History
Format
Format
User Rating
User Rating
Release Date
Release Date
Date Added
Date Added
Language
Language
ebook
(0)
Flour Before Gold
by Master Chef Walter M. E. Potenza
Part 2 of the History series
Flour Before Gold. The Untold History of the Gold Rush Foods (Bonus Chapters Include)The story of the Gold Rush is often told as a feverish quest for fortune, but beneath the clang of pickaxes and the roar of riverbeds lies a deeper, hungrier narrative-one of survival, ingenuity, and the quiet power of food. Flour Before Gold uncovers this forgotten history, revealing how the rush for precious metal was sustained, and sometimes sabotaged, by the search for something far more basic: a meal.When gold was struck at Sutter's Mill in 1848, it didn't just summon dreamers from the Eastern states-it drew a breathtaking mosaic of humanity from around the globe. Chilean miners, Chinese laborers, Mexican vaqueros, French cooks, and Native peoples all converged on California's rugged foothills, each carrying not only hopes of striking it rich but also the flavors of their homelands. Flour Before Gold follows these diverse threads, weaving a rich tapestry of ambition, adaptation, and appetite.In the ramshackle mining camps that sprang up overnight, daily life was grueling, and daily meals were even grimmer. Salt pork, hardtack, and beans formed the unholy trinity of the miner's diet-monotonous, barely palatable, and dangerously deficient in fresh nutrients. The result was not just hunger but a quiet epidemic of scurvy that left men weak, bleeding, and broken long before they ever saw a nugget. This was not merely a failure of cooking but a public health crisis born of isolation and desperation.To feed the thousands who could not feed themselves, an astonishing supply chain emerged-a sprawling, improvised network of merchants, mule trains, and schooners. Flour, the most coveted of commodities, sold for a dollar a pound (equivalent to nearly thirty dollars today), and speculators grew rich not from the ground but from the grain. In this new world, bread was worth more than gold.Yet amid the hardship, something remarkable blossomed. Immigrant communities refused to let their culinary heritage die in the dust. Chinese miners stir-fried wild greens and dried seafood in woks hammered from abandoned pans; Sonoran cooks pressed tortillas over open flames; French and Italian immigrants transformed meager rations into fragrant stews. Flour Before Gold lovingly chronicles these small rebellions of taste, showing how the mining camps became accidental kitchens of cultural fusion. And in San Francisco-then a chaotic tent city-the first restaurants began to flicker to life, offering weary prospectors a taste of civilization, one bowl of oyster stew or plate of chili at a time. But not everyone who prospered swung a pick. The book turns its gaze to those with sharper instincts: the farmers, ranchers, grocers, and butchers who understood that the real fortune lay in feeding the hungry. While thousands dug for fleeting specks of gold, these shrewd entrepreneurs cultivated something far more lasting-California's agricultural soul. Wheat fields rippled across the Central Valley, cattle ranches expanded, and the state's landscape was quietly, radically transformed, not by mining claims, but by plows and produce. Walter Potenza's illustrious career is marked by an unwavering commitment to elevating Italian culinary culture in the United States. Renowned for his culinary prowess and sharp business acumen, Chef Walter is a dedicated educator, dispelling stereotypes with passion and Knowledge. His life, career, and values are models for chefs in Italian gastronomy outside of Italy. Hailing from Abruzzo, Italy, Chef Walter is celebrated as a leading advocate for traditional and historical Italian cooking on a national scale.A familiar face on prestigious platforms such as the Food Network, ABC, CBS, NBC, RAI, FOX, Dubai Live, Chef Walter showcases his culinary talents. It takes on roles as a television host and trade show presenter. His influence extends to globally recognized publications, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The
ebook
(0)
100 Love Stories That Have Influenced China for 5,000 Years
by John Lee
Part of the History series
This book selects 100 classic love stories that have influenced Chinese civilization and emotional aesthetics, from ancient myths to the Ming, Qing and modern times, from Fuxi and Nuwa, Cowherd and Weaver Girl, to Liang Shanbo and Zhu Yingtai, Nie Xiaoqian and Ning Caichen, to scholars and beauties, emperors and beauties, and folk lovers of all ages. Each love story is a microcosm of the emotional world of Chinese people; Every relationship is filled with the unique tenderness and persistence of the East. One book, understand the most touching love and parting, persistence and deep affection in five thousand years of Chinese history.
Showing 1 to 2 of 2 results