Cookbooks
Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings
Found in 4 Collections and/or Records:
Alex Jay collection
Collection
Identifier: 2001.026-2015.041-2017.003
Scope and Contents
This collection mostly contains materials procured by Alex Jay and focus on Chinese American writers and playwrights, artists and illustrators, actors, comic book artists, filmmakers, designers, and architects. There are various periodicals, artwork, books, comic books, recipes, playbills, and other items either by Chinese Americans or about Chinese Americans, all dating between 1914 and 2015. Objects are also searchable via PastPerfect Online System at...
Dates:
Majority of material found in 1877-2015
Found in:
Museum of Chinese in America
Oral History Interview with Grace Young, 2016-03-11
Item
Identifier: 2016.037.032
Abstract
Grace Young is celebrated and award winning Chinese America chef and cookbook author. Born and raised in San Francisco, California with her brother and Cantonese parents, Young’s love of Cantonese cuisine began early in her childhood. She fondly recalls her mother’s home cooked meals made with authentic Chinese ingredients and cooking techniques. Young’s introduction to non-Chinese food came through Julia Child’s television show, which inspired Young to apprentice under French cooking...
Dates:
2016-03-11
Oral History Interview with Jonathan Wu, 2015-11-09
Item
Identifier: 2016.037.027
Abstract
Jonathan Wu discusses growing up in the Bronx and Hartford, CT., and then his education at FCI which lead to his career as a restauranteur. Jonathan Wu has working in restaurants in Brittany, Madrid, and Venice, as well as in New York City. He has learned a variety of techniques over his career and has benefitted greatly from supportive bosses and exposure to different cultures and cooking techniques and prattices. Wu is now the founder of Fung Tu, a Chinese restaurant with a modern vision...
Dates:
2015-11-09
Oral History Interview with Kimmie Lee Tie, 2016-09-24
Item
Identifier: 2016.037.021
Abstract
Kimmie Lee Tie discusses her early life in China and how World War II impacted her family and interestingly her diet. She talks about the experiences she had cooking on her family’s small farm and how after the war she married a Chinese American sailor and moved to the United States. Living in the US, Kimmie and her husband bought a Cantonese restaurant in 1957 which they operated for twenty years. In this environment, she taught herself how to cook with a wok and developed her Chinese...
Dates:
2016-09-24