The Warmest Room in the House: How the Kitchen Became the Heart of the Twentieth-Century American Home
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Average customer review:Product Description
Gdula traces the evolution of the kitchen from the back room where the work of the home happened to its place at the center of family life and entertainment today. Filled with fun facts about food trends, from Hamburger Helper to The Moosewood Cookbook, and food personalities, from Julia Child to Rachael Ray, The Warmest Room in the House is the perfect addition to any well-rounded kitchen larder.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #355962 in Books
- Published on: 2007-12-26
- Released on: 2007-12-26
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 256 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Freelance writer Gdula begins his story of the kitchen when women were wives and mothers, sanitation a primary concern and most modern industries in their infancy. Decade by decade America's domestic kitchen history unfolds, rapidly modernizing from a candlelit, well water–supplied pantry to a streamlined, lifestyle-supporting laboratory where sliced whole-grain bread toasts in seconds and hot-and-cold running water is forsaken for imported bottles from foreign springs. Even large social and economic forces like the Depression and WWII contributed to making our kitchens more efficient. Innovations now taken for granted, like frozen vegetables and the microwave, came from unexpected places: a field naturalist on assignment in the subzero Arctic; a defense-industry engineer's melted candy bar coming too close to a magnetron. While the book is well researched and entertaining, the narrative advances at such a rapid pace that entire decades (such as the chapter on the 1910s) are compressed into a handful of pages. Gdula successfully personifies the American kitchen, but he has to fight the evidence piling up on the other side of his argument, which continually and just as plausibly suggests that the real heart of the American home may be the television and the automobile. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review
“A worthy candidate for the kitchen shelf.” —Star Tribune
“A wealth of information on how the kitchen, and the food Americans prepared there, has changed since 1900..Gdula's scholarly approach will have you amazed at just how far we have come in easing the drudgery of cooking...a worthy candidate for the kitchen shelf.” —Chicago Tribune
“Steven Gdula's The Warmest Room in the House will warm you right up. This whirlwind tour of the past hundred years or so sheds light on how the kitchen was often a reflection of our society at any given time...You'll emerge armed with a wealth of kitchen-related tidbits..From Typhoid Mary to Martha Stewart, Gdula paints a portrait of America's culinary characters and how they fit into our changing sense of how to cook and eat.” —Gothamist
“Forget heart and hearth, argues the author of this inviting study of domiciliary evolution - home is where the stove is. Tracing the American kitchen's century-long rise from lowly back room to glowing center of domestic life, Gdula scours the historical pantry, illuminating the development of food preparation, scullery technology, gastronomic design, and culinary celebrity. The decade-by- decade survey he serves up is a delight, rich but restrained.” —Atlantic Monthly
“[Gdula] demonstrates in ample and fascinating detail. 'The Warmest Room' traces the evolution of the kitchen decade by decade through the 20th century.” —New York Times
“Yes, of course, you are what you eat, but you may well have to cook whatever it is you are eating, and the tools and techniques for doing so can say as much about you as the food itself...[Gdula] is interesting when he outlines the rise of Julia Child, the abiding tension between diet books and cookbooks, and the appearance of appliances as faddish as the fondue pot and as durable as the microwave...[He] does an especially good job on the food-related double consciousness of Americans in recent decades.” —Wall Street Journal
“In a more than 100-year odyssey, writer Gdula documents more than 10 decades of progress (or not) by American manufacturers, food producers, food experts, the government, and, yes, the consumer in the effort to transform the kitchen into the heart of the home...Gdula makes a strong case for the constant and continuing role of food and its associated topics…Fascinating.” —Booklist
“Well-researched and entertaining...Gdula successfully personifies the American kitchen.” —Publishers Weekly
About the Author
Customer Reviews
American History - through the kitchen door
Considering how much time is spent socializing in people's kitchens, The Warmest Room in the House is an apt title for this book. And that's before the author explores how the room went from being literally hot (open fires, no ventilation) to the center for family interaction, to the design showplace of today. Gdula's easy writing style makes for an enjoyable read as he goes from our kitchen's humble and dangerous beginnings to it's current ultra-modern state. And he brings along great stories of cooking pioneers and legends like Fannie Farmer and Julia Child, as well as innovations like aluminum foil and tv trays. Considering the issues we are having today with food quality and safety, his exploration of our government's earlier efforts at regulation are particularly timely. It's a fun story, an easy read, and well told.
A real letdown
I read the review of this book in the Wall Street Journal and thought this would be an interesting Summer read - a look that American kitchen over the last 100 years.
A very breezy read, the coverage of any topic is about at deep as a sheet of Phylo. I would have been interested to see diagrams of kitchen designs and how they have changed over time, a much more detailed discussion of how various items of kitchen equipment changed the America diet (the book discussed this a little, but just skimmed the surface), much more on the changing role of the kitchen as the center of the home, etc....
I can think of dozens of interesting topics that this book never explored in any worthwhile depth. It would have been fun to see a discussion of kitchen utensils of various types that have gone out of fashion. Heck, it would have been interesting to know whether the percentage of space dedicated to the kitchen has increased over time.
To me, a lost opportunity and a fair waste of time to read (even more than I was looking for). Basically, I just wish the book had delivered what the title promised.
Time for a trip down memory lane
If you want a 'good feel' read while accidentally learning quite a bit in the process, then this book is for you. Regardless of your age, "The Warmest Room in the House" is written in such a way that it provides you with a colorful and easily grasped perspective of how we got to where we are today in terms of how and what we eat. Being younger than those that truly suffered and sacrificed during the World Wars this country endured, I can only imagine the dedication our not-to-long-ago ancestors put up with in trying to get a meal on the table.
"The Warmest Room in the House" helps paint that picture very clearly.
You will enjoy this book.



