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9 Obras 427 Miembros 6 Reseñas 1 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Obras de Terence Scully

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Conocimiento común

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male

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Recipes by my favorite cook, the man who figured out in 1420 to list the main spice first with the supplemental spices thereafter and included his humble praise to God for his skills. It contains extensive footnotes, but no adaptations.
 
Denunciada
LibrarianFu | May 11, 2024 |
The title is misleading as is very quickly explained. Mediaeval cooking had nothing to do with art but all to do with science, as they then knew it. What a well researched and thorough guide into early cooking and its place in our history. Fascinating. All based on the 'science' of the humours and balancing or counteracting the humours of the food with the guest humours using appropriate cooking styles. Then over that the religious prescripts as to when were lean, non meat days. On top of that the need to put on a worthy display to show the hosts obvious wealth, status and position. That in itself is absorbing but what comes through all the time is how we today are still inheriting this past, not in direct and obvious tangible ways but subtly. So though the 'science' of the humours of hot, moist, cold, dry have long been ridiculed and overturned, the early cooks striving to master and balance them survive to this day in the way we think of food sequences, food combinations and food preparations. Or today's sense of food normality is actually rooted in cooking practices going back to the C12, 13 or 14th! Not just food preparations but the colouring of dishes that so much a vital part of their presentation still survive today. Where would be without custard, or piccalilli? Yes of course it is heavily based on what few surviving records there are of banquets, ordinary working man's food just never gets written down. Again the general universality of the food preparations for these banquets comes across so strongly. Ensured by the need to establish ones status and the inevitable movement of cooks and trainee's spreading the techniques. Certainly not a romp, but neither a studious slog, but for me almost every chapter was a revelation that made me want to keep on reading. Well organsied from a dip into thew water all the way through to swimming in a strong current. A few obligatory recipes end the book, but more on those later.… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
tonysomerset | otra reseña | Sep 3, 2011 |
The Complete Collection of Six Books, as printed in Venice 1570, facsimile
 
Denunciada
tlrobe | 2 reseñas más. | Jul 25, 2009 |
 
Denunciada
kitchengardenbooks | 2 reseñas más. | Apr 26, 2009 |

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Obras
9
Miembros
427
Popularidad
#57,179
Valoración
½ 4.3
Reseñas
6
ISBNs
14
Idiomas
2
Favorito
1

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