Various recipes and menu selections available for your eating pleasure. Gourmet favorites and down home cooking delights on the politics of food from the Chef extraordinarre himself. So indulge your palate on these food for thought pictures, and high end deluctables. Digestion required & leftovers taste good too.
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Consider The Fork: A History of How We Cook And Eat
In Consider the Fork, award-winning food writer Bee Wilson provides a wonderful and witty tour of the evolution of cooking around the world, revealing the hidden history of everyday objects we often take for granted.
Knives—perhaps our most important gastronomic tool—predate the discovery of fire, whereas the fork endured centuries of ridicule before gaining widespread acceptance; pots and pans have been around for millennia, while plates are a relatively recent invention. Many once-new technologies have become essential elements of any well-stocked kitchen—mortars and pestles, serrated knives, stainless steel pots, refrigerators.
Others have proved only passing fancies, or were supplanted by better technologies; one would be hard pressed now to find a water-powered egg whisk, a magnet-operated spit roaster, a cider owl, or a turnspit dog. Although many tools have disappeared from the modern kitchen, they have left us with traditions, tastes, and even physical characteristics that we would never have possessed otherwise.
Here's an NPR inner view with Bee Wilson.