Title:
The lost supper : searching for the future of food in the flavors of the past / Taras Grescoe.
ISBN:
9781771647632
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Vancouver ; Berkeley ; London : Greystone Books : David Suzuki Institute, [2023]
©2023
Physical Description:
327 pages ; 24 cm
Contents:
Prologue -- Montreal : kitchen dreams -- Mexico City : the secret of Axayacatl -- Ossabaw Island : some pig -- Cádiz : the quintessence of putresence -- Yorkshire Dales : hard cheese -- Puglia : the death of the immortals -- Cappadocia : lost and found -- Saint-Jean-Sur-Richelieu : bread alone -- Miʹwerʹla : the cooked and the raw -- Epilogue.
Summary:
"Many of us are worried (or at least we should be) about the impacts of globalization, pollution, and biotechnology on our diets. Whether it's monoculture crops, hormone-fed beef, or high-fructose corn syrup, industrially-produced foods have troubling consequences for us and the planet. But as culinary diversity diminishes, many people are looking to a surprising place to safeguard the future: into the past. The Lost Supper explores an idea that is quickly spreading among restaurateurs, food producers, scientists, and gastronomes around the world: that the key to healthy and sustainable eating lies not in looking forward, but in looking back to the foods that have sustained us through our half-million-year existence as a species"-- Publisher's website.
"Acclaimed author Taras Grescoe introduces readers to the surprising and forgotten flavors whose revival is captivating food-lovers around the world: ancient sourdough bread last baked by Egyptian pharaohs; raw-milk farmhouse cheese from critically endangered British dairy cattle; ham from Spanish pata negra pigs that have been foraging on acorns on a secluded island since before the United States was a nation; and olive oil from wild olive trees uniquely capable of resisting quickly evolving pests and modern pathogens. From Ancient Roman fish sauce to Aztec caviar to the long-thought-extinct silphium, The Lost Supper is a deep dive into the latest frontier of global gastronomy--the archaeology of taste. Through vivid writing, history, and first-hand culinary experience, Grescoe sets out a provocative case: in order to save these foods, he argues, we've got to eat them"-- Provided by publisher.
Genre:
OCLC Number:
on1369523221
Availability:
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