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The English Kitchen series from Prospect Books gives the reader
lots of recipes and helpful hints but also offers that extra
ingredient to a cookbook: knowledge and context. As very little of
this has ever been dished up when it comes to English food, the
series is therefore important. This book tells the story of English
sausages through the recipes and writings of chefs, cooks and
gourmets from the time of the Roman conquest to the present. The
story that unfolds is surprising. The English sausage, so often
regarded as a food of the peasant and the proletariat, has a long
and distinguished lineage - the food of kings and courtiers, as
well as commoners. The book contains chapters covering: the
sausages of Roman England; English fresh sausages; regional fresh
sausages; white puddings and hogs puddings; black puddings, smoked
and keeping sausages. There is then a section on making sausages, a
full glossary and bibliography. There are approximately 100
recipes. People now think of sausages in 'creative' terms: putting
God knows what into a pork casing. This book emphasises the wealth
of historical and regional recipes without the need for crazy
creations at all. In our lifetimes we have sacrificed the glorious
spicing and seasoning of good old-fashioned bangers for the
repellent pap of pink recovered meat.
Pickles are a global food: from the fiery, fermented kimchi of
Korea and Japan's salty tsukemono, to the ceviche and escabeche of
Latin America, Europe's sauerkraut and America's dill pickles. They
are also a modern food. Growing interest in naturally fermented
vegetables - pickles by another name - means that today, in the
early twenty-first century, we are seeing a renaissance in the
making and consumption of pickles. Across continents and throughout
history, pickling has been relied upon to preserve foods and add to
their flavour; and in these health-conscious times they have
acquired a new significance. Traditionally fermented pickles are
probiotic and possess anti-aging and anti-cancer properties; while
pickle juice cures hangovers, prevents muscle cramps in athletes
and reduces sugar spikes in diabetics. In Pickles, Jan Davison
explores the cultural and gastronomic importance of pickles from
the earliest civilisations to the present day. Discover the art of
pickling mastered by the ancient Chinese, find out why Korean
astronaut Yi So-yeon took fermented cabbage into space, learn how
the Japanese pickle the deadly pufferfish, and uncover the pickling
provenance of that most popular of condiments, tomato ketchup. In
this globe-trotting book, Davison discovers how pickles have been
omnipresent in our common quest, not only to conserve, but to
create foods with relish.
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