I will tell the story of my early years of appetizing involvement in food scholarship as it developed from folk cookery to foodways and in the study of American food history. Using a museum as a laboratory, I will focus on Colonial Pennsylvania Plantation to illustrate our knowledge of history through foodways. I also will focus on a contemporary world barbeque cookoff, its folklore and folklife, and the maintenance of food habits
Grow Food, Cook Food, Share Food is a practical food history lesson, an editorial about everything g...
Food is one of the principle components in understanding culture. Since the beginning of time, the h...
By Alma Igra I started the “Leftovers” project because I wanted to bring together two of my greatest...
By Marie Pellissier I’ve always been fascinated by the appeal of food in living history museums—the...
By Amanda Moniz Historians are currently engaged in a project of learning to use food as a source an...
Since the mid-twentieth century, an increasing number of scholars have incorporated food studies int...
By Theresa McCulla When members of the American Historical Association gathered for their annual mee...
Food and cuisine are important subjects for historians across many areas of study. Food, after all, ...
In this post, Tiffany Fisk explains the importance of recipes for apprentices in Historic Foodways, ...
From Compost to Gram\u27s Kitchen: A Cultural History of Food is a memoir combined with a look at f...
Maia Surdam considers how foodways served as the basis for an Appalachian Oral History class she tau...
This research utilizes historical archaeology in the examination of the foodways and food landscape ...
This research utilizes historical archaeology in the examination of the foodways and food landscape ...
My poster is about my research project through Berea College this past summer that focused on the st...
Studying Appalachian foodways can be a vehicle for learning about various historical, cultural, geog...
Grow Food, Cook Food, Share Food is a practical food history lesson, an editorial about everything g...
Food is one of the principle components in understanding culture. Since the beginning of time, the h...
By Alma Igra I started the “Leftovers” project because I wanted to bring together two of my greatest...
By Marie Pellissier I’ve always been fascinated by the appeal of food in living history museums—the...
By Amanda Moniz Historians are currently engaged in a project of learning to use food as a source an...
Since the mid-twentieth century, an increasing number of scholars have incorporated food studies int...
By Theresa McCulla When members of the American Historical Association gathered for their annual mee...
Food and cuisine are important subjects for historians across many areas of study. Food, after all, ...
In this post, Tiffany Fisk explains the importance of recipes for apprentices in Historic Foodways, ...
From Compost to Gram\u27s Kitchen: A Cultural History of Food is a memoir combined with a look at f...
Maia Surdam considers how foodways served as the basis for an Appalachian Oral History class she tau...
This research utilizes historical archaeology in the examination of the foodways and food landscape ...
This research utilizes historical archaeology in the examination of the foodways and food landscape ...
My poster is about my research project through Berea College this past summer that focused on the st...
Studying Appalachian foodways can be a vehicle for learning about various historical, cultural, geog...
Grow Food, Cook Food, Share Food is a practical food history lesson, an editorial about everything g...
Food is one of the principle components in understanding culture. Since the beginning of time, the h...
By Alma Igra I started the “Leftovers” project because I wanted to bring together two of my greatest...