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Pizza, Pickles, and Apple Pie

The Stories Behind the Foods We Love

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
How did a pizza become a pizza? Is a pickle really a cucumber in disguise? Explore fascinating food history, nutrition, and American culture through this middle-grade graphic-format nonfiction book for kids that answers oft-asked questions about the foods we love, explaining how they came to be.
Whether it's pizza and pickles or sushi and salad, there’s a story behind all of our favorite foods. From breakfast to dinner, this book explores popular foods from our history, and explains their origins. Young readers will travel back in time—sometimes thousands of years—to cultures all over the globe to learn how and why foods were discovered. They’ll also meet key people from food history along the way, including the inventor of breakfast cereal and the creator of salad dressing. The science behind unhealthy foods is also explored in this fascinating book, which includes projects and activities for both the classroom and home.
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    • Kirkus

      August 15, 2023
      A broader perspective for readers who think no further than cupboards and fridges when asked where their food comes from. Constructing mini-narratives--some decidedly simplistic--as he goes meal by meal from the "Sad, Boring World Before Breakfast" to the "Sweet History of Dessert," Rickert explains how, for instance, Central Asian herdsmen discovered yogurt; enslaved Black people made fried chicken at the behest of landowners in America but, after the Civil War, invented "shoebox" lunches on their own; and, before the 17th century (in, presumably, Europe), sweets were served among the courses rather than at meal's end. ("Please pass the ham and cookies," a diner requests.) Aside from occasionally spooning in critical comments about "cheap toys" and mountains of sugar in breakfast cereals, the author maintains a generally buoyant tone, reflected in the accompanying large cast of informally drawn, diversely clad and hued cartoon cooks and consumers uttering jokey side remarks. Along with breezy side notes on, say, the training of a sushi chef or the U.S. Navy's "ice-cream barge" (which dished up, he claims, 800 million gallons to American sailors in World War II), he layers in tributes to "superheroes" associated with various foods or inventions, such as pioneering cookbook maven Eliza Leslie and Charles Cretors (creator of the popcorn wagon), and includes galleries of birthday cakes, pickles, pizzas, and sandwiches throughout. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Too light to be very filling but tasty nonetheless. (recipes, further reading, index) (Nonfiction. 9-11)

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • Kindle Book
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  • English

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