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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Background and influence  





2 Scholarship  





3 Bibliography  



3.1  Editions  





3.2  Additional Laurel's Kitchen books  







4 References  





5 External links  














Laurel's Kitchen







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The New Laurel's Kitchen (1986)
First edition
AuthorLaurel Robertson, Carol Flinders, Bronwen Godfrey (1976); Laurel Robertson, Carol Flinders, Brian Ruppenthal (1986)
Original titleLaurel's Kitchen (1976)
LanguageEnglish
GenreVegetarian cuisine
PublisherNilgiri Press; Ten Speed Press

Publication date

1976; 1986
Pages511
ISBN0-89815-167-8

Laurel's Kitchen is a vegetarian cookbook by Laurel Robertson, Carol Flinders, and Bronwen Godfrey. It contributed to the rise of the vegetarian movement of the 1970s.

Background and influence[edit]

Laurel's Kitchen had a strong impact on the natural foods movement within the American counterculture.[1][2] A second edition, The New Laurel's Kitchen, was published in 1986. It had the same subtitle and the same first two authors, and Brian Ruppenthal was the new third author. The book has sold over a million copies.[3]

In 1978, Yoga Journal contained two reviews of Laurel's Kitchen, by different authors.[4] In 1994, the Vegetarian Times, a leading magazine for vegetarians, surveyed the most admired cookbooks among a "panel of cookbook authors, food editors, and chefs." The New Laurel's Kitchen was the "clear winner" for "best cookbook for beginners" (p. 107).[5]

Scholarship[edit]

A book by Megan Elias (2008), published by the University of Pennsylvania Press, devoted 9 pages to analyzing the book and its place in American culture, contending that "Laurel's Kitchen was as much a lifestyle guide as it was a cookbook" (p. 153).[2]

A scholarly review stated that Elias "gives the renowned countercultural cookbook Laurel’s Kitchen its proper due in American history.... she sees Laurel Robertson and her comrades Carol Flinders and Bronwyn Godfrey struggling, in an intelligent and heartfelt way, against the manipulations of the market, which devalued nutritious food, meaningful domestic labor, and communal connections" (p. 417).[6]

A scholarly book by Mary Drake McFeely (2001) also spent several pages discussing Laurel's Kitchen, which it described as "the Fannie Farmer of vegetarian cooking" (p. 142).[7]

Bibliography[edit]

Editions[edit]

Additional Laurel's Kitchen books[edit]

Several related books have been published by the same groups of authors. These books were based on a similar underlying philosophy, and also included the phrase "Laurel's Kitchen" in the title:

References[edit]

  1. ^ Belasco, Warren (2007). Appetite for Change: How the Counterculture Took on The Food Industry. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0801473296.
  • ^ a b Megan J. Elias (2008). Stir it up: home economics in American culture. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0-8122-4079-0. (NB: Laurel's Kitchen is discussed in pp. 152-160)
  • ^ The back cover of the 1986 edition states "over a million copies sold" (see link [1]).
  • ^ Freda E. Elliott (pp. 52, 64); Suza Norton Hebenstreit (pp. 53-55) (both 1978, March/April, under same title). Vegetarian Cookery at Laurel's Kitchen, issue 19.
  • ^ Sharon Bloyd-Peshkin (1994, November). Cookbooks You Can't Live Without. Vegetarian Times, pp. 106-108, accessed 8 Nov 2009.
  • ^ Elizabeth Hearne & Robert D. Johnston (2009). Raising the Roof: Science, Feminism, and Home Economics. Reviews in American History, v37 n3, pp413-419. doi:10.1353/rah.0.0121.
  • ^ Mary Drake McFeely (2001). Can She Bake a Cherry Pie?: American Women and the Kitchen in the Twentieth Century. Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 1-55849-333-6 (NB: Laurel's Kitchen is discussed in pp. 141-145)
  • External links[edit]

  • icon Books

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  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Laurel%27s_Kitchen&oldid=1167453162"

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    This page was last edited on 27 July 2023, at 21:14 (UTC).

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