That’s certainly true about “Come and Get It!” While it’s the “stuff” that’s on display, the exhibit successfully provides visitors a sensual time-trip through Midwestern foodways. As with the museum’s other exhibits, it focuses on McLean County, but of course much is applicable to central Illinois in general.
Central to the exhibit are four kitchens. The first is a typical Midwestern kitchen of the 1840s. Cooking was done in the fireplace. By the 1880s wood was still the fuel, but cast iron stoves provided a flat surface for pans and better heat regulation. In the 1920s, stoves were fueled by gas, and even had temperature-controlled ovens – a huge step forward. There was running water, another vast improvement, as were ice boxes which kept foods cool by means of large blocks of ice.
The 1970s kitchen – with harvest gold appliances, of course – has a dishwasher, electric stove and refrigerator with freezer. Other electric appliances have made their appearance: a crock pot, mixer and electric skillet.
Interspersed between the kitchens are displays of the evolution of what foods were eaten and how they were prepared and procured – from hunting and growing-your-own, to specialty markets (butchers, bakers, greengrocers), local food producers and processors, to the rise of supermarket chains. Dining out is explored, from nonexistent in the 1830s, to special occasion only in the late 1800s and early 1900s, to today’s fast food franchises.
For this special project, the McLean County Historical Museum appointed a guest curator, Robert Dirks. He is an emeritus professor at Illinois State University who specialized in the anthropology of food and nutrition for nearly 30 years. Dirks spent more than two years researching and conducting interviews for “Come and Get It!” The essence of the resultant manuscript was developed into a “script,” then Dirks collaborated with a set designer to create the exhibit.
Dirk’s full manuscript also resulted in a companion book that’s due out in print in a few weeks. “Loads and loads of what’s in the book didn’t make it on the walls,” he says.
On June 18, Dirks will lead an all-day tour featuring the “Come and Get It!” exhibit as well as other historic sites of culinary note, most of which are in the book. “I’ll have lots of two cents to throw in,” says Dirks with a laugh. Sponsored by the
Greater Midwest Foodways Alliance, the tour will begin at 10 a.m. at the exhibit (those who wish can arrive earlier for the Bloomington Farmers Market, which is located around the square).