Martha Stewart’s 77th book, Martha’s American Food, is a culinary travelogue that celebrates the best of these United States. Broken up regionally, the recipes and stories highlight what makes each part of this country unique, while at the same time create a desire to not only want to try the food from far away places but meet the people for whom these dishes are everyday food.
The book opens with a section called “All American”
featuring classics like blueberry pancakes, pot roast, and carrot cake. These
recipes are fairly comment but , the “backstory” accompanying each recipe,
describing the history and origins of these classics, makes the seemingly
ordinary extraordinary.
From there Martha visits each region of the country with a
collection of cocktails, entrees, side dishes and treats that stir up a pride
of place that goes beyond our own neighborhoods to the entire country. You know
that feeling of national pride you get listening to the Stars and Stripes
Forever by the Boston Pops on Independence Day? Martha creates that same
feeling here, in a cookbook.
The Northeast includes a good sampling of New England’s
seafood favorites and a dessert
collection that include New York Cheesecake and Boston Cream Pie. In the South
we’re introduced to Low Country and Cajun specialties, plus a few things worthy
of Derby Day. The Southwest section has a Tex-Mex accent but breaks from the
usual suspects to include Tamale Pie, Barbequed Brisket and Spiced Pumpkin
Flan. The West rounds out the book with entrée salads, salmon, and artichokes taking
center stage.
With 200 recipes, American Food is more of a volume as
opposed to a book. Listing the recipes would be a cumbersome task. The book is so large that if Ryan Seacrest
stood on a copy he might have a chance to play for the Lakers! It’s that big.
But its more just a collection of recipes, American food is a story of a people
who found interesting and sometimes unusual foods and created incredible meals
with them. The stories are about more than food, its about a nation that, time
and time again, has found itself in interesting situations and created
wonderful things as a result.
My second reaction after reading Martha’s American Food,(
right after “I need to buy a treadmill because I know I am going to make most
everything in this book), was OMG, I understand why people love Martha, this
book is fantastic. I picked the book up this morning and started reading it in
the gardens at the Van Vleck house, lost all track of time, and found myself inspired.
The book is available at both Watchung Booksellers and
Williams Sonoma in Montclair. Flip through a couple pages before buying and I
bet about 60% of the people who do so will find themselves in the supermarket
buying ingredients to make one of the recipes within an hour of making the
purchase.
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