
Description
Winner of the Gourmand World Cookbook Award in the US in the Fish and Seafood category!
A 2017 Nautilus Award Winner!
With the growing trend to reintroduce US-caught seafood into our culinary lexicon, this trustworthy reference from prestigious writer, chef, and sustainability advocate Barton Seaver will be the go-to source for home cooks, culinary students, professional chefs, and anyone fascinated by American food culture. American Seafood looks at maritime history, including Native American fisheries; fishing technology (including aquaculture); the effect of imports on our diet, economy, and the health of our seas; the biology of taste; and the evolution of seafood cuisine, from Pine Bark Stew, red and white chowder, Po' Boys, and Clam Bakes, to Baltimore Crab Cakes, Planked Salmon, Oysters Rockefeller, and Sushi. And although this is not a cookbook, Barton Seaver presents invaluable information on traditional culinary arts and his favorite ideas for taste pairings and preferred methods for cooking seafood. An index of species--with common, regional, and accepted names, all alphabetized--rounds out this must-have volume.
Product Details
Publisher | Union Square & Co. |
Publish Date | November 07, 2017 |
Pages | 528 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781454919407 |
Dimensions | 11.1 X 9.1 X 1.5 inches | 5.4 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"Seaver (For Cod and Country), head of the sustainable seafood and health initiative at the Center for Health and the Global Environment at the Harvard School of Public Health, has assembled a gorgeous illustrated encyclopedic survey of America's evolving relationship with seafood. From abalone to wreckfish, Seaver details key characteristics of each fish, its place in culinary history, and common preparations: grouper, for example, are caught mostly in the Gulf of Mexico, and are an 'all-purpose fish, as their pearly white meat cooperates with just about any flavors and methods of preparation.' Occasionally he suggests recipes for classic dishes such as lobster Newburg, cioppino stew, and seafood gumbo. Seaver offers accolades to the people in the fishing industry who help bring that food to the table, and the book is accordingly laced with gorgeous photos of fishers and their vessels, massive stacks of preserved halibut and fresh shrimp, and vintage advertisements and other fishing ephemera. 'Seafood is part of our culinary heritage, ' Seaver writes in the book's introduction, and his argument that Americans can't understand the present without knowledge of the past rings loud and clear in this remarkable work." --Publishers Weekly (starred review)
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