The Immigrant Cookbook: Recipes That Make America Great
Leyla Moushabeck
(Author)
Ricky Ricarius
(Illustrator)
21,000+ Reviews
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Description
More than 42 million people living in the United States emigrated here from other countries. In the most idealized tales told about America, it is a safe haven for people seeking refuge or in search of adventure and prosperity in a land where opportunity is promised to all--promises that, in reality, are selectively applied and have been systematically denied to the communities on whose freedom and opportunities they are built. Along with hopes and dreams, immigrants have brought valuable gifts: recipes and ancestral knowledge that has transformed the way America eats. Imagine an America without pizza or pad Thai, hummus or hot dogs, sushi or strudel--for most people, it wouldn't taste much like America at all. In these times of troubling anti-immigrant rhetoric and vilification, The Immigrant Cookbook: Recipes that Make America Great offers a celebration of the many immigrant communities that have contributed to America's vibrant food culture, and uplifts the experiences of it's culinary innovators. This beautifully photographed cookbook features appetizers, entrees, and desserts--some familiar favorites, some likely to be new encounters--by renowned American chefs from Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, and Europe.
Product Details
Price
$35.00
$32.55
Publisher
Interlink Books
Publish Date
July 01, 2018
Pages
224
Dimensions
8.25 X 10.63 X 1.0 inches | 2.64 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781566560382
BISAC Categories:
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Leyla Moushabeck is Interlink Publishing's longtime cookbook editor. Over the past 10 years, she has worked on numerous award-winning cookbooks, including, most recently, Interlink's humanitarian cookbook project Soup for Syria: Recipes to Celebrate our Shared Humanity and The Aleppo Cookbook, winner of the 2017 Art of Eating Prize. She is born to a Palestinian father and a British mother, and lives with her Colombian husband and son in Brooklyn.
Reviews
Recipes tell two stories: the story of how to make a meal and the story of the people who have made it over time. Recipes, like people, come from somewhere. They bring this somewhere to their new home and, in so doing, create something new. The resulting meal, like the resulting country, is all the better for it. The Immigrant Cookbook is a vital reminder and celebration of these two stories.--Yotam Ottolenghi
Reading the recipes in this beautiful book, I felt like I was listening to a language that could help bridge every divide.--Alice Waters
A gorgeous celebration of the delicious diversity of America-plate by plate.--David Lebovitz
The Immigrant Cookbook is exceptionally beautiful and important-the best story of America. It contains so much more than recipes and should be in every kitchen for Americans to show off and use with joy. It is a book that will have pride of place-and use-in my kitchen!--Deborah Madison
In her introduction, Moushabeck references 'these troubling times of anti-immigrant rhetoric' and counters that rhetoric by extolling the culinary gifts 42 million American immigrants have given the country, which are the inspiration for this excellent collection of recipes provided by immigrants and their descendants. Each recipe includes a personal, often touching headnote and brief bio. The diversity of recipes is staggering: Armenian yogurt soup, roasted whole fish from Senegal with a bracing spice rub, colorful Singapore stir-fry. Some are innovative twists on classics; others are tried-and-true favorites. Author and blogger Nadia Hassani combines her German and Tunisian heritage by braiding challah dough around a rhubarb filling. Chef Reem Assil discovered muhammara while visiting her father's family in Syria. Ivan Garcia's pozole is eaten in Mexico to celebrate Mother's Day, birthdays, and 'sometimes a divorce.' Moushabeck strikes a balance between big-name chefs (Michelin-starred chef and humanitarian Jose Andres checks in with his wife's gazpacho) and figures such as Tunde Wey, who emigrated from Nigeria at 16 and runs a dinner series exploring race. Wey's contribution is a recipe for smoky jollof rice, made with turmeric, coriander, and chili pepper. Affection for these dishes is palpable: writer Samantha Seneviratne says that her cashew semolina cake from Sri Lanka is so fragrant that it 'doubles as aromatherapy' while baking. This is an outstanding melting pot of recipes.
"This is a powerful, important, and delicious cookbook which everyone should own. Roots cooking at its finest."--Anthony Bourdain
In very few places will you, all at once, encounter so many James Beard Award-winning chefs and so many food professionals who are committed to making dreams come true. In this book, for which editor Moushabeck and the publisher are donating a portion of proceeds to the ACLU in support of immigrants' rights, more than 70 gourmet talents contribute 75 dishes from their native countries, covering a medley of cuisines from every continent but Antarctica. There are lots of recognizable names: Daniel Boulud (who contributes Lyonnaise salad with lardons), Australia's Curtis Stone (Pavlova with coconut cream and tropical fruits), Cronut inventor Dominique Ansel (mini-madeleines), and Jamaica's Ziggy Marley (coconut dream fish). Each profile-recipe features a straightforward bio and photo of the recipe's inventor, an in my own words" introduction about the dish and its origins, and an exquisite color photograph. Directions are written in narrative style, with ingredients posted on the side. A great collection that benefits from the incredible accomplishments of its contributors, and its excellent cause."
Reading the recipes in this beautiful book, I felt like I was listening to a language that could help bridge every divide.--Alice Waters
A gorgeous celebration of the delicious diversity of America-plate by plate.--David Lebovitz
The Immigrant Cookbook is exceptionally beautiful and important-the best story of America. It contains so much more than recipes and should be in every kitchen for Americans to show off and use with joy. It is a book that will have pride of place-and use-in my kitchen!--Deborah Madison
In her introduction, Moushabeck references 'these troubling times of anti-immigrant rhetoric' and counters that rhetoric by extolling the culinary gifts 42 million American immigrants have given the country, which are the inspiration for this excellent collection of recipes provided by immigrants and their descendants. Each recipe includes a personal, often touching headnote and brief bio. The diversity of recipes is staggering: Armenian yogurt soup, roasted whole fish from Senegal with a bracing spice rub, colorful Singapore stir-fry. Some are innovative twists on classics; others are tried-and-true favorites. Author and blogger Nadia Hassani combines her German and Tunisian heritage by braiding challah dough around a rhubarb filling. Chef Reem Assil discovered muhammara while visiting her father's family in Syria. Ivan Garcia's pozole is eaten in Mexico to celebrate Mother's Day, birthdays, and 'sometimes a divorce.' Moushabeck strikes a balance between big-name chefs (Michelin-starred chef and humanitarian Jose Andres checks in with his wife's gazpacho) and figures such as Tunde Wey, who emigrated from Nigeria at 16 and runs a dinner series exploring race. Wey's contribution is a recipe for smoky jollof rice, made with turmeric, coriander, and chili pepper. Affection for these dishes is palpable: writer Samantha Seneviratne says that her cashew semolina cake from Sri Lanka is so fragrant that it 'doubles as aromatherapy' while baking. This is an outstanding melting pot of recipes.
"This is a powerful, important, and delicious cookbook which everyone should own. Roots cooking at its finest."--Anthony Bourdain
In very few places will you, all at once, encounter so many James Beard Award-winning chefs and so many food professionals who are committed to making dreams come true. In this book, for which editor Moushabeck and the publisher are donating a portion of proceeds to the ACLU in support of immigrants' rights, more than 70 gourmet talents contribute 75 dishes from their native countries, covering a medley of cuisines from every continent but Antarctica. There are lots of recognizable names: Daniel Boulud (who contributes Lyonnaise salad with lardons), Australia's Curtis Stone (Pavlova with coconut cream and tropical fruits), Cronut inventor Dominique Ansel (mini-madeleines), and Jamaica's Ziggy Marley (coconut dream fish). Each profile-recipe features a straightforward bio and photo of the recipe's inventor, an in my own words" introduction about the dish and its origins, and an exquisite color photograph. Directions are written in narrative style, with ingredients posted on the side. A great collection that benefits from the incredible accomplishments of its contributors, and its excellent cause."