What is queer food?

how we served a revolution

What is queer food?

how we served a revolution
John Birdsall
Book - 2025

"A celebrated culinary writer's expansive, audacious excavation of the roots of modern queer identity and food culture. The food on our plates has long been designed, twisted, and elevated by queer hands. Piecing together a dazzling mosaic of queer lives, spaces, and meals, beloved food writer John Birdsall unfolds the complex story of how, through times of fear and persecution, queer people used food to express joy and build community--and ended up changing the shape of the table for everyone. Tracing the evolution of queer food from the early decades of the twentieth century through the LGBTQ civil rights movement of post-Stonewall liberation and the devastation of AIDS, Birdsall fills the gaps between past and present. He channels the twin forces of criticism and cultural history to propel readers into the kitchens, restaurants, swirling party houses, and buzzing interior lives of James Baldwin, Alice B. Toklas, Truman Capote, Esther Eng, and others who left an indelible mark on the culinary world from the margins. Queer food, as Birdsall brilliantly reveals, is quiche and Champagne eleganza at Sunday brunch and joyous lesbian potlucks in the bunker world of Cold War homophobic purges. It's paper chicken for the gender-rebel divas of Chinese opera in San Francisco, Richard Olney's ecstatic salade composée, and Rainbow Ice-Box Cake from Ernest Matthew Mickler's White Trash Cooking. It's the intention surrounding a meal, the circumstances behind it, the people gathered around the table. With cinematic verve and delicious prose, What Is Queer Food? is a monumental work: a testament to food's essential link to modern queerness that reveals how, like fashion or pop music, cooking and eating have become a crucial language of LGBTQ+ identity. By reframing our understanding of both food and queerness, it opens the door for courageous reckoning and boundless conversation"--

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Barcode Status Material Type CallNumber
37413322451388 Available Non-fiction 641.3009 BIRDSAL
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Birdsall, John, 1959- (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: New York, NY : W. W. Norton & Company, [2025]
Edition:First edition.
Subjects:

MARC

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245 1 0 |a What is queer food? :  |b how we served a revolution /  |c John Birdsall. 
250 |a First edition. 
264 1 |a New York, NY :  |b W. W. Norton & Company,  |c [2025] 
264 4 |c ©2025 
300 |a xi, 292 pages ;  |c 24 cm 
336 |a text  |b txt  |2 rdacontent 
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504 |a Includes bibliographical references (pages 249-279) and index. 
505 0 |a Prologue: The road to Hudson -- Part one: The taste of what we could not say, 1896-1948. The language of cake, part one ; Maddalena's pigeons ; Vile fugitive ; Redemption fudge ; Nights at the Mandarin ; Baked in the bedroom ; The sissy prophet of asparagus ; Paper chicken for divas ; The loneliness of rhubarb ; Book of secrets ; "The man among women" ; Ingredient X -- Part two: Tables under a partial sky, 1948-1961. Hungry in Paris ; The shape of Bohemia ; The banquette revolution ; Richard tells the truth ; The salvage queen of Fifty-Eighth Street ; The queer education of Miss Lewis ; Soufflés in soup cups ; Brother Ha of Pell Street ; Saturday night function ; Up the goat path -- Part three: Cooking in code, 1946-1973. Gen and Lou ; Pleasure en français ; When cookbooks lie ; Farewell to Fire Island ; Strangling the doves ; An edible for Saint Teresa ; Canned camp ; Les chef bros ; The unknown bed -- Part four: The rich, audacious tang of liberation, 1973-1986. Richard's dirty salad ; The welcome table ; Learning to cook from Mother ; Fress, darling ; Truman serves lunch ; A fractured timeline of quiche ; A culinary extravaganza ; Ernie and the rainbow cake ; Monday nights at Zuni ; Open house -- Epilogue: The queerest food -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Sources -- Index. 
520 |a "A celebrated culinary writer's expansive, audacious excavation of the roots of modern queer identity and food culture. The food on our plates has long been designed, twisted, and elevated by queer hands. Piecing together a dazzling mosaic of queer lives, spaces, and meals, beloved food writer John Birdsall unfolds the complex story of how, through times of fear and persecution, queer people used food to express joy and build community--and ended up changing the shape of the table for everyone. Tracing the evolution of queer food from the early decades of the twentieth century through the LGBTQ civil rights movement of post-Stonewall liberation and the devastation of AIDS, Birdsall fills the gaps between past and present. He channels the twin forces of criticism and cultural history to propel readers into the kitchens, restaurants, swirling party houses, and buzzing interior lives of James Baldwin, Alice B. Toklas, Truman Capote, Esther Eng, and others who left an indelible mark on the culinary world from the margins. Queer food, as Birdsall brilliantly reveals, is quiche and Champagne eleganza at Sunday brunch and joyous lesbian potlucks in the bunker world of Cold War homophobic purges. It's paper chicken for the gender-rebel divas of Chinese opera in San Francisco, Richard Olney's ecstatic salade composée, and Rainbow Ice-Box Cake from Ernest Matthew Mickler's White Trash Cooking. It's the intention surrounding a meal, the circumstances behind it, the people gathered around the table. With cinematic verve and delicious prose, What Is Queer Food? is a monumental work: a testament to food's essential link to modern queerness that reveals how, like fashion or pop music, cooking and eating have become a crucial language of LGBTQ+ identity. By reframing our understanding of both food and queerness, it opens the door for courageous reckoning and boundless conversation"--  |c Provided by publisher. 
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650 0 |a Sexual minorities  |z United States  |x Social life and customs. 
650 0 |a Gay people  |z United States  |x Identity. 
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