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Ernest Matthew Mickler (1940–1988)

Forfatter af White Trash Cooking

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A cult American spiral bound from the 1980s. A few great photographs with recipes which are of a time and place - reading rather than cooking material but no less diverting for that.
 
Markeret
Carrie.deSilva | 2 andre anmeldelser | Aug 28, 2011 |
A few of the recipes sound good in this book, but most of them are things that I would not eat. I actually got my favorite cobbler recipe from a relative's copy of this book years ago and still use it regularly. Even if you don't like all the recipes, this book is worth buying just for the "white trash" stories and photos. I grew up in South Alabama, so I have actually seen and heard a lot of this in my lifetime.
 
Markeret
ladybug74 | Jun 6, 2009 |
Ernest Matthew Mickler also wrote Sinkin Spells, Hot Flashes, Fits and Cravins. Both of these could have been condescending, mean-spirited takes on the food habits of the working poor. Certainly the names of these books would lend credence to the belief that that's what one would find in them. And I bought them because they looked amusingly kitsch-filled. But I was wrong. This isn't kitsch. Mickler loved these people. He had affection for their food. This was the written equivalent of the field recordings made of rural musics by Alan Lomax and his father. Mickler was preserving these artifacts, this ephemera. I wish he hadn't died. I think he was just getting started. I think he was just getting started. He died in 1988 of AIDS - the day after this book was published.

There's a wonderful article about the books here: http://www.oxfordamericanmag.com/content.cfm?ArticleID=46&Entry=Extras
… (mere)
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mcglothlen | 2 andre anmeldelser | Apr 25, 2007 |
Ernest Matthew Mickler also wrote the White Trash Cook Book. Both of these could have been condescending, mean-spirited takes on the food habits of the working poor. Certainly the names of these books would lend credence to the belief that that's what one would find in them. And I bought them because they looked amusingly kitsch-filled. But I was wrong. This isn't kitsch. Mickler loved these people. He had affection for their food. This was the written equivalent of the field recordings made of rural musics by Alan Lomax and his father. Mickler was preserving these artifacts, this ephemera. I wish he hadn't died. I think he was just getting started. He died in 1988 of AIDS - the day after this book was published.

There's a wonderful article about the books here: http://www.oxfordamericanmag.com/content.cfm?ArticleID=46&Entry=Extras
… (mere)
 
Markeret
mcglothlen | Apr 25, 2007 |

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Værker
4
Medlemmer
472
Popularitet
#52,190
Vurdering
4.0
Anmeldelser
5
ISBN
9

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