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A Conversation with Chef and Author Betty Fussell

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By Cheri Sicard
Posted August 6th, 2007
FabulousFoods.com Recommends: I Hear America Cooking: The Cooks, Regions and Recipes of American Regional Cuisine, by Betty Fussell, (1997, Penguin (Non-Classics))
I Hear America Cooking: The Cooks, Regions and Recipes of American Regional Cuisine
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Cheri Sicard: The book was wonderful and there were a lot of facts that surprised me. In all your research, what surprised you most about corn, that you didn't know before?
Betty Fussell: What I didn't know was everything. I didn't know how complex, how ancient, how complicated this subject was. I am still immersed in it years afterwards because there's no end to it---corn is in everything.

Cheri Sicard: You mentioned the other book, I Hear America Cooking, and I know you traveled extensively for the research on that book. You must have some secrets or tips for finding great food on the road.
Betty Fussell: It doesn't work that way because once a spot is discovered, as in road food, its' over, it's gone within the next two years. It's very hard to find patches in our particular society that remain patches of regionalism. You can still go into Cajun country and find crawfish in season and find local dialects. You could still go into the Southwest and go visit the Hopis and do the pueblos in midsummer. It gets a little harder when you go up to places like Michigan and try to find...well let's see, when is that whitefish festival? We don't operate regionally the way Europe does. We are always looking for that analogy and the analogy is wrong. We have a dialogue between incredible mobility and the changes that brings, with pockets of ethnicity that are a little slower to change. Again, the model is neither Europe nor the Far East.

Cheri Sicard: So things change much slower in those countries?
Betty Fussell: Correct.

Cheri Sicard: I know you have lived extensively in other countries. Which ones influenced your cooking styles the most?
Betty Fussell: Obviously France, for everybody in my generation I think. People who are not of my generation, who are younger, have no idea how isolated America was before World War II. After the War, we just exploded into Europe and everything was new and surprising. Since France was the traditional center of food, French food was a great surprise.

Cheri Sicard: Something I found really interesting about I Hear America Cooking is how much the way we cook and what we eat has changed in so short a time. Things we take for granted were just unheard of even twenty or thirty years ago.
Betty Fussell: Unheard of in most people's mother's lifetime and certainly unheard of in their grandmother's lifetime.

Cheri Sicard: It's kind of strange, when I started this website...I actually overheard some kids speaking and one of them didn't know you couldn't make a cake that didn't come out of a box.
Betty Fussell: Yes. A friend of my daughter, I think she was still in high school, called up in a panic one night and said, 'Betty, what do you do for mayonnaise when you have run out of mayonnaise?'

Cheri Sicard: You lived for a while in England as well. What do you think of British cuisine?
Betty Fussell: Well, British cuisine has certainly improved since the 1950s when we spent a lot of time there. British cuisine has, in it's restaurants, always been mostly French. That is, the good stuff has always come from across the channel and been imported into England. People like Escoffier and The Ritz, that's French cuisine. The cache has always been French and still is, like the Roux Brothers in England. It's very hard to get good British cooking in restaurants. There's always been good 18th-century-based cuisine in country houses -- the good, simple beef and vegetables. And there's a lot of traditional homespun dishes like summer pudding. There's a kind of out-of-the garden freshness to good British food in the summer.




 

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