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Food
Food: The History of Taste | Paul Freedman
3 posts | 5 to read
Surveys the history of changing tastes in food and fine dining - what was available for people to eat, and how it was prepared and served - from prehistory to the present daySince earliest times food has encompassed so much more than just what we eat - whole societies can be revealed and analysed by their cusines. In this wide-ranging book, leading historians from Europe and America piece together from a myriad sources the culinary accomplishments of diverse civilizations, past and present, and the pleasures of dining. Ten chapters cover the food and taste of the hunter-gatherers and first farmers of Prehistory; the rich Mediterranean cultures of Ancient Greece and Rome; the development of gastronomy in Imperial China; Medieval Islamic cuisine; European food in the Middle Ages; the decisive changes in food fashions after the Renaissance; the effect of the Industrial Revolution on what people ate; the rise to dominance of French cuisine in the 19th and 20th centuries; the evolution of the restaurant; the contemporary situation where everything from slow to fast food vies for our attention. Throughout, the entertaining story of worldwide food traditions provides the ideal backdrop to today's roaming the globe for great gastronomic experiences.
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shanaqui

Still plodding through this! Some bits are more interesting than others, but mostly... eh. Lots of facts, not much interpretation.

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shanaqui
Food: The History of Taste | Paul H. Freedman

This sounds like a fascinating book! I'm a bit worried about the editing, though; I'm reading the first essay and the author of this one confidently asserts some facts about early humans and hunting which I'm pretty sure are untrue, and states that “it is no accident that the taste buds that sense sweetness are on the tip of our tongues“, which is a pure myth. This guy can't be a scientist, and given what he's reporting on, that matters...

DivineDiana Agree! Unless, he has really done his homework! 4y
9 likes1 comment
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MrBook
Food: The History of Taste | Paul H. Freedman
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#TBRtemptation post 3! This is a richly illustrated collection of essays by prominent American & European historians, laid out as a chronological history. The early repertoire of sweet tastes; contributions made by ancient empires, especially China; the contributions by early Islamic caliphates; Middle Age cuisine; the post-Renaissance break with highly spiced foods; the evolution of modern restauranting; etc. #blameLitsy #blameMrBook 😎

LitsyGoesPostal 😊👍🏻 8y
65 likes5 stack adds1 comment