Wina Born

Wina Born-Meijer (Sliedrecht, 21 August 1920 – Amsterdam, 6 August 2001) was a Dutch journalist. She is often named as de moeder van de Nederlandse gastronomie (English: The mother of the Dutch gastronomy).[1][2] She has written about a hundred cooking books and countless articles in magazines, like Margriet and Avenue.[3]

Work

In 1949, Wina Born published her first articles in the newly founded monthly Wijn (English: Wine). In the sober years after the Second World War gastronomy and wine were virtually unknown in the Netherlands.[4] Due to her weekly recipe-column in the magazine Margriet, with Libelle one of the major women magazines in the Netherlands, Born gained notoriety. She could also broaden the culinary horizon of the ordinary housewife, the main readers of the magazin.[5]

In a later stage Wina Born started writing articles about foreign kitchen styles and producing restaurant-reviews.[6]

Between 1962 and 2000, Born wrote and translated more than a hundred books about wine and cooking. She also wrote articles for several newspapers, like Het Parool, and magazines.[7]

For the "Stichting voor Academische reizen" she led yearly wine- and culinary trips to many different countries. in the period 1974-1997 she visited, amongst others, Turkey, Romania, Hungary and Bulgaria.[8]

Influence

In her early years as a journalist, "culinary journalism" was something new in the Netherlands. In the 1960s Wina Born became very influential as a culinary journalist.[9] Through her writings she learned the ordinary man and woman to look beyond the classic Dutch kitchen style and look at foreign kitchens. She also taught them that eating out is a nice type of recreation and not necessarely expensive.[10] Another effect was that cooks and chefs lost their anonymous place in the kitchen and became more well known or even celebrities.[11]

Honours

A selection of the honours Wina Born received:

In 1995 Wina Born, at to her 75th birthday, was honoured with the launch of the "Wina Born-prijs". The price is given to living people, who, in the spirit of Wina Born, made gastronomy more accessible for the broad public.[14]

Originally the price was handed out by the Dutch "Stichting Vakopleiding Horeca"[15] but in 2008 the "Netwerk in Gastronomie en Gastvrijheid" took over.[16]

Selective bibliography (all Dutch)

[17]

References

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