Betty Harper Fussell est une auteure américaine dont l'œuvre exhaustive comprend des essais, des biographies, des livres de cuisine, des histoires culinaires et des mémoires. Ses écrits, souvent empreints d'expériences personnelles et d'une profonde fascination pour la culture gastronomique et du voyage, sont réputés pour leur observation perspicace et leur prose élégante. Fussell offre aux lecteurs une perspective unique sur des sujets allant des arts à l'essence du bœuf américain, explorant comment nos régimes alimentaires façonnent notre identité et notre société. Sa capacité à mêler narration personnelle et thèmes culturels plus larges fait de ses livres des lectures captivantes et stimulantes.
Ever since American soldiers returned home after World War II with a passion
for pate and escargots instead of pork and beans, our preferences have moved
from cooked to raw, from canned to fresh, from bland to savory, from water to
wine. This title includes more than two hundred recipes with chapters on
appetizers, soups, salads, sauces, and more.
Exploring the complex relationship between meat and American identity, the book delves into the historical tensions between British and Spanish influences, as well as the clash between wilderness and progress. It highlights the transformation of cattle ranching from buffalo to industrial practices, revealing how rugged individualism intersects with corporate technology. Through interviews with various stakeholders in the meat industry, the narrative unveils the mythology surrounding cowboys, technocrats, and the cultural significance of meat consumption in the United States.
Betty Fussell is an inspiring badass. She's not just the award–winning author of numerous books ranging from biography and memoir to cookbooks and food history; not just a winner of the James Beard Foundation's Journalism Award who was inducted into their "Who's Who of American Food and Beverage" in 2009; and not just an extraordinary person whose fifty years' worth of essays on food, travel, and the arts have appeared in scholarly journals, popular magazines and newspapers as varied as The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Los Angeles Times, Saveur, and Vogue. This is a woman who at eighty–two years old (and despite being half–blind) went deer hunting for the very first time in the Montana foothills with her son, Sam (as described in her 2010 essay for the New York Times Magazine.) She got her deer. This is a woman who declared in a 2005 essay for Vogue that she had to teach herself Latin and German from scratch (on top of teaching herself how to cook) as a young twenty–one year old bride, because "housewifery wasn't enough." Indeed, for Fussell one subject is never enough. Counterpoint is thrilled to be publishing this selected anthology of her diverse essays.