Kitchenless Cooking


Book Description

Are you starting out on your own, starting over, or setting up your first apartment? Are you moving into a dorm, dreaming of retirement on your boat or motor home, or just wondering how you can make the most of your small space? If so, Kitchenless Cooking can help. For years, Susan Otsuki's life as an International Flight Attendant and commuter required her to spend much of her time in a small apartment that didn't have a kitchen. Through her resourcefulness she made up for limited space. Now, she shares her very best tips, recipes and suggestions. She shows you how easy it is to set up a small but efficient kitchen starting with six small appliances and explains the basics of customizing your pantry, so you'll always have the core ingredients to make delicious and healthy food. Inside you'll be inspired to create easy entrees, snacks, dips, soups, casseroles and desserts including: Easter Brunch Pie Cheesy Pesto Dip Leapin' Lentils Grandma P's Chicken Paprikash Coffee Cup Macadamia Nut Chocolate Cake ...and more! Kitchenless Cooking proves that you don't need a big kitchen to prepare delicious and healthy meals without red meat or breaking the bank.




The Kitchenless Cookbook


Book Description

If you're a...college student living in a dormsingle or couple in a small apartmentsingle parentbusy retireephysically or dietetically challengedRV or boat enthusiastor just one of us overstressed, overworked millions with limited time and/or budget who would like to eat right but must do so when the opportunity strikes...This Book's For You With no fancy language and with easy-to-read, fully illustrated directions, The Kitchenless Cookbook will have you cooking in no time--even if you've never cooked before. And you'll be eating better and more nutritionally than ever.




Food and Urbanism


Book Description

Cities are home to over fifty percent of the world's population, a figure which is expected to increase enormously by 2050. Despite the growing demand on urban resources and infrastructure, food is still often overlooked as a key factor in planning and designing cities. Without incorporating food into the design process – how it is grown, transported, and bought, cooked, eaten and disposed of – it is impossible to create truly resilient and convivial urbanism. Moving from the table and home garden to the town, city, and suburbs, Food and Urbanism explores the connections between food and place in past and present design practices. The book also looks to future methods for extending the 'gastronomic' possibilities of urban space. Supported by examples from places across the world, including the UK, Norway, Germany, France, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Romania, Australia and the USA, the book offers insights into how the interplay of physical design and socio-spatial practices centred around food can help to maintain socially rich, productive and sustainable urban space. Susan Parham brings together the latest research from a number of disciplines – urban planning, food studies, sociology, geography, and design – with her own fieldwork on a range of foodscapes to highlight the fundamental role food has to play in shaping the urban future.




College 101


Book Description

Written for college students by a former college student, this book is the definitive guide to the college experience. Includes advice on dorm living, food options, doing laundry, buying books, and much more.




From Submarines to Suburbs


Book Description

Using documentary evidence in the form of numerous advertisements of the time, From Submarines to Suburbs is a fascinating analysis of the way corporations made the successful switch from supporting the war effort to building on the peacetime prosperity by re-tooling the patriotic fervor of the home front.




Cooking Club Magazine


Book Description




Household Chores and Household Choices


Book Description

Discusses the concepts of “home,” “house,” and “household” in past societies Because archaeology seeks to understand past societies, the concepts of "home," "house," and "household" are important. Yet they can be the most elusive of ideas. Are they the space occupied by a nuclear family or by an extended one? Is it a built structure or the sum of its contents? Is it a shelter against the elements, a gendered space, or an ephemeral place tied to emotion? We somehow believe that the household is a basic unit of culture but have failed to develop a theory for understanding the diversity of households in the historic (and prehistoric) periods. In an effort to clarify these questions, this volume examines a broad range of households—a Spanish colonial rancho along the Rio Grande, Andrew Jackson's Hermitage in Tennessee, plantations in South Carolina and the Bahamas, a Colorado coal camp, a frontier Arkansas farm, a Freedman's Town eventually swallowed by Dallas, and plantations across the South—to define and theorize domestic space. The essays devolve from many disciplines, but all approach households from an archaeological perspective, looking at landscape analysis, excavations, reanalyzed collections, or archival records. Together, the essays present a body of knowledge that takes the identification, analysis, and interpretation of households far beyond current conceptions.




The Archaeology of Household Activities


Book Description

This pioneering collection engages with recent research in different areas of the archaeological discipline to bring together case-studies of the household material culture from later prehistoric and classical periods. The book provides a comprehensive and accessible study for students into the material records of past households, aiding wider understanding of our own domestic development.







A Taste of Power


Book Description

"A Taste of Power is an investigation of the crucial role culinary texts and practices played in the making of cultural identities and social hierarchies since the founding of the United States. Nutritional advice and representations of food and eating, including cookbooks, literature, magazines, newspapers, still life paintings, television shows, films, and the internet, have helped throughout American history to circulate normative claims about citizenship, gender performance, sexuality, class privilege, race, and ethnicity, while promising an increase in cultural capital and social mobility to those who comply with the prescribed norms. The study examines culinary writing and practices as forces for the production of social order and, at the same time, as points of cultural resistance against hegemonic norms, especially in shaping dominant ideas of nationalism, gender, and sexuality, suggesting that eating right is a gateway to becoming an American, a good citizen, an ideal man, or a perfect mother. Cookbooks, as a low-prestige literary form, became the largely unheralded vehicles for women to participate in nation-building before they had access to the vote or public office, for middle-class authors to assert their class privileges, for men to claim superiority over women even in the kitchen, and for Lesbian authors to reinscribe themselves into the heteronormative economy of culinary culture. The book engages in close reading of a wide variety of sources and genres to uncover the intersections of food, politics, and privilege in American culture."--Provided by publisher.