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Encarnacion's Kitchen: Authentic 19th-Century Mexican Recipes from California - Traditional Spanish Cookbook by Encarnación Pinedo | Perfect for Food Historians, Cultural Enthusiasts & Home Chefs | California Studies in Food & Culture Vol.9
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Encarnacion's Kitchen: Authentic 19th-Century Mexican Recipes from California - Traditional Spanish Cookbook by Encarnación Pinedo | Perfect for Food Historians, Cultural Enthusiasts & Home Chefs | California Studies in Food & Culture Vol.9
Encarnacion's Kitchen: Authentic 19th-Century Mexican Recipes from California - Traditional Spanish Cookbook by Encarnación Pinedo | Perfect for Food Historians, Cultural Enthusiasts & Home Chefs | California Studies in Food & Culture Vol.9
Encarnacion's Kitchen: Authentic 19th-Century Mexican Recipes from California - Traditional Spanish Cookbook by Encarnación Pinedo | Perfect for Food Historians, Cultural Enthusiasts & Home Chefs | California Studies in Food & Culture Vol.9
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Description
In 1991 Ruth Reichl, then a Los Angeles Times food writer, observed that much of the style now identified with California cuisine, and with nouvelle cuisine du Mexique, was practiced by Encarnación Pinedo a century earlier. A landmark of American cuisine first published in 1898 as El cocinero español (The Spanish Cook), Encarnación's Kitchen is the first cookbook written by a Hispanic in the United States, as well as the first recording of Californio food―Mexican cuisine prepared by the Spanish-speaking peoples born in California. Pinedo's cookbook offers a fascinating look into the kitchens of a long-ago culture that continues to exert its influence today. Of some three hundred of Pinedo's recipes included here―a mixture of Basque, Spanish, and Mexican―many are variations on traditional dishes, such as chilaquiles, chiles rellenos, and salsa (for which the cook provides fifteen versions). Whether describing how to prepare cod or ham and eggs (a typical Anglo dish labeled "huevos hipócritas"), Pinedo was imparting invaluable lessons in culinary history and Latino culture along with her piquant directions. In addition to his lively, clear translation, Dan Strehl offers a remarkable view of Pinedo's family history and of the material and literary culture of early California cooking. Prize-winning journalist Victor Valle puts Pinedo's work into the context of Hispanic women's testimonios of the nineteenth century, explaining how the book is a deliberate act of cultural transmission from a traditionally voiceless group.
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5
Until recent history, women rarely wrote their own stories for the history books, men did. This is especially true of the Hispanic women living in the lands after the Mexican war (1848). The Hispanics living in California and other territories that became the American Southwest were quickly defrauded of their land and civil rights. This cookbook begins with beautifully researched and sensitively written essays describing the social-political context within which Encarnacion penned her recipes. The recipes are as she wrote them in 1898. To cook them accurately presumes adequate knowledge of cooking. Cookbooks are more than a collection of recipes, they transmit culture. This book is necessary for any person deeply interested in the cultural context of California and Southwest cuisine. Before I read this book, I wondered how accurate or true to my experience it would be. My late grandmother, Catalina Maria Ortiz Acosta, was a woman from a prominent Hispanic family, and was born in Los Angeles in 1904. When I read this book I recognized the recipes from the meals and the style of food my grandmother had cooked. The history confirmed the stories she would tell me about the various political elite she knew. (Catalina Pico, the grand daughter of Pio Pico, the last Mexican Governor or Alta California was her godmother.) I highly recommend this book.

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