Tastes of Faith: Eating in the United States by Leah Hochman [1557537992, Format: EPUB]

Title: Tastes of Faith: Jewish Eating in the United States (The Jewish Role in American Life: an Annual Review of the Casden Institute for the Study of the Jewish Role in American Life)
Autor: Leah Hochman
Print Length: 160 pages
Publisher (Publication Date): Purdue University Press (December 15, 2017)
Language: English
ASIN: B077TY3HP4
ISBN-10: 1557537992
ISBN-13: 978-1557537997
File Format: EPUB

“Tell me what you eat, and I will tell you what you are,” wrote the eighteenth-century French politician and musician Jean Brillat-Savarin, giving expression to long held assumptions about the role of food, taste, and eating in the construction of cultural identities. Foodways—the cultural, religious, social, economic, and political practices related to food consumption and production—unpack and reveal the meaning of what we eat, our tastes. They explain not just our flavor profiles, but our senses of refinement and judgment. They also reveal quite a bit about the history and culture of how food operates and performs in society. Jewish food practices and products expose and explain how different groups within American society think about what it means to be Jewish and the values (as well as the prejudices) people have about what “Jewish” means. Food—what one eats, how one eats it, when one eats it—is a fascinating entryway into identity; for Jews, it is at once a source of great nostalgia and pride, and the central means by which acculturation and adaptation takes place. In chapters that trace the importance and influence of the triad of bagels, lox, and cream cheese, southern kosher hot barbecue, Jewish vegetarianism, American recipes in Jewish advice columns, the draw of eating treyf (nonkosher), and the geography of Jewish food identities, this volume explores American Jewish foodways, predilections, desires, and presumptions.