Small Batch
Pickles, Cheese, Chocolate, Spirits, and the Return of Artisanal Foods
by Suzanne Cope
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Pub Date Oct 16 2014 | Archive Date Nov 30 2014
Description
Artisanal
foods are making a comeback as more and more people seek to stock their
pantries, and their bellies, with handcrafted or locally grown and made
foods. Specialty markets and sections at grocery stores are catering to
this new desire for the special, the unique, the carefully made foods. Small Batch: Pickles, Cheese, Chocolate, Spirits and the Return of Artisanal Foods
colorfully details the landscape of the newest wave of the artisanal
food revolution by looking at four foods that whet our appetites for
specialty. Considering the history and the cultural issues surrounding
the resurgence of craft food, including the evolving definition of
terroir, the importance of narrative in valuing artisanal food, and the
way that these present food trends connect with—and upend—their rich
history, Small Batch seeks
to define and update the term "artisanal" and give insight into the
influences, challenges, and identity of food artisans today.
Suzanne
Cope sumptuously surveys the collective history of the production of
cheese, pickles, chocolate, and alcoholic spirits, and brings this
narrative to the present by incorporating interviews with over fifty
modern artisans. Cope details the influences, challenges, and evolving
identity of these modern craft industries—and places them in context
within the recent resurgence and growth of the artisanal segment of the
market. Readers interested in craft foods, and what it means to be an
artisan, will find here a fascinating history and updating of both.
Advance Praise
Small Batch is one large
feat! We have so many words buzzing around our food world nowadays:
locavore, lacto-fermented, artisanal, carbon footprint, GMO,
sustainable, and more. Suzanne Cope's excellent book is the ultimate map
out of the woods and into the light with these extremely meaningful and
timely discussions with our fellow residents of what R. Buckminster
Fuller sagely called 'Spaceship Earth.'
— Norman Van Aken, James Beard finalist and author of No Experience Necessary: The Culinary Odyssey of Chef Norman Van Aken
Anyone
interested in today's artisanal movement will appreciate the depth of
research, historical context, and anecdotes of modern day small-scale
producers that Suzanne Cope has so deftly compiled in Small Batch.
From how the United States moved away from craft production, to the
technologies and processes behind some of our favorite foods, and the
socio-economic movement that brought us back to our artisanal roots,
Cope’s account will inspire and inform, compelling us, if we haven’t
already, to seek out pickles (or cheese, or chocolate, or spirits) that
come with a story.
— Amy McCoy, author of Poor Girl Gourmet: Eat in Style on a Bare-Bones Budget and tinyfarmhouse.com
Marketing Plan
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Available Editions
EDITION | Hardcover |
ISBN | 9781442227347 |
PRICE | $35.00 (USD) |
Featured Reviews
Interesting look at history and, mostly, present day challenges of small batch producers of pickles, cheese, chocolate and spirits. Different than I thought it would be, with some good information and interesting points of view.
If you're buying this as a how to...don't. If you're looking at artisan and other small producers and thinking "what's the big deal" this is one to read. If you're thinking about value added products, give this book a whirl for views on perspective and how it's seen. Much good to chew over, and it is applicable beyond the main topics. Good lessons if you're looking at other canned goods, sauces, dried things or others.
I viewed from NetGalley - but easily worthy of a read in hard copy.
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