1st Edition

The Anthropologists' Cookbook

By Jessica Kuper Copyright 1997
    262 Pages
    by Routledge

    262 Pages
    by Routledge

    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.

    Introduction, Some Unusual Ingredients and Possible Substitutes SECTION 1: Europe SECTION 2: Africa SECTION 3: The New World, SECTION 4 Asia SECTION 5: The Pacific and Australia SECTION 6: The Anthropology of Cooking

    Biography

    Jessica Kuper came to England from South Africa in 1965, and has a PhD in anthropology from the University of London.