In recent generations most Americans, even farm kids, didn’t grow up on heirloom fruit and vegetables grown from traditional, naturally pollinated seed stock but on agribusiness produce. As UW-Milwaukee sociology professor Jennifer A. Jordan recounts in her book, Edible Memory: The Lure of Heirloom Tomatoes & Other Forgotten Foods, her self-reliant great-great aunt, living on a remote ranch with a wood-burning stove, made Jell-O molds and cakes from box mixes. Some proponents of the heirloom food movement have constructed a mythic culinary past that reflects the preoccupations of present-day foodies. And yet, this movement is a valuable pushback against the industrialization of agriculture and the standardization of our lives. Although she belabors her main points, which could easily have been contained in a magazine essay, Jordan writes beautifully and with enthusiasm, reminding us that the crops we cultivate and the food on our table have changed along with social conditions.
Memories of Meals
The meaning of heirloom foods