Bedford Public Library

Food, a cultural culinary history, Ken Albala

Label
Food, a cultural culinary history, Ken Albala
Language
eng
Form of composition
not applicable
Format of music
not applicable
Literary text for sound recordings
historylectures speeches
Main title
Food
Medium
sound recording
Music parts
not applicable
Oclc number
898127827
Responsibility statement
Ken Albala
Series statement
The great courses. Better living. Food & wineThe great courses
Sub title
a cultural culinary history
Summary
Explores the history of how humans have produced, cooked, and consumed food, from the earliest hunting-and-gathering societies to the present
Table Of Contents
Hunting, gathering, and Stone Age cooking -- What early agriculturalists ate -- Egypt and the gift of the Nile -- Ancient Judea -- from Eden to kosher laws -- Classical Greece -- wine, olive oil, and trade -- The Alexandrian exchange and the four humors -- Ancient India -- sacred cows and Ayurveda -- Yin and Yang of classical Chinese cuisine -- Dining in republican and imperial Rome -- Early Christianity -- food rituals and asceticism -- Europe's Dark Ages and Charlemagne -- Islam -- a thousand and one nights of cooking -- Carnival in the High Middle Ages -- International Gothic cuisine -- A Renaissance in the kitchen -- Aztecs and the roots of Mexican cooking -- 1492 -- globalization and fusion cuisines -- 16th century manners and reformation diets -- Papal Rome and the Spanish Golden Age -- The birth of French haute cuisine -- Elizabethan England, Puritans, country food -- Dutch treat -- coffee, tea, sugar, tobacco -- African and Aboriginal cuisines -- Edo, Japan -- Samurai dining and Zen aesthetics -- Colonial cookery in North America -- Eating in the early Industrial Revolution -- Romantics, vegetarians, utopians -- First restaurants, chefs, and gastronomy -- Big business and the homogenization of food -- Food imperialism around the World -- Immigrant cuisines and ethnic restaurants -- War, nutritionism, and the Great Depression -- World War II and the advent of fast food -- Counterculture -- from hippies to foodies -- Science of new dishes and new organisms -- The past as prologue?
Transposition and arrangement
not applicable
resource.variantTitle
Cultural culinary history
Classification
Mapped to

Incoming Resources

  • Has instance
    1