Peanuts: The Illustrious History of the Goober PeaThe peanut's rise from a lowly bean to national favorite The peanut is one of the most versatile and beloved of American food icons. In this first culinary history of the protein-laden legume, Andrew F. Smith follows the peanut's rise from a lowly, messy snack food to its place in haute cuisine and on candy racks across the country. Chronicling how peanut consumption and production has changed throughout history, Smith highlights the peanut's role in the ways economic distress, wartime conditions, industrialization, and health trends reflect and inform our culinary landscape. Chock-full of photographs, advertisements, and peanut recipes from as early as 1847, this entertaining and enlightening volume is a testament to the culinary potential and lasting popularity of the goober pea. |
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Dishonest vendors picked up used bags and filled them with fewer peanuts until concessionaires caught on and responded by stapling the bags shut to prevent reuse . An article in the Lansing Republican commented on the " nuisance which ...
Many pea- nut vendors were immigrants , and Italian vendors were the first immigrants to sell peanuts on the streets of New York . After the Civil War , Italians dom- inated the retail peanut trade . Louis Onetto arrived from Italy in ...
To maintain high profits , many vendors dealt in cheap , inferior peanuts . Beginning in 1923 , newspapers commented upon the poor quality of peanuts being sold to the public by vendors , specifically those at baseball stadiums .
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Table des matières
Origin and Dispersion | 1 |
Slave Food to Snack Food | 11 |
Soldiers and Vendors | 20 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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