How To Cook A Wolf
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''How to Cook a Wolf'' by M. F. K. Fisher is an American cookery book and/or disaster survival guide and/or prose poem that was first published in 1942.


History

''How to Cook a Wolf'' was written following the
attack on Pearl Harbor The attack on Pearl HarborAlso known as the Battle of Pearl Harbor was a surprise military strike by the Empire of Japan on the United States Pacific Fleet at Naval Station Pearl Harbor, its naval base at Pearl Harbor on Oahu, Territory of ...
, which led to the American entry in World War II, when Fisher (then known to society as Mrs. Dillwyn Parrish) returned to California from already-war-torn Europe and wrote a well-received guide to blackout curtains and crisis cooking for her father's paper, the '' Whittier News''. The newspaper columns evolved into a book, which she wrote in about a month, and publisher
Duell, Sloan and Pearce Duell, Sloan and Pearce was a publishing company located in New York City. It was founded in 1939 by C. Halliwell Duell, Samuel Sloan and Charles A. Pearce. It initially published general fiction and non-fiction, but not westerns, light romances or ...
rushed it into print because of its wartime topicality. A revision ("the Cold War edition") was published in 1954, with Fisher revisiting her own text by way of "marginal notes, footnotes, and a section of additional recipes." The revision "quietly spoke out against the over-indulgences of the postwar years," and included new material on feeding children, an experience that Fisher had not yet had when writing the first edition. ''How to Cook a Wolf'' was anthologized in full in '' The Art of Eating'' (with an introduction by
Clifton Fadiman Clifton Paul "Kip" Fadiman (May 15, 1904 – June 20, 1999) was an American intellectual, author, editor, and radio and television personality. He began his work in radio, and switched to television later in his career. Background Born in Brook ...
), which was first published in 1954 and remains in print. Five chapters were included in posthumous compilation of Fisher's work called ''The Measure of Her Powers.'' In 1988, the now-defunct
North Point Press North is one of the four compass points or cardinal directions. It is the opposite of south and is perpendicular to east and west. ''North'' is a noun, adjective, or adverb indicating Direction (geometry), direction or geography. Etymology T ...
reprinted ''How to Cook a Wolf''. Both the 9/11 terrorist attacks of 2001 and the COVID-19 pandemic led to a resurgence of interest in ''Wolf''. A Vox writer commented during the coronavirus crisis, "I am not recommending ''How to Cook a Wolf for'' the recipes. They're 1942 recipes, and even if you wanted to roast a pigeon or jug a hare I have no idea how you would get the ingredients right now. This book has outlived its function as a practical how-to guide." Fisher's biographer Joan Reardon wrote that the overarching theme of ''How to Cook a Wolf'' was "the will to survive, whether in wartime or in battle with old age or in a ." A pandemic-era writer agreed, arguing that the essays in ''How to Cook a Wolf'' are "an argument for living the best life that you can when everything around you goes to shit."


Description

''Wolf'' may be the "best known" of the 20-odd books produced by American food writer Fisher, whose writing has been described as "highly stylized" and so lyrical that she is "basically a
Sappho Sappho (; ''Sapphṓ'' ; Aeolic Greek ''Psápphō''; ) was an Ancient Greek poet from Eresos or Mytilene on the island of Lesbos. Sappho is known for her lyric poetry, written to be sung while accompanied by music. In ancient times, Sapph ...
." Nominally about food, home economics, thrift, and preparedness, ''How to Cook a Wolf'' has been described "barely a cookbook" and "part experimental cookbook, part 'escape reading material,' and part war protest." The book is dedicated to Fisher's friend
Lawrence Bachmann Lawrence Paul Bachmann (December 12, 1911 – September 7, 2004) was an American film producer and executive who settled for a time in the United Kingdom. He was head of MGM's British operations in the 1960s. Biography Bachmann was born in New Yor ...
, who reportedly came up with the title. The wolf in question "is the one at the door," the ever-allegorical
big bad wolf The Big Bad Wolf is a fictional wolf appearing in several cautionary tales, including some of ''Grimms' Fairy Tales''. Versions of this character have appeared in numerous works, and it has become a generic archetype of a menacing predatory ant ...
of folk tales, and more precisely, the predator described in
Charlotte Perkins Gilman Charlotte Anna Perkins Gilman (; née Perkins; July 3, 1860 – August 17, 1935), also known by her first married name Charlotte Perkins Stetson, was an American humanist, novelist, writer, lecturer, early sociologist, advocate for social reform ...
's poem "The Wolf at the Door." As per the brick-house little pig from the folktale collected by the
brothers Grimm The Brothers Grimm ( or ), Jacob Grimm, Jacob (1785–1863) and Wilhelm Grimm, Wilhelm (1786–1859), were Germans, German academics who together collected and published folklore. The brothers are among the best-known storytellers of Oral tradit ...
, the solution to the problem is simply "outsmart him and have him for dinner." ''Wolf,'' along with '' An Alphabet for Gourmets'' and '' A Cordiall Water'', is one of three works by Fisher that examine food as a form of self-help. Some critics place ''How to Cook a Wolf'' in a poorly studied literary genre known as food memoir, in company with titles like '' The Alice B. Toklas Cook Book'' and
Mimi Sheraton Miriam "Mimi" Sheraton ( Solomon; February 10, 1926 – April 6, 2023) was an American food critic. Early life and education Sheraton's mother, Beatrice, was described as an excellent cook and her father, Joseph Solomon, as a commission merchan ...
's ''From My Mother's Kitchen: Recipes and Reminiscences''. An Associated Press writer once characterized it as a "budget cookbook," alongside ''How to Eat Better for Less Money'' by
James Beard James Andrews Beard (May 5, 1903 – January 21, 1985) was an American chef, cookbook author, teacher and television personality. He pioneered television cooking shows, taught at The James Beard Cooking School in New York City and Seaside ...
and Sam Aaron, ''Economy Gastronomy'' by Sylvia Vaughn Thompson, and ''A Cookbook for Poor Poets and Others'' by Ann Rogers. The book contains 73 recipes, but
Orville Prescott Orville Prescott (September 8, 1906, Cleveland, Ohio – April 28, 1996, New Canaan, Connecticut) was the main book reviewer for ''The New York Times'' for 24 years. Biography Born on September 8, 1906, in Cleveland, Ohio, Prescott graduated f ...
, the ''New York Times'' reviewer, reported that the book's strengths were not so much in its catalog of recipes as in its "unorthodox, specific and pointed suggestions about cooking various types of food..." The book's adaptable prescriptions are derived from Fisher's precept that there's "no such thing as a new recipe." In 1987, a San Francisco Bay Area writer named Cyna McFadden reported that Fisher had told her: "The book has some terrible recipes...We were just so grateful to get hold of anything." A later writer argued that "the forced minimalism" of the recipes ''Wolf'' was valuable to him because "I couldn't get carried away with exotic ingredients, oI was forced to learn the basics." Per ''Humanities'' magazine, "The book is really a literary rather than a culinary accomplishmentultimately, more book than cook. Fisher's cheekiness in telling readers how to make war cake and then warning them away from it is a small case in point. Much of the book is like that, as Fisher steps slightly offstage of her narrative and confesses a change of mind." Scholar Allison Carruth calls it "an important text for both late modernism and food writing...Through her modernist redefinition of the cookbook and culinary redefinition of modernism, Fisher reveals a nation's growing appetites for industrialized food and the bodily as well as economic power that food promises."


Reception and legacy

The ''New York Times'' critic complained, "She has the weird notion that if a soup is rich enough and good enough, it is almost presumptuous to want anything else. Imagine! And she is very scornful and patronizing about desserts, too." During the
back-to-the-land movement A back-to-the-land movement is any of various agrarianism, agrarian movements across different historical periods. The common thread is a call for people to take up smallholding and to grow food from the land with an emphasis on a greater degree o ...
of the 1970s, it was said that ''How to Cook a Wolf'' had been "almost a bible for modern commune dwellers, homesteaders, and other devotees of the simple life...referred to frequently in ''
Mother Earth News ''Mother Earth News'' is a bi-monthly American magazine that has a circulation of 500,520 . It is published in Topeka, Kansas. Since its founding, ''Mother Earth News'' has promoted renewable energy, recycling, family farms, good agricultura ...
'' and other
underground publications The terms underground press or clandestine press refer to periodicals and publications that are produced without official approval, illegally or against the wishes of a dominant (governmental, religious, or institutional) group. In specific rece ...
." A latter-day practitioner of a similar ideology, Novella Carpenter, references Fisher's dictums on wastefulness in '' Farm City''. Cherry Pickman wrote a series of poems with titles "stolen" from ''How to Cook a Wolf''. Tamar Adler's ''An Everlasting Meal'' has been characterized as a riff on ''How to Cook a Wolf'' with "an up-to-date sensibility about cooking and food and the memories associated with kitchenry." Adler recycled several of Fisher's chapter titles ("How to Boil Water") and explicitly credited Fisher as her inspiration: "''How to Cook a Wolf'' is not a cookbook or a memoir or a story about one person or one thing. It is a book about cooking defiantly, amid the mess of war and the pains of bare pantries...I love that book. I have modeled this one on it." In 2016, ''How to Cook a Wolf'' was number 37 on the ''Guardian'''s list of 100 best nonfiction books.


Short film

In 1958, Fisher appeared in a five-minute color short film produced by the Wine Advisory Board of San Francisco called "How to Cook a Wolf Quickly".


Table of contents


See also

*


Notes


References


Sources

* * * * * * *


External links

* {{url, https://www.marxists.org/subject/women/poetry/wolf.html, "The Wolf at the Door" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman M. F. K. Fisher Books about food and drink 1942 non-fiction books American cuisine