Sunday, February 22, 2009

Foodwatch Alternative Cookbook or Art Culture and Cuisine Ancient and Medieval Gastronomy

Foodwatch Alternative Cookbook

Author: Honor J Campbell

With 300 delicious vegetarian recipes and a wealth of information about vitamins and minerals, balancing restricted diets, and substitutes for commonly excluded foods, this is invaluable for anyone who is allergic to cow's milk, wheat, eggs, or yeast, or is following a rotation diet.



Interesting book: Chinas Military Modernization or Freedoms Daughters

Art, Culture, and Cuisine: Ancient and Medieval Gastronomy

Author: Phyllis Pray Bober

In Art, Culture, and Cuisine, Phyllis Pray Bober examines cooking through an assortment of recipes as well as the dual lens of archaeology and art history. Believing that the unity of a culture extends across all forms of expression, Bober seeks to understand the minds and hearts of those who practiced cookery or consumed it as reflected in the visual art of the time.
Bober draws on archaeology and art history to examine prehistoric eating customs in ancient Turkey; traditions of the great civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, Greece, and Rome; and rituals of the Middle Ages. Both elegant and entertaining, Art, Culture, and Cuisine reveals cuisine and dining's place at the heart of cultural, religious, and social activities that have shaped Western sensibilities.
"Using gastronomy as its focus, lacy language as its style, and illustrations to enchant, Art, Culture, and Cuisine researches exactly those subjects from the time of the 'first hominids' to the 15th century. . . . The writing is extremely witty, and the dinner menus with recipes are esoteric, delightful, and mostly doable."—Library Journal
"An ambitious attempt to find culinary echoes of visual and sociological movements throughout history. In sturdy, robust prose . . . the author marches us through every major civilization from prehistory through the late Gothic."—New York Times Book Review

New York Times Book Review

...[A]n ambitious attempt to find culinary echoes of visual and sociological movements throughout history.

Library Journal

Using gastronomy (not "cookery"!) as its focus, lacy language as its style, and illustrations to enchant, Art, Culture, and Cuisine researches exactly those subjects from the time of the "first hominids" to the 15th century. The chapters in this academic work by a humanities professor follow a time line: prehistory, ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, the "Hellenic Experience," ancient Rome, the early Middle Ages, and "Late Gothic International Style," which covers the Crusades to 1400. There is so much historical fact that only Bober's steady fidelity to her theme keeps this book from being too diffuse. Although we are dealing with solid scholarship (there are many pages of notes and bibliography), the writing is extremely witty, and the dinner menus with recipes are esoteric, delightful, and mostly doable--even if one must accept substitutes like sheep's stomach in the absence of an available "sow's womb." Highly recommended for large public, special, and academic libraries.--Wendy Miller, Lexington P.L., KY Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

New York Times Book Review

...[A]n ambitious attempt to find culinary echoes of visual and sociological movements throughout history.



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