Dr. Amy Trubek is a Professor in the Nutrition and Food Sciences
department at ̽̽. She was the founding Faculty Director of the
Food Systems graduate program. Trained as a cultural anthropologist and chef, her
research interests include the globalization of the food supply, the relationship between
taste and place, the development of food agency, and cooking and sensory evaluation as
cultural practices. Dr. Trubek is involved in transdisciplinary, collaborative research with
scholars focusing on the ‘wicked problems’ of our time in relation to food systems and
food agency.
She teaches both undergraduate and graduate courses, including Basic Concepts of Food,
Qualitative Research Methods, and Food Systems, Society and Policy. She is the author
of three books: Haute Cuisine: How the French Invented the Culinary Profession (2000),
The Taste of Place: A Cultural Journey into Terroir (2008) and Making Modern Meals:
How Americans Cook Today. She serves as the co-editorial chair of Gastronomica: The
Journal For Food Studies. She has been interviewed and quoted in various media outlets,
including the Burlington Free Press, Atlantic Monthly, the Boston Globe and the New
York Times.
Dr. Trubek’s research involves the practices needed to move from the raw to the cooked
(in a broad sense): people working with food, making food for themselves and for others,
taking the resources of the natural environment and transforming them into palatable and
culturally acceptable dishes, meals and drinks. This focus on people and practices also
involves an analytic consideration of the transfer of knowledge. How do chefs learn what
is considered “expert knowledge?” Why do cheesemakers and winemakers want to
convey the importance of their landscapes when explaining what makes their cheese and
wine taste so good? How do we understand the consequences of global food supply
chains in light of the increasing evidence of climate change? How do Americans learn
how to cook while living in such a saturated food environment, when someone else (or
something else) can always do that work instead? These questions also intersect with a
robust line of social science and humanities inquiry into the cascading interest (especially
in the United States) in foods from somewhere made by someone, most often identified
as a cultural and political response to the industrialization and globalization of the
modern food supply.