All Stirred Up

Suffrage Cookbooks, Food, and the Battle for Women's Right to Vote

Description

In honor of the centenary of the 19th amendment, a delectable new book that reveals a new side to the history of the suf frage movement.

We all likely conjure up a similar image of the women’s suffrage movement: picket signs, red carnations, militant marches through the streets. But was it only these rallies that gained women the exposure and power that led them to the vote? Ever courageous and creative, suffragists also carried their radical message into America’s homes wrapped in food wisdom, through cookbooks, which ingenuously packaged political strategy into already existent social communities. These cookbooks gave suffragists a chance to reach out to women on their own terms, in nonthreatening and accessible ways. Cooking together, feeding people, and using social situations to put people at ease were pioneering grassroots tactics that leveraged the domestic knowledge these women already had, feeding spoonfuls of suffrage to communities through unexpected and unassuming channels. Kumin, the author of The Hamilton Cookbook, expands this forgotten history, she shows us that, in spite of massive opposition, these women brilliantly wove charm and wit into their message. Filled with actual historic recipes (“mix the crust with tact and velvet gloves, using no sarcasm, especially with the upper crust”) that evoke the spirited flavor of feminism and food movements, All Stirred Up re-activates the taste of an era and carries us back through time. Kumin shows that these suffragettes were far from the militant, stern caricatures their detractors made them out to be. Long before they had the vote, women enfranchised themselves through the subversive and savvy power of the palate.

About the author(s)

Laura Kumin is the author of The Hamilton Cookbook: Cooking, Eating, and Entertaining in Hamilton's World and runs the popular blog "Mother Would Know" Kumin earned a law degree from Columbia Law School and practiced in Washington D.C. for more than two-decades. She lives in Washington D.C. where she now teaches cooking and food history.

Reviews

“Part cookbook and part spirited history lesson, this book examines a little-known aspect of the women's suffrage movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Kumin makes some thorny history go down easily.”

"Laura Kumin’s new book about the suffrage movement is a fascinating story of the struggle women faced in the mid 19th-century to win the right to vote. It puts into context the way women have always had to fight for equal rights, to have our voices heard. All Stirred Up is equal parts women’s history and a cookbook with terrific recipes."

 

Kathy Gunst, Resident Chef for NPR’s Here and Now and co-author of Rage Baking—The Transformative Power of Flour, Fury and Women’s Voices

While it did not surprise me to learn that suffragists deployed culinary tactics to promote their cause, the breadth of Laura Kumin’s research delighted me chapter after chapter. The book’s opening timeline is especially helpful for placing their efforts into historical, global context. And thanks to Laura’s deep dive into suffrage cookbooks, I’ll feel connected to this voting rights’ revolution whenever I make one of All Stirred Up’s thoughtfully adapted recipes.

Bonnie S. Benwick, former WASHINGTON POST deputy food and recipes editor

Laura Kumin's All Stirred Up is revelatory. The way women suffragists used food and cooking-- their deepest burdens and familial connective tissue--to change the world for themselves and  future generations is a story perfect for the centennial of women's voting rights and years beyond. 

Michael Twitty, author of Kosher/Soul and The Cooking Gene

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