![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEikgzR5TYy170PGWlal2whgwDH9jHsJxHFI62l5ORtDDrAN8qEPh6EKSwcBdRM96SiOuMh8QawjUsjPbQ0VWhxZUae-hDXQ9mv8xWgxUPPk-WUlYrr-6yXJR_XnODs8mzUMi4NykUL51c5P/s320/The+Dirty+Life+cover.jpg)
This is a memoir by a woman who gave up her life as a journalist in NYC to start a farm from the ground up with her husband. It's beautifully written and tells the story of the nitty gritty reality of running a farm. Her descriptions of meals made lovingly from the fruits of the work of their own hands were captivating.
It also made me glad that we participate in a local CSA which helps small farms survive in the day and age of horrid factory farming and industrial agriculture.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi1t-iZLQfp-9WeinwLgmL1hvwaFx7cCJQk4x9W0kGsE7_RpDxeeiK0FRP0Ghc3LFk4ofbYxorWVP1-d8KEeA4vWl8MWom6o8lilzflWwldHqbKfUTTw52x_edpmORFxkmE0fjGJIx6Fin9/s200/righteous+porkchop+cover.jpg)
Niman is ironically a vegetarian. She is an attorney who worked for Robert Kennedy's Waterkeeper project, and in her work began to discover the ugly truth of factory farming -- not only what it does to our food, but the animals, the water supply, and the environment in general, as well as the livelihood of farmers and industry workers. This book is partly a description of her own journey of discovery, but also gives practical advice on how we can make a difference and vote with our forks. Her husband was the founder of Niman Ranch, which raises animals in humane and sustainable conditions. This book is just one of the many voices that convincingly argue that we can choose to take back our knowledge of where our food comes from and how it is made, and make both practical and moral/ethical decisions we can live with based on that knowledge.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh2GXQctA2gVtlO-AGEECwvvQgyr1jd6uWrOUMcLwhUTeG3VHkLfaR5_jjx3gfAHgRnaUFHQaXlphZsbECBYLrZAW2al7pQE9Or43Nvv9Di-27SmnevT3aSU51QDsaXpQ4fYvnQbQAhxu79/s200/fannie%2527s+last+supper+cover.jpg)
Christopher Kimball (of America's Test Kitchen and Cooks Illustrated fame) lives in Boston, and made it a project to discover as much as he could about Fannie Farmer and about how cooking and daily life would have been in her time. The book is devoted to the preparations for a 12 course, turn of the century meal that he and his staff prepared for a group of guests, in almost exactly the same way Fannie would have cooked such foods herself. His team even made their own gelatin from calves feet! Along the way Kimball discusses American culinary history, as it pertains to the different types of cuisine he was preparing and testing, using Farmer's famous cookbook as a reference. You would have to be really interested in food history and culinary arts to want to read the entire book, but it was truly fascinating, and I appreciated Kimball's dry wit. I'm glad that this book did not let me down, since I am such a devotee of ATK and Cooks. (The most foolproof recipes you will ever find, hands down.)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjOS4puMED8kmjZt_S65n3OXKaO8u9YRD70Lwz2ygFdgLVmRx0b041lxeiZVQQQL925-h14B1t23dJ3jehVPvVkO5GDmNl4KOrn2-es_mIqUmrn2_Q81uxJg4g5DuILVYPePBKbSbWQ-qgX/s200/my+life+in+france.jpg)
Next on my food-related book list is Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life by Barbara Kingsolver.
No comments:
Post a Comment