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Books > Food & Drink > General
With beguiling recipes and sumptuous photography, "A Kitchen in
France" transports readers to the French countryside and marks the
debut of a captivating new voice in cooking.
When Mimi Thorisson and her family moved from Paris to a small town
in out-of-the-way Medoc, she did not quite know what was in store
for them. She found wonderful ingredients--from local farmers and
the neighboring woods--and, most important, time to cook. Her
cookbook chronicles the family's seasonal meals and life in an old
farmhouse, all photographed by her husband, Oddur. Mimi's convivial
recipes--such as Roast Chicken with Herbs and Creme Fraiche, Cepe
and Parsley Tartlets, Winter Vegetable Cocotte, Apple Tart with
Orange Flower Water, and Salted Butter Creme Caramel--will bring
the warmth of rural France into your home.
Eating Words gathers food writing of literary distinction and
historical sweep into one splendid volume. Beginning with the
taboos of the Old Testament and the tastes of ancient Rome, and
including travel essays, polemics, memoirs and poems, the book is
divided into sections such as "Kitchen Practices"; "Food Memory:
Identity, Family, Ethnicity"; "Eating: Delight, Disgust, Hunger,
Horror" and "Food Politics". Selections by Julia Child, Anthony
Bourdain, Bill Buford, Michael Pollan, Molly O'Neill, Calvin
Trillin and Adam Gopnik, along with authors not usually associated
with gastronomy-Maxine Hong Kingston, Henry Louis Gates Jr,
Hemingway, Chekhov and David Foster Wallace-enliven and enrich this
comprehensive anthology.
Have I told you I'm vegan yet? Who is this book for? It's for
vegans, people who want to know about vegans, vegetarians who
dabble in the dark arts of soya milk, meat-reducers and full
carnivores looking to take the piss out of vegans. What's in this
book? Answers to questions like: 'What is a vegan, wait, I don't
eat gluten, am I a vegan?!'; pie charts to show how much
conversation time with non-vegans will focus on how you're getting
your protein; useful recipes and advice (such as how to work on
your smugface); inspirational(ish) quotes and much more. What isn't
in this book? Arguments for or against veganism; it's obvious that
you should be vegan and here is how to do it. How to Vegan is the
hilarious new book from the infographic genius Stephen Wildish,
author of How to Swear and How to Adult.
From the writers of acclaimed blog Pen & Palate, a humorous
coming-of-age (and mastering-the-art-of-home-cooking) memoir of
friendship, told through stories, recipes, and beautiful
illustrations. Getting through life in your twenties isn't
easy--especially if you're broke, awkward, and prone to starting
small grease fires in your studio apartment. For best friends Lucy
Madison and Tram Nguyen, cooking was an escape from the daily
humiliation that is being a twenty-something woman in a big city.
PEN & PALATE traces the course of Lucy and Tram's devoted
friendship through miserable jobs and tiny apartments, first loves
and ill-advised flings, successes and setbacks--always with a
shared love of food at the center of the narrative. A modern take
on Laurie Colwin's classic Home Cooking, this coming-of-age memoir
for the Girls set weaves together comical (mis)adventures and
recipes meant to be shared with a best friend and bottle of wine.
This unique and easy-to-use layman's reference takes the mystery
out of the bewildering array of health and labeling information
that faces us every time we go to a grocery or health food store.
Using this simple guide to the most important food elements and
additives, readers can find out everything the average person needs
to know to make healthy choices in eating and diet supplementation.
Eileen Renders has pulled together a practical reference that
boils down essential information from research studies, her own
ongoing work in the field, and standard dietary and chemical
references. Each topic is covered in a separate alphabetized
chapter. In one chapter the author lists and describes all the
additives that you will commonly see on labels or that may be used
without labeling -- including additives used to preserve,
condition, or "beautify", those that are proved or suspected to be
harmful, as well as those that are benign or even beneficial. She
devotes a chapter to processed foods that have been largely
stripped of nutritional value and suggests tasty, nutritious
substitutes. Several chapters provide information on nutrients --
their functions, typical deficiencies, and generally accepted
therapeutic qualities. Chapters on amino acids, vitamins and
minerals with trace minerals), oils and essential fatty acids,
enzymes, and antioxidents are included. Food sources of these
various nutrients are considered in a separate chapter, as are
dietary supplements. Offering quick authoritative answers in plain
language and an easy-to-use format, Renders' book is he only
up-to-date reference that covers all these important topics under
one cover. It will simplify life for anyone concernedwith planning
tasty nutritious meals and insuring a healthy diet.
Few things in life have as much universal appeal as flowers. But
why in the world would anyone eat them? Greek, Roman, Persian,
Ottoman, Mayan, Chinese and Indian cooks have all recognized the
feast for the senses that flowers brought to their dishes. Today,
chefs and adventurous cooks are increasingly using flowers in
innovative ways.Edible Flowers is the fascinating history of how
flowers have been used in cooking from ancient customs to modern
kitchens. It also serves up novel ways to prepare and eat soups,
salads, desserts and drinks. Discover something new about the
flowers all around you with this surprising history.Constance
Kirker is a retired Penn State University professor of art history.
Mary Newman has taught at Ohio University and the University of
Malta.
Cookbook author, TV chef and food writer Terry Tan takes a trip
down memory lane in "Stir-Fried and Not Shaken," TanAEs intriguing
memoir into Singapore's past. Lap up the mirth of TanAEs anecdotal
observations, and enjoy memories that would otherwise be relegated
to the mists of history.
This book explores food from a philosophical perspective, bringing
together sixteen leading philosophers to consider the most basic
questions about food: What is it exactly? What should we eat? How
do we know it is safe? How should food be distributed? What is good
food? David M. Kaplan's erudite and informative introduction
grounds the discussion, showing how philosophers since Plato have
taken up questions about food, diet, agriculture, and animals.
However, until recently, few have considered food a standard
subject for serious philosophical debate. Each of the essays in
this book brings in-depth analysis to many contemporary debates in
food studies - Slow Food, sustainability, food safety, and politics
- and addresses such issues as "happy meat", aquaculture, veganism,
and table manners. The result is an extraordinary resource that
guides readers to think more clearly and responsibly about what we
consume and how we provide for ourselves, and illuminates the
reasons why we act as we do.
In 2013, a Dutch scientist unveiled the world's first
laboratory-created hamburger. Since then, the idea of producing
meat, not from live animals but from carefully cultured tissues,
has spread like wildfire through the media. Meanwhile, cultured
meat researchers race against population growth and climate change
in an effort to make sustainable protein. Meat Planet explores the
quest to generate meat in the lab-a substance sometimes called
"cultured meat"-and asks what it means to imagine that this is the
future of food. Neither an advocate nor a critic of cultured meat,
Benjamin Aldes Wurgaft spent five years researching the phenomenon.
In Meat Planet, he reveals how debates about lab-grown meat reach
beyond debates about food, examining the links between appetite,
growth, and capitalism. Could satiating the growing appetite for
meat actually lead to our undoing? Are we simply using one
technology to undo the damage caused by another? Like all problems
in our food system, the meat problem is not merely a problem of
production. It is intrinsically social and political, and it
demands that we examine questions of justice and desirable modes of
living in a shared and finite world. Benjamin Wurgaft tells a story
that could utterly transform the way we think of animals, the way
we relate to farmland, the way we use water, and the way we think
about population and our fragile ecosystem's capacity to sustain
life. He argues that even if cultured meat does not "succeed," it
functions-much like science fiction-as a crucial mirror that we can
hold up to our contemporary fleshy dysfunctions.
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