, but you will get recipes
for Tuna Salad Sandwiches, San Diego Fish Tacos, Philly
Cheesesteak and Kung Pao Chicken.
Rosengarten
segments the American food experience into three categories
beginning with "Ethnic America." In this
section, he examines how Italian, Korean, Indian,
French (and you name it) cuisines landed in America
and morphed into the forms we recognize today. Rosengarten
gives the most attention to the obvious front-runners
of Italian, Chinese and Mexican descent, but you won't
lack for Lamb Tagine, Thai Yellow Shrimp Curry or
Saag Paneer either. Better still, you'll finish this
section not only knowing why Cuban food is the most
familiar of Caribbean cuisines, but also how to whip
up a crispy skinned Cuban-Style Roast Pork Shoulder
and a batch of Tostones.
The
second section is devoted to "Regional America"
and foods with roots in places like New England, the
Midwest and the South. While some of these regional
dishes rarely stray far from home, you can find many
of them embedded in other parts of the country. These
are the real things. You'll find plenty of background
and recipes for Home-Cured Corned Beef, New York Deli
Style; Apple Butter; Maryland Crab Soup; Seafood and
Okra Gumbo; Buffalo Chicken Wings and, yes, even Corn
Dogs. What about California? Rosengarten wisely acknowledges
the Golden State as the hamburger capital of the world,
but also as home to Cobb Salad, great tacos and sushi.
Here I thought he spoiled the fun a bit by including
some highbrow recipes for Cod Steaks Poached in Olive
Oil and Herbs, and Tuna Burgers with Lemon-Shallot
Mayonnaise, but I guess anything goes in California.
Finally,
Rosengarten gives a nod to comfort food in "Classic
America." These are the familiar foods that occupy
most American kitchens: Tuna Noodle Casserole, Swiss
Steak, Macaroni and Cheese and Apple Pie. There are
also good, solid recipes for Creamed Spinach, Parker
House Rolls and, trust him, an amazing Burned Chocolate
Ice Cream.
There's
little to complain about. The format could be friendlier.
With its textbook style, the recipes and text run
closely together. It's easy to read but tough to use.
For instance, while trying to focus on Fattoush, I
found my eyes wandering over to Tabbouleh in the next
column. And I wouldn't want my Raita to muddle up
the Mulligatawny. I guess function was somewhat sacrificed
for good looks.
It's
also not clear, up front, what you might be getting
yourself into. Considering the generous detail throughout
the book, I'm surprised that overall preparation times
are not clearly stated. Read the recipe carefully
because some of the dishes require advance preparation
and long sitting times corned beef is a two-week
ordeal that isn't disclosed immediately, and the Guacamole
with Grilled Onion and Roasted Garlic needs at least
an hour to roast the garlic.
But
the rewards in this book are great. It's All American
Food is a serious book but altogether fun, engaging
and deliciously useful. It's part history lesson and
part cookbook with appropriate undertones of American
pride. Whether it's ethnic, regional or comfort food,
Rosengarten gives thoughtful consideration to the
vastness of America's culinary riches and bestows
them to us in this fetching book.
Reviewed
by Kevin Schoeler
(Updated: 05/12/11 SG)
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