Recipes for the Melting Pot

The Lives of The Settlement Cook Book

Nora L Rubel author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Columbia University Press

Publishing:30th Jun '26

£22.00

This title is due to be published on 30th June, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Recipes for the Melting Pot cover

In 1901, Lizzie Black Kander put together a cookbook based on the classes she taught at the Milwaukee Jewish Mission. “I was trying to teach a group of young foreign girls in a crowded neighborhood how to cook simple and nutritious food, yet have it attractive and inexpensive as we prepare it in America,” she recalled. The Settlement Cook Book would go on to be the most successful charitable cookbook in American history, remaining a best-seller into the 1970s. Despite including nonkosher recipes, it became a mainstay in Jewish kitchens and an enduring touchstone of Jewish American culture.

Recipes for the Melting Pot tells the remarkable story of The Settlement Cook Book, demonstrating how it shaped Jewish American identity—and was in turn shaped by generations of Jewish women. Nora L. Rubel traces the cookbook’s evolution across forty editions over several decades, through waves of immigration, shifting gender roles, upward mobility, suburbanization, and rapid changes in Jewish life. She argues that the book celebrates pluralism, allowing it to serve at once as a tool for Americanization, a repository of tradition, and a platform for culinary innovation. Ultimately, The Settlement Cook Book is a record of American Jewish women’s history, told through the food they made and the lives they led. A cultural biography of an iconic cookbook, this lively and inviting book shares an inclusive vision of American cuisine.

In this well-written and thoroughly researched book, Nora L. Rubel provides a new perspective on American Jewish life through the lens of a widely used yet rarely studied volume: The Settlement Cook Book. She makes a strong argument for culinary pluralism as a major component of Jewish acculturation and assimilation in the twentieth-century United States. -- Rebecca Alpert, professor of religion emerita, Temple University
For someone obsessed with “The Settlement” since childhood, Nora Rubel’s book is a dream come true, answering my every question about the life of Lizzie Black Kander, the juxtaposition of kosher and treyf, the provenance of the recipes, and the community and society in which the book came forth and flourished. -- Bonnie Slotnick, owner of Bonnie Slotnick Cookbooks
From a pamphlet in 1901 to cookbook juggernaut almost a century later – that is the story of The Settlement Cook Book, a hero in millions of kitchens and the protagonist of this book. In the hands of this gifted historian, a cookbook becomes a prism for understanding the world in which it evolved. -- Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Ronald S. Lauder Chief Curator, Core Exhibition, POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews

ISBN: 9780231224345

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

240 pages