This holiday season, renowned chef, author and food ambassador Lidia Bastianich travels to rural communities across the U.S. to explore the patchwork of traditions that make up America's diverse cuisine, in a holiday celebration of big meals from small towns.
In LIDIA CELEBRATES AMERICA: A Heartland Holiday Feast, a new television special co-produced with public media powerhouse WGBH, Lidia Bastianich journeys across the country to visit towns in Pennsylvania, Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma, Wisconsin and Minnesota to explore how tiny towns and charming hamlets in America's rural regions celebrate diverse culinary traditions and how the food itself helps to shape and preserve the identities of the people and places. Inspired by her travels, Lidia then prepares a sumptuous holiday meal for a gathering of friends, family and people she has met along the way.
LIDIA CELEBRATES AMERICA: A Heartland Holiday Feast, premieres on Tuesday, December 18 at 9:00 p.m. ET on PBS (check local listings).
"Small towns are the heart of our nation -- rich in traditions that are brought here and then handed down generation after generation," says Bastianich. "In LIDIA CELEBRATES AMERICA: A Heartland Holiday Feast, we take people on an intimate journey to see how food bonds people and places together."
"Lidia Bastianich knows better than anyone that food is a universal language creating bonds between friends, families and communities, and LIDIA CELEBRATES AMERICA brings that language to life," says Laurie Donnelly, WGBH Executive Producer.
In the U.S. nearly three-quarters of the land is rural, with over 50 million Americans living in small towns and farmlands. Many have been here for centuries, while others are recent arrivals. As an immigrant who moved to America with her family at the age of 12 after fleeing Communist Europe, Lidia feels connected to the people and families she meets in the special.
In Sunbury, Pennsylvania, Lidia returns to the small town where she went to high school and first learned what it meant to be an American teenager while she lived for a year with relatives shortly after arriving in the U.S. She visits family and friends and retraces her rural roots in Pennsylvania Dutch country, with its traditions of succotash and shoo-fly pie, and cooks pizza in an outdoor brick oven, reminiscent of her childhood in Istria.
She then heads south to the land of gumbo and crawfish, where many cultural influences and ethnicities collide to form the Creole cooking traditions. In Natchitoches, Louisiana Lidia learns how to make file, an herb made from the sassafras tree, used for seasoning gumbo, and enjoys some downhome cooking among locals who have been there for generations.
The special also explores the influences of growing immigrant communities. In Denton, Texas, near Dallas, a restaurant family brings its Mexican heritage to the local food culture and shows Lidia how to make tamales, a traditional and classic Christmas dish. In Wausau, Wisconsin home to a thriving Hmong community--a group of refugees who escaped Laos after the Vietnam War--a family prepares for Lidia a favorite Hmong ceremonial dish of pork and greens.
Lidia also visits Lawton, Oklahoma, home to some of the best BBQ around--including hotspot Sam's Soul Food. It was once home to the famed Buffalo soldiers in the 1800s, the African American troops who served on the western frontier after the Civil War and later helped the US expand westward. Lidia cooks a dinner on the open fire in their tradition--salted pork, cornbread, BAKED beans, dumplings and coffee.
Up north, we get a taste of the Scandinavian culture, food traditions and ice house fishing when Lidia travels with her grandson to the tiny town of Walker, Minnesota--gamely setting out on a snowmobile for the annual Eelpout Festival. Fishermen all over flock to compete for the freshwater cod that hides at the bottom of Minnesota lakes and drill deep holes through 30 inches of frozen water for a chance to catch the strange eel-like fish. Lidia kisses the fish for good luck and fries eelpout nuggets in oil on an open fire out on the ice. She also learns an old family recipe for leftse, a Scandinavian dish similar to crepes.
LIDIA CELEBRATES AMERICA: A Heartland Holiday Feast culminates in a festive celebration with families joining Lidia as she returns to rural Pennsylvania for a large family-style dinner--including antipasto, risotto with leeks, Arborio rice, carnaroli, a main course of braised porkchops, red onion and pears, polenta, winter caponata, acorn SQUASH salad and braised broccoli rabe. The dishes are inspired by her travels and experiences across the country.
Series Description
LIDIA CELEBRATES AMERICA is a lively exploration of the rich diversity of cultures across the United States, and the vibrant ethnic and religious customs and traditions observed by various groups--in which food is a common denominator that connects all human beings. Previous programs have focused on the different ways Americans celebrate weddings, holiday traditions, independence, and life's milestones. The prior two specials, which have honored our troops and celebrated the ways in which veteran farmers continue to give back to the country, have each won the prestigious James Beard Award. For more program information, visit the website pbs.org/lidiacelebratesamerica. To view recipes featured in the series, go to PBS Food: pbs.org/food. LIDIA CELEBRATES AMERICA series DVDs, Best of Lidia: Pastas DVD, Mastering the Art of Italian Cuisine cookbook and more are available at shoppbs.org. Every purchase supports PBS.
For images and additional up-to-date information on this and other PBS programs, visit PBS Press Room at pbs.org/pressroom.
To download recipes, watch video previews, and view behind-the-scenes images and stories, go to pbs.org/lidiacelebratesamerica.
PRODUCTION CREDITS:
Underwriter: Corporation for Public Broadcasting
Producers: WGBH Boston and Tavola Productions
Executive producers: Lidia Bastianich and Laurie Donnelly
LIDIA CELEBRATES AMERICA: A Heartland Holiday Feast, is a production of WGBH Boston and Tavola Productions. Lidia Bastianich is host. Executive Producers are Lidia Bastianich and Laurie Donnelly.
Funding for LIDIA CELEBRATES AMERICA: A Heartland Holiday Feast, is provided by The Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
About Lidia Bastianich
Lidia Bastianich is an Emmy award-winning public television host, a best-selling cookbook author, restaurateur, and owner of a flourishing food and entertainment business. Her longtime series on public television include the current Lidia's Kitchen, in addition to Lidia's Italy, Lidia Celebrates America, Lidia's Family Table and more. She is the chef and owner/co-owner of four acclaimed New York City restaurants - Felidia, Becco, Esca and Del Posto, as well as Lidia's Pittsburgh and Lidia's Kansas City. She is also founder and president of Tavola Productions, an entertainment company that produces high quality broadcast productions. Lidia also has a line of pastas and all natural sauces called LIDIA'S. She is part of the team that opened Eataly, the international artisanal Italian food and wine marketplace with two locations in New York City, plus Los Angeles, Boston, Chicago and Sao Paolo, Brazil. Lidia has authored, or co-authored with her daughter Tanya Bastianich Manuali, ten cookbooks including Lidia's Celebrate Like An Italian: 220 Foolproof Recipes That Make Every Meal a Party. In her new memoir, My American Dream: A Life of Love, Family, and Food, Lidia takes readers from her life under communism, a dramatic escape across the border and life as a refugee, to her journey to America - penniless - and the launch of her food business.
About Tavola Productions
Founded by Lidia Bastianich, Tavola Productions, an entertainment company that produces award-winning broadcast productions of quality, including Lidia's Kitchen, Lidia's Family Table, Lidia's Italy and Lidia's Italy in America.
About WGBH
WGBH Boston is America's preeminent public broadcaster and the largest producer of PBS content for TV and the Web, including Masterpiece, Antiques Roadshow, Frontline, Nova, American Experience, Arthur, Pinkalicious & Peterrific, and more than a dozen other primetime, lifestyle and children's series. WGBH's television channels include WGBH 2, WGBX 44, and the digital channels World and Create. WGBH Radio serves listeners across New England with 89.7 WGBH, Boston's Local NPR®; 99.5 WCRB Classical Radio Boston; and WCAI, the Cape and Islands NPR® Station. WGBH also is a major source of programs for public radio (among them, PRI's The World®), a leader in educational multimedia (including PBS LearningMedia(TM), providing the nation's educators with free, curriculum-based digital content), and a pioneer in technologies and services that make media accessible to deaf, hard of hearing, blind and visually impaired audiences. WGBH has been recognized with hundreds of honors: Emmys, Peabodys, duPont-Columbia Awards and Oscars. Find more information at wgbh.org.
About PBS
PBS, with nearly 350 member stations, offers all Americans the opportunity to explore new ideas and new worlds through television and digital content. Each month, PBS reaches over 90 million people through television and 30 million people online, inviting them to experience the worlds of science, history, nature and public affairs; to hear diverse viewpoints; and to take front row seats to world-class drama and performances. PBS' broad array of programs has been consistently honored by the industry's most coveted award competitions. TEACHERS of children from pre-K through 12th grade turn to PBS for digital content and services that help bring classroom lessons to life. Decades of research confirms that PBS' premier children's media service, PBS KIDS, helps children build critical literacy, math and social-emotional skills, enabling them to find success in school and life. Delivered through member stations, PBS Kids offers high-quality educational content on TV - including a 24/7 channel, online at pbskids.org, via an array of mobile apps and in communities across America. More information about PBS is available at www.pbs.org, one of the leading dot-org websites on the internet, or by following PBS on Twitter, Facebook or through our apps for mobile and connected devices. Specific program information and updates for press are available at pbs.org/pressroom or by following PBS Pressroom on Twitter.
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