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From craft beers and sourdough bread to kimchi, coffee, tea, and
cheese, fermentation is a popular topic in both food and health
circles. In Our Fermented Lives, food historian and fermenting
expert Julia Skinner explores the fascinating roots of a wide range
of fermented foods in cultures around the world, with a focus on
the many intersections fermented foods have with human history and
culture, from the evolution of the microbiome to food preservation
techniques, distinctive flavor profiles around the globe, and the
building of community. Fans of fermentation, chefs, and anyone
fascinated with the origins of various foods will enjoy this
engaging popular history, which is accompanied by 42 recipes
adapted from historic sources, including sauerkraut, corn beer, uji
(fermented grain porridge), pickles and relishes, vinegars,
ketchup, soy sauce, Tepache (fermented pineapple drink), vinegars,
beet kvass, and more.
Afternoon Tea: A History explores the development of the afternoon
tea meal, diving deeper than the popular tale of the Duchess of
Bedford's afternoon gatherings to find the meals that inspired
those early afternoon teas. Julia Skinner carefully separates the
fact and lore around the meal and sets the story of afternoon tea
within its historic contexts. Recognizing that a meal's birth and
life never happen in a vacuum, the book sets aside the already
well-documented conversations surrounding tea etiquette, instead
exploring the social contexts that made the meal possible and
popular, moving it from one small subset of the population to a
widespread and beloved phenomenon, one that nearly died out at the
end of the 20th century before experiencing a resurgence in the
21st. Afternoon tea is a meal that came of age during the British
Empire's most aggressive expansion, and as such became a meal that
was transported to new continents with colonial forces. The book
explores how this movement took place and uncovers the different
ways tea and colonialism intersect in both the colonial and
postcolonial worlds. It also looks at afternoon tea in America, a
country that broke from the Empire before the meal was established
as a set ritual, but which still has its own complex relationship
with the beverage and a continuing fascination with the meal. The
book concludes by looking at afternoon tea today, including a
handful of interviews that show the range of perspectives about the
meal and its place in society, as well as its resurging popularity
in the last decade.
Gervase Markham's The English Housewife was the first important
mass-market cookbook and housekeeping guide in the English
language. Bridging the manuscript and print eras, Markham's work
had a much larger reach than previous works on the home. Julia
Skinner takes Markham's work across the centuries into current new
media, translating Markham's recipes and ideas into a blog and back
into a book again. Even if you don't know a conserve from a wet
sucket, Modernizing Markham is a fun and eye-opening look into
English kitchens of old.
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