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All the United States New York State New York City Brooklyn Museum of Food and Drink
Gastro Obscura

Museum of Food and Drink

Here, exhibits come with a side of edible history.

Brooklyn, New York

Added By
Sam O'Brien
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A machine for making fortune cookies on display.   Prospect Park Alliance
  Edsel Little
The museum’s puffing gun.   Edsel Little
A staff member prepares a stir-fry.   Randy Duchaine
Salesman sample box of Extrin “butter” favored products.   Anna Minster / Atlas Obscura User
Have a whiff at the Smell Synthesizer.   Anna Minster / Atlas Obscura User
The four neurological pathways to flavor.   Anna Minster / Atlas Obscura User
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It's easy to work up an appetite as you meander your way through the Museum of Food and Drink in Williamsburg. Its long-standing exhibit, "Chow: Making the Chinese American Restaurant," for instance, weaves together stories of immigration, culture, and perseverance through photos, historical menus, artifacts, and vintage signs. And if you find your stomach rumbling as you learn about the origins of chop suey or Peking ravioli, you're in luck: The museum also features a kitchen that serves up dishes associated with its exhibits.

Depending on the day, the museum's menu for "Chow" has featured the likes of wonton soup, fried rice, and dumplings. (When the exhibit changes, however, so will the kitchen's offerings.) As the chef cooks, he or she will explain the history and significance of the recipe, making for a multi-sensory learning experience.

After walking through the museum, be sure to look out for the puffing gun stationed in the lobby. Large devices such as this one were once used to turn oats, corn starch, and rice into puffed cereal. After debuting at the 1904 World's Fair, puffing guns were responsible for creating breakfast classics such as Cheerios, Kix, and Corn Pops. Although the cannon-like devices made for spectacular cereal explosions, they were replaced by more efficient technology after World War II.

Update: MOFAD is now located at the Empire Stores in DUMBO.

Related Tags

Food Museums Museums History

Know Before You Go

MOFAD has now moved to a small space in DUMBO and is hosting a version of its original exhibit, Flavor, open Thursday-Sunday each week.

Community Contributors

Added By

Sam OBrien

Edited By

tobcarne, Anna Minster

  • tobcarne
  • Anna Minster

Published

October 29, 2019

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  • https://www.mofad.org/
Museum of Food and Drink
55 Water St
Brooklyn, New York, 11201
United States
40.703488, -73.991618
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