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Pressure Cooker
Pressure Cooker: Why Home Cooking Won't Solve Our Problems and What We Can Do about It | Sarah Bowen, Joslyn Brenton, Sinikka Elliott
5 posts | 4 read | 13 to read
Food is at the center of national debates about how Americans live and the future of the planet. Not everyone agrees about how to reform our relationship to food, but one suggestion rises above the din: We need to get back in the kitchen. Amid concerns about rising rates of obesity and diabetes, unpronounceable ingredients, and the environmental footprint of industrial agriculture, food reformers implore parents to slow down, cook from scratch, and gather around the dinner table. Making food a priority, they argue, will lead to happier and healthier families. But is it really that simple? In this riveting and beautifully-written book, Sarah Bowen, Joslyn Brenton, and Sinikka Elliott take us into the kitchens of nine women to tell the complicated story of what it takes to feed a family today. All of these mothers love their children and want them to eat well. But their kitchens are not equal. From cockroach infestations and stretched budgets to picky eaters and conflicting nutrition advice, Pressure Cooker exposes how modern families struggle to confront high expectations and deep-seated inequalities around getting food on the table. Based on extensive interviews and field research in the homes and kitchens of a diverse group of American families, Pressure Cooker challenges the logic of the most popular foodie mantras of our time, showing how they miss the mark and up the ante for parents and children. Romantic images of family meals are inviting, but they create a fiction that does little to fix the problems in the food system. The unforgettable stories in this book evocatively illustrate how class inequality, racism, sexism, and xenophobia converge at the dinner table. If we want a food system that is fair, equitable, and nourishing, we must look outside the kitchen for answers.
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Tamra
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The struggle is real for everyone feeding a family; the mixed messages, the guilt/shame complexes, time crunches, food preferences, money & health concerns, etc. The list goes on. “Cook organic whole foods in the kitchen that you bicycled home in cloth bags and the planet‘s and families‘ problems will be solved” is unrealistic and untrue.

AlaMich Yes, and to avoid all the hidden sugars in store-bought foods, make your own mayo and ketchup and almond milk and bread and and and... 5y
Tamra @AlaMich 👌🏾 5y
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Tamra
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Good grief! The only way for a low income & food insecure grandmother to take her grandchildren to the state fair is to donate cans of food for the food pantry collection at the entrance, specifically to help families like hers. 🙄 I have a lot of concerns that I can‘t express with limited space.

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Tamra
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Some last blooms. 😩 This book is making me feel better about the challenges of feeding a family - I‘m not alone.

Smrloomis Thanks for posting this! This looks really interesting. 5y
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CampbellTaraL
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A ton of research went into this book; a fifth of it at the end is citations. Each chapter follows a participating family, and those stories destroy the idea that women are not doing enough to feed their families "properly." Regardless of income, the burden of the "back to home cooking" movement prescribed by white male journalists/chefs/farmers fell on women who are already beyond taxed physically/mentally/financially.

#nonfiction

Tamra Really intriguing! 5y
38 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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CampbellTaraL
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"Romantic images of family meals are inviting, but they create a fiction that does little to fix the problems with the food system."

I'm going in! I've been dying to read this one, and after having read some Michael Pollan and Samin Nosrat, this is the perfect palate-cleansing reality check that I've needed.

(This is just from the jacket... I think there's going to be a lot of quotable content.)

Christine Looking forward to your review! I‘m intrigued by this one. 5y
Reggie This one sounds good. Stacked. 5y
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