When did the custom of meals served at regular hours begin? At what time did humankind rise to the table and commence eating with individual plates and utensils? Since when have we begun to speak of cuisine and to judge our foods, their methods of preparation, and manner of consumption on social criteria of gastronomic merit? In this rich, illuminating book an array of authorities explore the history of food from prehistoric times to the present day. In the process, they dispel many of the myths about our culinary heritage that food lovers have come to take for granted: * Those who believe pasta originated in China and was brought to Venice by Marco Polo will find another story here. * The notion that flaky pastry dough was invented by Claude Lorrain is shown to be a spurious auxiliary to the renowned seventeenth-century painter's resume. * The illusion that pate de foie gras was invented in Strasbourg, France in 1788 is shattered by evidence of its existence much earlier in the eighteenth century. * The original recipe for chocolate -- served as a beverage -- contained chili instead of sugar, and the eventual addition of sugar by the Spanish made both sugar and chocolate hot items throughout Europe. In the course of this major intellectual endeavor the writers explore dietary rules of ancient Hebrews and the contributions of Arabic cookery to European cuisine, detail the table etiquette of the Middle Ages and the beverages of colonial America. They reflect on the McDonaldization of culture and on the burgeoning popularity of foreign foods in our times. Food: A Culinary History is a testament to the diversity of human cultures across the centuries. Exploring culinary evolution and eating habits in a cornucopia of cultures from ancient Mesopotamia to modern America, from the Byzantine Empire to Jewish Mediterranean culture in the Middle Ages, the book is a rich banquet for readers. Culinary customs, the writers reveal, offer great insight into societies past and present -- from agriculture to social life, from religious beliefs to our most unreflected habits. Consider the development of the use of individual place settings in the Middle Ages -- as one writer here contends, the Black Plague may have been responsible in large measure for the decline of communal dining and the increase of space between diners. Introducing the history of food into the realm of popular discussion, Food: A Culinary History is an extraordinary reading experience, a delicious intellectual feast for food lovers around the world.
| Limba | Engleza |
| Cuprins | Introduction to the Original EditionOne: Prehistory and Early CivilizationsIntroduction: The Humanization of Eating Behaviors, by Jean-Louis Flandrin1. Feeding Strategies in Prehistoric Times, by Catherine Perles2. The Social Function of Banquets in the Earliest Civilizations, by Francis Joannes3. Food Culture in Ancient Egypt, by Edda Bresciani4. Biblical Reasons: The Dietary Rules of the Ancient Hebrews, by Jean Soler5. The Phoenicians and the Carthaginians: The Early Mediterranean Diet, by Antonella Spano GiammellaroTwo: The Classical WorldIntroduction: Food Systems an |
| Data Publicarii | 2 November 99 |
| Format | Hardback |
| Paginare | 624 |
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