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(Hardcover)
Everything you eat has a story behind it. If you relish savory steaks you'll delight in the story of the Roman emperor who kept his figure by eating 40 pounds a meat a day. According to legend, you may even one day discover the genie of the tea, an ancient Chinese poet. Compiling countless references and illustrations, History of Food serves up delicious research on the common groceries you buy and some not-so-common foods eaten throughout the world.
This well-written volume discusses the historical significance of food and myths surrounding various delectable treats. It describes hunting and gathering, ancient rituals surrounding certain foods, and a vast array of cooking techniques. History of Food is a must-have for your kitchen.
Now in paperback, here is the fascinating, definitive history of cuisine and eating. Magauelonne Toussaint-Samat looks at the transition from a vegetable to an increasingly meat-based diet, as well as the relationship between people and what they eat, between particular foods and social behavior, and between dietary habits and methods of cooking.
Although this voluminous compendium, mixing social and natural history, is a worthy resource, it lacks verve and narrative coherence. Toussaint-Samat, a French journalist and sociologist, is more accomplished at describing the past, such as the origins of hunting and gathering, than the uses of food today and the development of modern cuisine. The author canvasses the world but emphasizes Europe and especially France, which may interest Francophiles for Toussaint-Samat devotes more attention to foie gras than to pasta. The book contains interesting information--on winemaking at monasteries and the role of merchants in the Middle Ages--but subjects like chocolate and chilis beg for more creative exposition. Illustrations. (Dec.)
More Reviews and RecommendationsMaguelonne Toussaint-Samat is an historian, journalist and writer. She has written for a variety of periodicals in France and published over seventeen books on cuisine, history, and French regional culture. Her books on the Loire and Perigord received commendations from the Academie Française and the Academie du Perigord. Her principal historical interest is in the medieval and renaissance culture of Europe, in particular the domestic economy, food and clothing. She pursues her research in association with the École des Hautes Études.
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July 16, 2002: At 801 pages, this volume is, to say the least, exhaustive in its efforts to present not only a thorough history of food and cuisine, but also a witty and endlessly charming story of the hows and whys to what we eat. Some of the stories, historical anecdotes, and speculations unfold excitingly before the reader, in the grand tradition of good historical texts, but don't think for a moment that this book is only for foodies or history majors. It greatly transcends its trappings as a simple 'history book', and it will endure as a classic in its own right. Enjoy this one in passages...relax, and absorb what it has to tell you.
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April 06, 2001: No culinary student or chef- to -be should be without this book. How important is salt beyond the dinner table? Find out where Saltzburg got its name. What three items were deemed by Moses as the sacrificial foods of choice and why. Its one thing to cook and plate food, its another to understand their history. Make youreself a better food-historian and look beyond current cuissene.