The co-op bookstore for avid readers
Book Cover for: Try It!: How Frieda Caplan Changed the Way We Eat, Mara Rockliff

Try It!: How Frieda Caplan Changed the Way We Eat

Mara Rockliff

Meet fearless Frieda Caplan--the produce pioneer who changed the way Americans eat by introducing exciting new fruits and vegetables, from baby carrots to blood oranges to kiwis--in this brightly illustrated nonfiction picture book!

In 1956, Frieda Caplan started working at the Seventh Street Produce Market in Los Angeles. Instead of competing with the men in the business with their apples, potatoes, and tomatoes, Frieda thought, why not try something new? Staring with mushrooms, Frieda began introducing fresh and unusual foods to her customers--snap peas, seedless watermelon, mangos, and more!

This groundbreaking woman brought a whole world of delicious foods to the United States, forever changing the way we eat. Frieda Caplan was always willing to try something new--are you?

Book Details

  • Publisher: Beach Lane Books
  • Publish Date: Jan 12nd, 2021
  • Pages: 32
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 11.10in - 8.80in - 0.80in - 0.93lb
  • EAN: 9781534460072
  • Recommended age: 04-08
  • Categories: • Biography & Autobiography - Women• Cooking & Food• Health & Daily Living - Diet & Nutrition

More books to explore

Book Cover for: Pretend Soup and Other Real Recipes: A Cookbook for Preschoolers and Up, Mollie Katzen
Book Cover for: What's for Lunch?, Sarah L. Thomson
Book Cover for: Johnny Boo and the Happy Apples (Johnny Boo Book 3), James Kochalka
Book Cover for: Let's Go Nuts!: Seeds We Eat, April Pulley Sayre
Book Cover for: Little Pea: (Children's Book, Books for Baby, Books about Picky Eaters, Board Books for Kids), Amy Krouse Rosenthal
Book Cover for: Touch the Sky: Alice Coachman, Olympic High Jumper, Ann Malaspina
Book Cover for: Good Books for Bad Children: The Genius of Ursula Nordstrom, Beth Kephart
Book Cover for: Good Books for Bad Children: The Genius of Ursula Nordstrom, Beth Kephart
Book Cover for: Becoming a Good Creature, Sy Montgomery
Book Cover for: Queen of the Track: Alice Coachman, Olympic High-Jump Champion, Heather Lang
Book Cover for: Six Dots: A Story of Young Louis Braille, Jen Bryant
Book Cover for: Women Who Broke the Rules: Sacajawea, Kathleen Krull
Book Cover for: She Persisted: Naomi Osaka, Kekla Magoon
Book Cover for: Swimming with Sharks: The Daring Discoveries of Eugenie Clark, Heather Lang
Book Cover for: She Persisted: Ella Fitzgerald, Andrea Davis Pinkney

About the Author

Rockliff, Mara: - Mara Rockliff is the author of many historical books for children, including Mesmerized, winner of the Cook Prize and an Orbis Pictus Honor book, and Gingerbread for Liberty!, an ALA Notable Children's Book and winner of the Garden State Children's Book Award and Land of Enchantment Book Award. Under the pen name Lewis B. Montgomery, she wrote all twelve books in the popular Milo and Jazz Mysteries chapter book series, which has been translated into Spanish, French, and Chinese. She lives in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, with her family. Visit her online at MaraRockliff.com.
Potter, Giselle: - Giselle Potter has illustrated many books, including Try It! by Mara Rockliff, All by Himself? by Elana K. Arnold, and Kate and the Beanstalk by Mary Pope Osborne, as well as her own Tell Me What to Dream About, This Is My Dollhouse, and The Year I Didn't Go to School, about traveling through Italy with her parents' puppet troupe when she was eight. She lives in Rosendale, New York, with her husband and two daughters. Visit her at GisellePotter.com.

More books by Mara Rockliff

Book Cover for: All at Once Upon a Time: A Picture Book, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: Signs of Hope: The Revolutionary Art of Sister Corita Kent, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: A Perfect Fit: How Lena "Lane" Bryant Changed the Shape of Fashion, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: Sweet Justice: Georgia Gilmore and the Montgomery Bus Boycott, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: Mesmerized: How Ben Franklin Solved a Mystery That Baffled All of France, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: Lights! Camera! Alice!: The Thrilling True Adventures of the First Woman Filmmaker (Film Book for Kids, Non-Fiction Picture Book, Inspiring Ch, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: The Girl Who Could Fix Anything: Beatrice Shilling, World War II Engineer, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: Born to Swing: Lil Hardin Armstrong's Life in Jazz, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: Chik Chak Shabbat, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: Around America to Win the Vote: Two Suffragists, a Kitten, and 10,000 Miles, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: Billie Jean!: How Tennis Star Billie Jean King Changed Women's Sports, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: Anything But Ordinary Addie: The True Story of Adelaide Herrmann, Queen of Magic, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: Doctor Esperanto and the Language of Hope, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: Jefferson Measures a Moose, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: The Grudge Keeper, Mara Rockliff
Book Cover for: Pieces of Another World, Mara Rockliff

Praise for this book

Baby corn? Seedless watermelons? Purple potatoes? Who'd eat that?

Frieda Caplan was the plucky produce promoter who mainstreamed much of the world's delicacies and innovative hybrids into the American kitchen. Starting her own eponymous company--Frieda's--in 1962, she ensured that her reputation was made in what was then an all-male wholesale produce business. Almost nothing was too far-out for Frieda; after all, spaghetti squash was just one more recipe card in search of a convert. However, even Frieda was stumped with the Chinese gooseberry--but sales took off after she renamed it a kiwi. Anyone who bites into a crunchy jicama or a fiery habanero purchased from a supermarket can thank the adventurous taste buds of this pioneering greengrocer. Rockliff's snappy sentences and rollicking alliteration make this a fun read-aloud: "Farmers dug for tips on what to grow. Cooks peppered her with questions"; "mounds of mongosteen, heaps of jicama, and quantities of quince." Potter's signature flat palette gives way to bright purples, brilliant reds, and crisp greens. The retro illustrations follow Frieda from her entry into a marketplace filled with "boxes of bananas. Piles of potatoes. Truckloads of tomatoes" to a consumer wonderland filled with boxes of donut peaches and cherimoyas....A delectable delight daring readers to embrace the 80,000 species of Earth's edible plants.--Kirkus Reviews *STARRED REVIEW "11/1/20"