Mastering the Art of Soviet Cooking
By Anya von Bremzen
By Anya von Bremzen
By Anya von Bremzen
By Anya von Bremzen
By Anya von Bremzen
Read by Kathleen Gati
By Anya von Bremzen
Read by Kathleen Gati
Category: Biography & Memoir | International Cuisine | European World History
Category: Biography & Memoir | International Cuisine | European World History
Category: Biography & Memoir | International Cuisine | European World History | Audiobooks
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$16.00
Sep 16, 2014 | ISBN 9780307886828
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Sep 17, 2013 | ISBN 9780307886835
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Sep 17, 2013 | ISBN 9780804128322
758 Minutes
Buy the Audiobook Download:
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Praise
“Delightful . . . The culinary memoir has lately evolved into a genre of its own, what is now known as a ‘oodoir.’ But Anya von Bremzen is a better writer than most of the genre’s practitioners, as this delectable book, which tells the story of postrevolutionary Russia through the prism of one family’s meals, amply demonstrates. . . . Von Bremzen moves artfully between historical longshots and intimate details.”—The New York Times Book Review
“Von Bremzen ladles out a rich, zesty history of family life in the USSR conveyed through food and meals.”—Entertainment Weekly
“Beautifully told . . . Mastering the Art of Soviet Cooking turns a bittersweet eye and an intelligent heart on Soviet history through food.”—Los Angeles Times
“Von Bremzen knows how to tell a story—poignant, funny, but never lacking.”—Chicago Tribune
“Brilliant . . . a lyrical memoir and multifaceted reflection on Soviet (and American) cultures.”—The Philadelphia Inquirer
“An ambitious food memoir that is also a meticulously researched history of the Soviet Union. . . . A meditation on culinary nostalgia.”—Julia Moskin, The New York Times
“Both rollicking and heartrending.”—Time
“Breathtaking . . . Mastering the Art of Soviet Cooking is a painstakingly researched and beautifully written cultural history but also the best kind of memoir: one with a self-aware narrator who has mastered the art of not taking herself entirely seriously.”—Masha Gessen, New York Review of Books
“At once harrowing and funny as hell, an epic history told through kotleti (Soviet hamburgers) and contraband Coca-Cola.”—James Oseland, Saveur
“There is no book quite like Mastering the Art of Soviet Cooking. . . . Through all of this lovely and moving memoir’s good humor, bittersweet reminiscences, and gorgeous evocations of food, there hangs the ‘toska,’ the Russian nostalgic ‘ache,’ of Anya and Larisa’s conflicted feelings about the past.”—The Christian Science Monitor
“A masterful telling of Soviet history through the eyes of a cook . . . a collection of fantastic stories that you hear only when sitting on a bar stool or in a church pew. Von Bremzen offers remarkable—and personal—insight about the Cold War, its politics, military strategy and the human suffering that accompanied it.”—Minnapolis Star-Tribune
“Moving . . . funny . . . fascinating . . . Soul-stirring for any emigrant to read, Mastering the Art of Soviet Cooking is a beautifully written tale of heartbreak and ultimately happiness.”—Epicurious
“I don’t think there’s ever been a book quite like this; I couldn’t put it down. Warm, smart and completely engaging, this food-forward journey through Soviet history could only have been written by someone who was there. Part memoir, part cookbook, part social history, this gripping account of Anya von Bremzen’s relationship with the country she fled as a young girl is also an unsentimental, but deeply loving tribute to her mother. Unique and remarkable, this is a book you won’t forget.”—Ruth Reichl, author of Tender at the Bone
“Anya’s description of the saltiness in vobla is as poignant and image-filled as her reflection on a life that started out one way, but ended up in a better place by chance and fate. Her experience of growing up a child of two different worlds tells the beautiful tale of so many American immigrants.”—Marcus Samuelsson, chef-founder, Red Rooster Harlem, and author of Yes, Chef
“Anya von Bremzen describes the foods of her past powerfully, poetically, and with a wicked sense of humor. Anyone can make a fancy layer cake sound delicious. To invoke an entire culture and era through an intimate story about a salad or soup—that’s taking food writing to a whole different level.”—David Chang, chef-founder, Momofuku
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