Synopses & Reviews
"Crisscrossing the nation, visiting everyone from small ranchers to famous chefs to corporate honchos, Fussell skillfully explains why beef, steak in particular, has come to symbolize what this country is all about,for good and ill ... You'll want to dust off the grill and get cooking.--Chicago Tribune
In Raising Steaks, Betty Fussell saddles up for a spirited ride across America on the trail of our most iconic food.
When we bite into a steak's charred crust and pink interior, we bite into contradictions that have branded our nation from the start. We taste the competing fantasies of British pastoralists and Spanish ranchers that erupted in land wars between a wet-weather East and a desert West. We savor the ideas of wilderness and progress that clashed when we replaced buffalo with cattle, and then cowboys with industrial machines. We see rugged individualism and corporate technology collide when we breed, feed, slaughter, package, and distribute the animals we turn into meat. And we participate--like the cattlemen, chefs, feedlot operators, and scientists Fussell talks with--in the mythology that inspires cowboys to become technocrats and presidents to play cowboy. Raising Steaks is a celebration of, and an elegy for, a uniquely American Dream.
"Fussell approaches her subject with an uncommon capacity to suspend judgment, the better to collect as much information as possible ... You can't help admiring Fussell's tireless willingness to crawl through thornbrush, ride in a parade dressed up as a cowgirl, sit through industry conferences, and suit up in near-biohazard gear to learn butchering."--New York Times
"[Fussell's] adventurous spirit is contagious, as is her unabashed pleasure in details ..."--Saveur
An IACP and James Beard Award Nominee
BETTY FUSSELL is the author of ten previous books, including The Story of Corn and My Kitchen Wars. A contributor to the New York Times, the New Yorker, Saveur, Food & Wine, Gastronomica, and other publications, she has also lectured widely on food history. Western born, she lives in New York City.
www.bettyfussell.com
Review
PRAISE FOR THE STORY OF CORNand#160;"Fussell . . . is totally and passionately in love with corn, and she treats it the way Cecil B. DeMille treated a Bible story--with zest and romance and hordes of gorgeously costumed extras."--The New York Times Book Reviewand#160;"Fussell . . . can get away with phrases like 'the sexiness of corn' . . . The way she writes about it, is is--hypnotic, alluring, sustaining, and not a little bit mysterious."--Los Angeles Times
Synopsis
When we bite into a steak's charred crust and pink interior, we bite into contradictions that have branded our nation from the start. We taste the competing fantasies of British pastoralists and Spanish ranchers that erupted in land wars between a wet-weather East and a desert West. We savor the ideas of wilderness and progress that clashed when we replaced buffalo with cattle, and then cowboys with industrial machines. We witness rugged individualism and corporate technology collide whenand#160;we breed, feed, slaughter, package, and distribute the animals we turn into meat. And we participateand#151;like the cattlemen, chefs, feedlot operators, and scientists Fussell talks withand#151;in the mythology that inspires cowboys to become technocrats and presidents to play cowboy.
Aand#160;celebration and an elegy for a uniquely American Dream,and#160;Raising Steaksand#160;takes an "unflinching look at the ethical and environmental implications of modern meat ... yet leaves us with a powerful hankering for a thick T-bone grilled rare"--Michael Pollan
Synopsis
In Raising Steaks, Betty Fussell saddles up for a spirited ride across America on the trail of our most iconic food in a celebration of, and an elegy for, a uniquely American Dream.
About the Author
BETTY FUSSELL is the author of ten previous books, including The Story of Corn and My Kitchen Wars. A contributor to the New York Times, the New Yorker, Saveur, Food and Wine, Gastronomica, and other publications, she has also lectured widely on food history. Western born, she lives in New York City.
Table of Contents
CONTENTS
The Cowboy and the Machine 1
Beefy Boys 8
Breaking the Wild 27
Playing Cowboy 61
The New Range Wars 82
Circling the Wagons 99
Buffalo Commons 122
Greening Beef 136
Good Breeding 149
The Smell of Greeley 172
Slaughterhouse Blues 191
Riding Point for the Industry 219
Mad Cows and Ethanol 248
Beef: Itand#8217;s Whatand#8217;s for Dinner 285
The United Steaks of America 303
Acknowledgments 345
Permissions Acknowledgments 347
Endnotes 349
Selected Bibliography 374
Index 384