Kansas City: A Food Biography

Presented By
Andrea Broomfield

While some cities owe their existence to lumber, oil, or steel, Kansas City is arguably – or perhaps not so arguably – built on food.

From its earliest days as a provisioner for pioneers and traders headed west, KC evolved into a major marketer of the nation’s meat and wheat. Thousands also have made a living providing meals and hospitality to travelers passing through. As restaurateur and adopted son Fred Harvey noted, “Travel follows good food routes.”

In a discussion of her fascinating book Kansas City: A Food Biography, culinary historian and Johnson County Community College English professor Andrea Broomfield explores how a frontier town grew into a major metropolis famous for great cuisine, iconic dishes, and crossroads hospitality and how those features continue to define the city.

Listen
Upcoming in this series:
9
Nov
Kansas City’s Little Italy Neighborhood: How the N...
Central Library |
2:00pm
Watch or Listen to Past Events in this Series:
17
Aug
Missouri’s German Americans During World War I - P...
Central Library |
2:00pm
6
Apr
American Carnage: Wounded Knee, 1890
Central Library |
2:00pm
17
Oct
Rockhurst University: The First 100 Years
Central Library |
4:00pm
2
Oct
Merchants of the Santa Fe Trail
Central Library |
2:00pm

Kansas City: A Food Biography

Date & Location
In Person