Authors: Aaron Bobrow-Strain
organic fermentation, 24
Orowheat bread, 161
Osgood, Eva, 97
pageants (eugenic fitness), 93â94
pain au levain
, 11, 71, 193
Paleolithic era, 3
Paltrow, Gwyneth, 74
Panschar, William, 63
Parker, Jane, 126
Parran, Thomas, 118
patriarchy, 174, 175
Paz, Octavio, 149
peace and security, dreams of, 8, 133â61; and Bimbo Bakery, 153â55, 160â61; and changing Japanese diet, 144â48; and famine relief from U.S., 136â37; food access and, 159; impact of Mexico's Green Revolution technology on, 155â58; industrial food production politics and, 134â36; and Mexican Bimbo bread, 133â34; negative impact of Green Revolution technology model, 158â59; revolutionary bread in Mexico, 148â51; and superiority of American food/bread, 140â44; and U.S. wheat/bread exports, 138â40; and wheat production in Mexico, 152â53
peasants: demand for bread by English, 5; Mexican Agricultural Program and, 157, 158
pellagra, 111
Pepperidge Farms, 179â80, 184
Perfection Bakeries, 44
Perfection Salad
(Shapiro), 11
Perkins, Frances, 39, 40
Perkins, John H., 158
Perry County, Missouri, 23
Phillips, Cyrus, 40
Physical Culture
(magazine), 93, 95
Physical Culture philosophy, 91â93, 94
Pierpont, John, 84
Pilcher, Jeffrey, 149
Pittsburgh, 25â26
Plan Puebla, 158
Plato, 7, 78
political fermentation, dream of, 190â95
politics.
See
food politics Pollan, Michael, 107
Pont-Saint-Esprit, France, 143
poolish
, 69
poor diet: as cause of nation's problems, 34; Physical Culture philosophy on, 92; poverty and, 15, 22â23, 36â37; racial eugenicists on, 36; in tenements, 35
Popenoe, Paul, 95
popular culture, eugenic ideals in, 93â94
poverty/the poor: bakeries associated with, 37â38; cholera outbreak and, 15, 81, 82â83; diet and, 15, 22â23; diversity of diet and, 100; enriched bread and, 114â17, 118; in
How the Other Half Lives
(Riis), 35; hygienic eating/diet and, 36â37
power: English “lords” and, 5; food and distribution of, 11, 12; making “good food” accessible to others, 12; relationships between bread and, 6.
See also
food politics; food power
probiotic foods, 194
professional cyclists, 73â74
professionalism, culture of, 32
Progressive Era, 21â23; concern over food purity, 34â35; sixties counterculture food reform and, 168
propaganda: Cold War, 140â41; Soviet, 139
Providence, Rhode Island, 26
Pryor, Richard, 173
public health, 32, 34
public health officials: on bread enrichment, 112, 120â21; and cholera pandemic (1832), 81; dietnational security connection and, 108; on Japanese school lunch program, 144, 146
Punjab region, India, 158
pure food.
See
food purity
Pure Food and Drug Act (1906), 19, 67
Pure Food laws, 115
Pure Foods Movement, 18â19, 68
purity and contagion, dreams of, 8, 17â49, 190â91; anxiety over germs and hygiene, 33â34; automatic baking and, 20; bread making science and, 41â43; bread panic of late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, 19â20; bread wrapping and, 43â44; concern over food safety and purity, 34â35; decrease in homemade baking and small bakeries, 44â45; domestic expertise and, 31â33; food reformers on healthy eating and, 35â37; immigrants, attitudes toward, 21; in Progressive Era, 21â23; and Pure Foods Movement, 18â19; raw milk and, 17â18; and shift to store-bought bread, 29â30; and triumph of industrial bread, 45â47; and Ward Baking Company, 20â21, 25â29
Pyler, E. J., 172
race: dreams of “real” food and, 29; “improving,” through diet, 93â95; Mexican white bread preferences and, 149.
See also
racial eugenics; racial fitness; racial hierarchies; racial purity; racism racial eugenics, 21, 36, 88, 93, 95â96
racial fitness, with white bread, 95â97
racial hierarchies, in Mexico, 149
racial purity: food purity and, 35;
whiteness of bread and, 64â66
racism, food safety concerns and, 49
rationing, food, 123
rations, bread, 3â4, 136, 137â38, 139
raw milk, 17â18
“real” food, dreams of, 29
Red Cross nutrition classes, 119
Red Scare, 14, 127
Red the cow, 17, 18, 47
refined wheat/flour, 65â66, 78, 83
regulation: food safety, 19; guidelines for bakeries, 38â39
Reid, Margaret, 110
The Republic
(Plato), 7, 78
research: on bread consumption, 121â22; on enriched bread's impact on health, 124; nutrition, 111â12
research-based meal planning, 32â33
resistance and status, dreams of, 8, 163â88; counterculture's dream of good bread, 169â71; counterculture's revolt against industrial white bread, 166â69; health breads and, 179â81; healthy eating and, 177â78; high-end bakeries, 182â85; homemade bread and, 181â82; social change by women in the kitchen, 174â76; social status connection with health and, 186â88; white trash-white bread association, 163â65
Reynolds, Horace, 129
rice, 6; beriberi and, 115; bread as substitute for, 145â47; Japanese preferring, over bread, 148
Richards, Ellen, 33, 42
Right Food
(Froude), 97
Riis, Jacob, 35
riots, bread, 4â5, 36, 139, 150
Roaring Twenties, 14
Robertson, Laurel, 175
Rockefeller Foundation, 151, 152
Rockford, Illinois, 121â22
Rohwedder, Otto, 55
Rome, ancient, 4
Ross, Delle, 97
Roszak, Theodore, 166
Routh, C. H., 42
Rudkin, Margaret, 179â80
Rumsey, Louis, 98
rural inequality, 157, 159
Russia, 3
rye bread, 96, 98, 112, 123, 142, 219n53
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
, 2, 192â93, 194
safety, food.
See
food safety
Saguaro-Juniper Ranch (Tucson, Arizona), 10â11
Salter, James, 165
sanitation, 32; bakery bread lacking, 37â38; clean bread advertising and, 40â41; food purity and, 18â19, 190â91; homemade bread and, 61â62; immigrant labor in bakeries and, 39â40; and meatpacking industry, 18, 38; wrapped bread and, 43â44.
See also
hygiene
Sara Lee, 133, 161
Saveur
, 187
Schlosser, Eric, 48
Schneider Baking Company, 126
school lunch program, Japanese, 145â46, 147
Science News Letter
, 118, 128
“Science of Oven Management” (
Ladies Home Journal)
, 60
Scientific American
, 44â45, 68
scientific baking and eating: bleached flour, 66â68; continuous-mix baking, 69â70; fermentation process, 68â69; vs. homemade bread, 61â63; science of bread making, 60â61; and sliced bread, 55â57; and streamlined loaves, 57â60; Ward Bakery, 24â25.
See also
industrial bread; techno-scientific baking
scientific control, 65, 71, 191.
See also
control and abundance, dreams of
scientific expertise, 31â32
scientific housekeeping, 32â33
scurvy, 110
Seattle's Little Bread Company, 174
Selective Service, 110
Sen, Amartya, 159
Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs, 179
Servitje, Lorenzo, 134, 154, 160â61
Servitje, Roberto, 160â61
Seventh-Day Adventist Church, 86
seventies counterculture.
See
counterculture of the 1960s and 1970s
Shapiro, Laura, 11
Sheboygan, Wisconsin, 154
Sheraton, Mimi, 183â84
Sherman, H. C., 99, 100
Sherwood, R. C., 120
Shiva, Vandana, 158â59
Sickels, Emma, 32
Siebel Institute of Technology, 61
Siegmond, Warren E., 129
Sienna, 4
Silverton, Nancy, 53, 70
Simmons, Patrick, 186
Sinclair, Upton, 18, 38
Sister Corita, 166, 168
sixties counterculture.
See
counterculture of the 1960s and 1970s
sliced bread: appeal of streamlined design in, 57â60; invention of, 55â57; need for bread uniformity and, 64; softness of bread and, 57
Slim, Carlos, 160
slow fermentation, 54, 70
slow food, xi, 71
small-bakery revival, 183â84
social change: immigrants blamed for, 21; made by women in the kitchen, 174â76.
See also
social reform
social Darwinism, 88
social hierarchies.
See
class; racial hierarchies; social status
socialism, utopian, 59
social reform: counterculture movement of 1960s and 1970s, 167, 168; on dangers of poor hygiene and germs, 33â34; for healthy eating habits and hygienic eating, 36â37; in Progressive Era, 21â23
social status: bread choices and, 37, 46, 186â87; bread consumption and, 7; healthy eating and elite, 187.
See also
class
soft/softness of bread, 57, 72, 129, 160
Sokolsky, George, 147
sourdough bread/starters, 23, 53, 70, 184
South America, Grupo Bimbo in, 160â61
South Park
(TV program), 165
Soviet Union, 127, 139, 141â42
Spencer, Herbert, 59
“staff of death,” 92, 117
Standard Brands, 116, 119
status.
See
social status sterilization, forced, 93, 94.
See also
eugenics
Stern, Alexandra Minna, 35
Stiebeling, Hazel K., 120
St. Louis Bread Company, 183
Stolzenbach's bakery, 41
Stone, Lucy, 84
store-bought bread: bought in the 1940s and 1950s, 122â23; convenience and, 30; late nineteenth century, 23; shift from homemade bread to, 29â30.
See also
industrial bread
Stowe, Catherine, 31â32, 60
Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 31â32, 60
streamlined aesthetic, 57â60
strength and defense, dreams of, 8; and association between individual/national strength and enriched bread, 121, 123, 125â30; and bread consumption during 1940s and 1950s, 121â23; and Canadian Bread, 113; and civilian diet during wartime, 108â9; and Cornell Bread, 113; and impact of enriched bread, 130â31; and national education campaign for enriched bread, 118â20; national security and food, 105â9; and nutritional preparedness for World War II, 110â12; and reasons for eating industrial white bread, 123â25; and success of enriched bread, 120â21; and synthetic enrichment, 112, 113â14; and War Bread, 112â13.
See also
alternative food movement
strikes, bakery, 35, 36
Stude, Henry, 100
suffrage activists, 84
sugar, 2, 6, 15, 43, 85, 89, 90, 179, 182
Sullivan, Steve, 184, 185, 186
Sullivan Street Bakery, 184
Sun-Made bread, 161
supermarkets, bakeries in, 183
Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers (SCAP), 144, 145, 147
Swenerton, Hilda, 179
“swill dairies,” 18
Switzerland, 113
synthetic enrichment.
See
enriched bread
Syria, 3
Tassajara Bread Book
(Brown), 169, 181
technological progress: and Progressivism, 22; utopian thought and, 59â60.
See also
industrial bread
technology, Green Revolution, 153â55, 157â59
techno-scientific baking, 60.
See also
industrial bread; scientific baking and eating
temperance movement, 22, 80, 85
tenements, 35, 36â37, 82
thiamin, 90, 115; thiamin deficiency, 111â12
Tip-Top bread, 29, 41
toaster, first pop-up, 58
Toastmaster toaster, 58
Tom Cat Bakery (New York), 184
Tompkins, Kyla, 87
tortillas, 6, 134, 149
Tour de France, 74
Truman, Harry S., 125, 136â37, 140
Tryon, Thomas, 78
Turkey, 3, 139
typhoid, 34
typhus, 46
unbleached flour, 68, 180
United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, 159
United States: Cold War industrial food production and, 134â36; El Trigo de Rockefeller, 152â53; eugenics movement in, 93â94; famine relief from, 135, 136â37; Grupo Bimbo in, 161; history of bread consumption in, 4; history of eating and defense connection in, 108â9; humanitarian aid during World War II by, 136â40; pushing white bread in Japan, 144â48; social order of bread in, 7; superiority of consumerism and bread in, 140â44; wheat shipments to Mexico from, 150â51
“United States of Arugula” (Kamp) 12, 185
unpasteurized milk, 17â18, 47â48
upper class: Progressive Era social reform and, 23
U.S. Bureau of Chemistry, 66, 67
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), 69, 99â100, 114, 122, 123, 128, 148
U.S. Department of Commerce, 120
U.S. Supreme Court, 67, 68
utopian thinking, 58â59
Vande Velde, Christian, 73â74
Van Nuys industrial park (La Brea Bakery), 52â54, 70
vegetables, 4, 15, 16, 58, 81, 83, 84, 96, 100, 107, 145, 146, 152, 179
Vegetarian Gothic
(Willet), 169â70
Vegetarian Settlement Company, 86
Veracruz, Mexico, 150
Victory Gardens, 107
Villa, Francisco, 148
vitamins: American knowledge of, 117â18; B1, 115; B2, 110; deficiencies in, 110â11; enriched bread helping Americans become conscious of, 120; in whole wheat bread, 96, 97.
See also
thiamin
Vogue
(magazine), 182
Vreeland, Diana, ix
Wahl Efficiency Institute, 61
Wahl-Heinus Institute of Fermentology, 61
Wallace, Henry, 151
Walla Walla, Washington, 15â16; artisan bread in, 52; Brasserie Four in, 51; knowing where your food comes from in, 48; liberal stereotypes in, 105â6; wine tourism in, 10