ABSTRACT

First published in 1997. This cookbook invites you to sample cuisines that are still exotic even in the post-modern kitchen. Try out cooking techniques from the Colombian Amazon or from Highland New Guinea. Experiment with recipes from a Malaysian fishing village or taste a Maroon dish from the Jamaican mountains. The idea that a meal should be made up of a sequence of dishes is by no means universal, but there is no reason why one might not construct a syncretic menu. But this book does not just offer a string of recipes. Cooking and eating can be a way of travelling to foreign countries, just as food can trigger memories and bring the past back to you. This book is also a practical introduction to the anthropology of food.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

Section 1: Europe

part |2 pages

Section 2: Africa

chapter |6 pages

Cooking in the Garden of Ensete

chapter |4 pages

Some Yoruba Ways with Yams

chapter |2 pages

An Adaptation of Tiv Sesame Chicken

chapter |3 pages

Ghanaian Groundnut Stew

chapter |2 pages

Groundnut Stew from Sierra Leone

chapter |5 pages

Snacks and Stew from Ghana

chapter |3 pages

A Sauce from Sierra Leone

chapter |6 pages

Social Aspects of Iteso Cookery

chapter |4 pages

Food and Recipes in Padhola

chapter |5 pages

Malagasy Cooking

chapter 2|5 pages

Recipes from Southern Morocco

chapter |9 pages

Tasty Little Dishes of the Cape

part |2 pages

Section 3: The New World

part |2 pages

Section 4: Asia

chapter |4 pages

Time and Menu

chapter |6 pages

Fish in Laos

chapter |4 pages

Kammu Dishes

chapter |5 pages

Food with the Yao

chapter |4 pages

Foods of Bali

chapter |4 pages

Pukkai

chapter |3 pages

Oyakodonburi from Japan

chapter |6 pages

Catholic Goan Food

part |2 pages

Section 6: The Anthropology of Cooking

chapter |10 pages

The Roast and the Boiled