I am so excited about this book, Eat the City: A
Tale of the Fishers, Foragers, Butchers, Farmers, Poultry Minders, Sugar
Refiners, Cane Cutters, Beekeepers, Winemakers, and Brewers Who Built New
York by Robin Shulman, and you can win your own copy!
New York is not a city for growing and manufacturing food.
It’s a money and real estate city, with less naked earth and industry than
high-rise glass and concrete. Yet in this intimate, visceral, and
beautifully written book, Robin Shulman introduces the people of New York City
- both past and present - who do grow vegetables, butcher meat, fish
local waters, cut and refine sugar, keep bees for honey, brew beer, and make
wine. In the most heavily built urban environment in the country, she shows an
organic city full of intrepid and eccentric people who want to make things
grow. What’s more, Shulman artfully places today’s urban food production
in the context of hundreds of years of history, and traces how we got to where
we are.
In these pages meet Willie Morgan, a Harlem man who first
grew his own vegetables in a vacant lot as a front for his gambling racket. And
David Selig, a beekeeper in the Red Hook section of Brooklyn who found his bees
making a mysteriously red honey. Get to know Yolene Joseph, who fishes crabs
out of the waters off Coney Island to make curried stews for her family. Meet
the creators of the sickly sweet Manischewitz wine, whose brand grew out of
Prohibition; and Jacob Ruppert, who owned a beer empire on the Upper East Side,
as well as the New York Yankees.
Eat the City is about how the ability of cities
to feed people has changed over time. Yet it is also, in a sense, the story of
the things we long for in cities today: closer human connections, a tangible link
to more basic processes, a way to shape more rounded lives, a sense of
something pure.
Of course, hundreds of years ago, most food and drink
consumed by New Yorkers was grown and produced within what are now the five
boroughs. Yet people rarely realize that long after New York became a dense
urban agglomeration, innovators, traditionalists, migrants and immigrants
continued to insist on producing their own food. This book shows the perils and
benefits—and the ironies and humor—when city people involve themselves in
making what they eat.
Food, of course, is about hunger. We eat what we miss and
what we want to become, the foods of our childhoods and the symbols of the
lives we hope to lead. With wit and insight, Eat the City shows how in places
like New York, people have always found ways to use their collective hunger to
build their own kind of city.
ROBIN SHULMAN is a writer and reporter whose work has
appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times,
Slate, the Guardian, and many other publications. She lives in New York
City.
To win a copy of EAT THE CITY by Robin Shulman, send
an email to contest@gmail.com, with "EAT THE CITY " as
the subject or click here. Make sure to include your name and mailing address in
the US only. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age. One entry
per email address, please. Your email address will not be shared or sold to
anyone. All entries, including names, email addresses and mailing addresses,
will be purged after winner is notified. This contest ends July 10, 2012. Good
luck!
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