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In search of real American cuisine

A cookbook out of New Jersey evokes the true American cooking we lost and haven't rediscovered yet.

In search of real American cuisine

by

Peter Miller

A cookbook out of New Jersey evokes the true American cooking we lost and haven't rediscovered yet.

A  new cookbook came out last week, Canal House Cooking, Volume No. 6, an  interesting antidote to Nathan Myhrvold's Modernist Cuisine. CH6 is a  linen-covered soft bound title for $26 and the Mod Cuisine is six  volumes for $600, CH6 is an indie production and Mod Cuisine is an  exMSFT/Avatar-like corporation. The CH crew of two works out of an old  brick mill building in Lambertville, New Jersey; Mod Cuisine  headquarters in Redmond as a corporation called Intellectual Ventures, where the  subdivision called The Cooking Lab has a 20-person staff, stainless steel tables,  centrifuge, laser, particle accelerator, and white jackets.

CH6 is  a dinghy to the Myhrvold flotilla but a brave and remarkable one. The  task of a cookbook is to help — to help you understand, to help you  design, to help you prepare and perform, and, perhaps most difficult, to  help you give a damn. A true cookbook can rescue your cooking heart  from the ingredients of winter, or the decay of repetition, or the flatlining of not wanting to cook at all.

One primary fuel for Mod  Cuisine is the technique sous vide, French for "under vacuum." But for  Canal House, a primary fuel might be called "under pressure," referencing not a way of cooking, but the act itself — the pressure that  you are the one, and, how, on God's beleaguered earth, will you be able  to make something, like it, and finally even be pleased. And do it  again.

For that task, for that emotional specific, Canal House  Cooking is quite remarkable. We are a fluttered land, this America,  battered with such doubts and abuses of our food that we barely have our  own cuisine. We have now almost-brilliant Italian versions or  re-enactments, we have Thai basil where there was not even basil, we  have fish sauce and coriander and quinoa and we can pronounce foods we  cannot spell. But behind the new theme-park restaurants or a mile away  from the new food shop it is a desert for food in the home and in the  dinners, a desert of lost history and reputation and inspiration.

I  know a grandmother who told me that when she was 20 years old, she  knew, and all around her knew, the look and feel and smell and use of  20 different apple varieties, how they combined, which ones went in a  pie in September and which ones in November and why. Now the 20  varieties are nearly extinct, and the oral history with it. But the  apples, in true variety, they seem to be coming back and maybe the  discrimination and judgment will come with them.

And, in a true  way, that is Canal House Cooking: judgment and use and sense and  humor. It is not American cooking, yet it is cooking that could only grow here, that could only form around  polyglots and aunts who ran off to France and grocers who never left  New Jersey and Turks that never will leave the Lower East side. A  cuisine that can only grow after the regional cuisine has been  devastated by fast food and  process food and all manners of modernism.

Canal  House parades proudly in with beets and cabbage and sardines and peas  and potatoes. But they are as easily stacking cans of clams, frozen fava  beans and frozen puff pastry. They are in with both feet, both hands  and for the long haul, this meal and the next one, Easter, but Tuesday  lunch as well. And Saturday when you thought it was nothing and a three  pound chicken would do but four more people have shown up with your  sister.

They love dried beans and they love meat and they know  asparagus is only true for a month and cabbage is gassy and fried fish,  if the cod is fresh, can rescue your notions.They publish a new book  three times a year, the coming of spring, the bounty of summer, the  resolve of fall and winter, different colors each, slanted to the  season. They are loyal to the truth that it be wonderful, that it not be  dumb, and that it be a pleasure. And there is no place on earth they  would not take parts from, past or present.

Every book starts  with a story, then drinks (it's always 5 o'clock somewhere), then  crackers and soups and vegetables, meats and fish. And they each finish  with desserts, subtle ones that grin just enough to lure. Proper often,  never prudish, always mindful that it be a pleasure.

Lincoln  Center in Manhattan has just opened its first on-location restaurant. High Italian style, with each item in English translation on the menu. A  wonderful accessory to the opening of Marriage of Figaro at the  Met. But Lincoln Center is the very pivot of American culture. It will  be a hopeful sign if, one day, the restaurant is more Canal House than  Fiore di Latte.

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By Peter Miller

Peter Miller is owner of Peter Miller Books, a store in Seattle specializing in architecture and design books. You can reach him in care of editor@crosscut.com.