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Dinner with the President

Food, Politics, and a History of Breaking Bread at the White House

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A sumptuous narrative history of presidential food—from Washington starving at Valley Forge to Trump's well-done steaks with ketchup—from the co-author of My Life in France.
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue is perhaps the most important house in the world, which gives the food on the Commander-in-Chief's table unprecedented significance. What our leaders choose to eat, how the food is prepared and by whom, and the context in which these meals are served speaks volumes not only to the country, but often to the world at large. These gustatory messages touch on everything from personal taste (Jefferson's love of eggplant, FDR's terrapin stew, Nixon's daily lump of cottage cheese topped with barbecue sauce, Obama's arugula) to local politics, national priorities, global diplomacy, climate change, and war—not to mention race, gender, class, money, and religion. In The First Kitchen, Alex Prud'homme explores the fascinating stories of first families through the food they ate and served, and in doing so paints a unique picture of the institution of the presidency—and its place in American history.
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    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2022

      George Washington's meager meals at Valley Forge--and, later, the escape of his enslaved chef, Hercules Posey, to freedom. Teddy Roosevelt's supper with Booker T. Washington and Jimmy Carter's Camp David d�tente between Israel and Egypt. Plus efforts by First Ladies from Dolley Madison to Michelle Obama to link food to politics and policy. There's more to U.S. presidential dining than what meets the tongue, as evidenced by this study from Prud'homme, coauthor of Julia Child's memoir, My Life in France.

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      December 1, 2022
      A journalist shows us what our presidents liked to eat. Prud'homme, author of several books about Julia Child, brings his interest in cuisine to a lively consideration of the culinary preferences of 25 presidents, from George Washington to Joe Biden. In the White House, he notes, food is both "sustenance and metaphor," reflecting the tastes of the nation's top leader as well as the economic, agricultural, political, and social conditions of the country. The author reveals each president's attitude about food, which ranges from abstemious (Woodrow Wilson, who suffered from chronic indigestion) to disinterested (Nixon) to adventurous. Obama, both praised and criticized for being a "foodie," had, in the author's estimation, "the most globally informed palate." Some men preferred food they grew up eating: Lincoln loved "raw honey and corn bread," James Garfield and Eisenhower were partial to squirrel stew, and Jimmy Carter loved grits, with a few eggs dropped in. Eisenhower was an accomplished cook of hearty American cuisine, such as grilled steak, boiled potatoes, and apple pie. Truman, like Ike, was a meat-and-potatoes man, and Lyndon Johnson served guests traditional Texas barbecue. Whatever they ate in private (jelly beans, Mexican food, and sweet desserts for Reagan; cottage cheese for Nixon), they realized the significance of the menu at state dinners: occasions for the president to assert his power, showcase "the best of American ingredients," and display the prowess of the White House cooks. The Kennedys, comfortable with an international palate, were, to their guests' delight, masters of the art. Prud'homme appends the history with 10 recipes--all of which he tried and some of which he updated--including George Washington's grilled striped bass; Martha Washington's preserved cherries; Thomas Jefferson's Tarragon Vinegar salad dressing; Wilson's breakfast of two raw eggs dropped in grape juice; Franklin Roosevelt's reverse martini, heavy on the vermouth; and Carter's grits. An entertaining, well-researched, politically tinged gastronomic history.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from February 15, 2023
      Nodding to Lin-Manuel Miranda, Prud'homme (The French Chef in America, 2016) characterizes sharing a meal with the president as being "in the dining room where it happens." Prud'homme starts with Thomas Jefferson's pre-presidential dinner with Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, a sumptuous repast of French cooking and wines that softened rivalries, yielding a compromise to restructure the nation's debt and determine its capital city. Across the centuries, other presidents used the White House dining room to similarly cajole other leaders to reach goals consistent with the president's wishes. George Washington never resided in the White House, but his enslaved chef, Hercules, produced renowned foods for the Washingtons' constant stream of visitors. Abraham Lincoln often failed to eat, immersed in wartime duties. U. S. Grant hosted the first reigning monarch to visit the White House: Kalakaua, King of the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii). Dwight Eisenhower liked to do his own cooking, particularly breakfast and barbecue. The Kennedys favored haute cuisine, and Lyndon Johnson brought Texas chili. By the twenty-first century, food became a mainstream national obsession, and presidents had to acknowledge it. With much insight into human behavior, Prud'homme has confected an appealing, panoramic history of power dining for both foodies and students of politics and statecraft.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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