Her Bread to Earn: Women, Money, and Society from Defoe to Austen

Her Bread to Earn: Women, Money, and Society from Defoe to Austen

by Mona Scheuermann (Author)

Synopsis

African American cooks were not strangers in the kitchens of the Old South, but white southerners often failed to acknowledge their contributions. One of the first exceptions was Kentucky socialite Minnie C. Fox, who recognized the significant influence and importance of the African American cooks and wrote The Blue Grass Cook Book, first published in 1904. From biscuits and hams to ice creams and puddings, this cookbook is a collection of over three hundred recipes from family and friends, including black cooks, near Minnie Fox's Bourbon County, Kentucky, family estate and her Big Stone Gap, Virginia, home. In Fox's time, the culinary history of black women in the South was usually characterized by demoralizing portraits of servants toiling in big house kitchens. In contrast, The Blue Grass Cook Book, with its photographs of African American cooks at work and a passionate introduction by Fox's brother, respected Kentucky novelist John Fox Jr., offers insight into the complex bond between well-to-do mistresses and their cooks at the turn of the century. Toni Tipton-Martin's new introduction provides in-depth commentary on the social, cultural, and historical context of this significant cookbook. She presents background information on the Fox family and their apparently uncommon appreciation for the African Americans of their time. She reveals the vital role of the black cooks in the preparation and service required in establishing the well-known Southern hospitality tradition.

$90.62

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 296
Edition: 1st Edition
Publisher: University Press of Kentucky
Published: 31 Dec 1993

ISBN 10: 0813118174
ISBN 13: 9780813118178

Media Reviews

A forceful and persuasive revisionist study of the role of women and money in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries that challenges the fashionable stereotype of women as marginalized by patriarchy. -- Nineteenth-Century Literature

Author Bio

Mona Scheuermann is professor of English and director of the Perspectives on Women Program at Oakton Community College in Des Plaines, Illinois.