Red Sauce, Ian MacAllen
Red Sauce, Ian MacAllen
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Red Sauce
How Italian Food Became American

Author: Ian MacAllen

Narrator: Paul Bellantoni

Unabridged: 7 hr 20 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 10/25/2022

Categories: Cooking, Nonfiction


Synopsis

In Red Sauce, Ian MacAllen traces the evolution of traditional Italian-American cuisine, often referred to as "red sauce Italian," from its origins in Italy to its transformation in America into a new, distinct cuisine. It is a fascinating social and culinary history exploring the integration of red sauce food into mainstream America alongside the blending of Italian immigrant otherness into a national American identity. The story follows the small parlor restaurants immigrants launched from their homes to large, popular destinations, and eventually to commodified fast food and casual dining restaurants.

Drawing on inspiration from Southern Italian cuisine, early Italian immigrants to America developed new recipes and modified old ones. Ethnic Italians invented dishes like lobster fra Diavolo, spaghetti and meatballs, and veal parmigiana, and popularized foods like pizza and baked lasagna that had once been seen as foreign. Eventually, the classic red-checkered-table-cloth Italian restaurant would be replaced by a new idea of what it means for food to be Italian, even as "red sauce" became entrenched in American culture. This book looks at how and why these foods became part of the national American diet, and focuses on the stories, myths, and facts behind classic (and some not so classic) dishes within Italian-American cuisine.

About Ian MacAllen

Ian MacAllen is a writer and book critic. He has written reviews and interviews for Chicago Review of Books, Southern Review of Books, The Rumpus, Trampset, Electric Literature, and Fiction Advocate, with other nonfiction in The Billfold, Thought Catalog, and io9. His short fiction has appeared in The Offing, 45th Parallel Magazine, Little Fiction, Vol 1. Brooklyn, Joyland Magazine, and elsewhere. His maternal grandfather was born in Bagnoli del Trigno in Molise, Italy, and his maternal grandmother's family was from Naples and Sicily. He is descended from a line of Sicilian Strega. He lives in Brooklyn with his wife and son.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Bill on April 22, 2022

REV Red Sauce By Bill Marsano. Some 4,000,000 Italians emigrated to the U.S. between about 1880 and 1924, and one of the things they liked best about their new home was “abbondanza”—abundance. More food than they’d ever had before or even dreamt of. Peasants who could eat meat only on major holidays......more

Goodreads review by John on January 09, 2024

Dive back far enough in history and you'll find surprises. Being Italian, there are many things I take for granted about the foods my family has traditionally eaten. My great-grandmother, who I was lucky enough to know until she passed away when I was 16, was born in 1895 and reached America in 1900......more

Goodreads review by Abigail on February 19, 2022

I knew a very kind, smart, salt of the earth type guy who once told me a story of how he went to Italy and left hungry because the food was so different than expected and he found he didn’t like any of it. Turns out that while he thought Italian food was his favorite, so much so that it inspired his......more

Goodreads review by Bren on January 26, 2023

If you are interested in Italian American food or the history of Italian Americans, as I am, this is a good read. MacAllen does commendable research about not only the Italian American experience but the history of food and culture in Italy as well. He even goes further back in time to Greece or Nor......more