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    Food: A Cultural Culinary History [repost]

    Posted By: FenixN
    Food: A Cultural Culinary History [repost]

    Food: A Cultural Culinary History
    36xDVDRip | MP4/AVC, ~1310 kb/s | 720x404 | Duration: 18:32:23 | English: AAC, 96 kb/s (2 ch) | 10.9 GB
    Genre: Food, Cooking, History

    Eating is an indispensable human activity. As a result, whether we realize it or not, the drive to obtain food has been a major catalyst across all of history, from prehistoric times to the present. Epicure Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin said it best: "Gastronomy governs the whole life of man." In fact, civilization itself began in the quest for food. Humanity's transition to agriculture was not only the greatest social revolution in history, but it directly produced the structures and institutions we call "civilization."

    In every era, the unfolding of history has been intimately tied to the need for food, the production of food, and the culture of food. In all major religions, food choice has been an integral part of religious identity. The quest for spices and exotic foodstuffs led to the European discovery of the New World, as well as to the connecting of the entire globe through trade. In 1840s Ireland a single food—the potato—changed the course of history. Modern warfare, from Napoleon's conquests to World War II, was made possible by advances in food technology.

    In our own times, more people worldwide now recognize the McDonald's "golden arches" than the Christian cross. Beyond feeding our bodies, food choices and ideologies express social distinctions, as well as our values, concerns, and aspirations. For all of these reasons, food offers a deeply insightful lens on human history, shedding new light on the evolution of social and political systems, on cultural interactions, economic empires, human migrations, and more. Through food culture, we see how primary biological needs have shaped all human lives through the ages. The history of food is the history of human life at its most elemental, its most intimate, its most essential. It's also a story of ingenuity, creativity, and remarkable human behavior to rival any other aspect of culture.

    In Food: A Cultural Culinary History, award-winning Professor Ken Albala of the University of the Pacific puts this extraordinary subject on the table, taking you on an enthralling journey into the human relationship to food. With this innovative course, you'll travel the world discovering fascinating food lore and culture of all regions and eras—as an eye-opening lesson in history as well as a unique window on what we eat today.

    Incorporating extensive study of historical recipes, food preparation techniques from around the world, and activities you can try at home, these 36 colorful lectures take you through the entire spectrum of food history, from the cuisine of ancient Egypt to the great flowering of European cookery in the Middle Ages, and from the celebrity chefs of 18th-century France to our own Zagat- and Michelin-rated restaurant culture. Along the way, you learn in depth about food production and technology in each era; the social, economic, and political factors surrounding food culture; and thinking on diet and eating through the centuries. The result is a compelling inquiry that will change the way you look at both history and food itself.

    Food as a Driver of Human History

    As context for exploring humanity's remarkable food cultures, you observe the integral role of food in the unfolding of civilization. From prehistory to our own era, your study includes these seminal subjects:

    The revolutions of agriculture: Learn how agriculture arose in the prehistoric world and how it spurred the development of urban organization, political systems, social classes, militaries, and trade.
    Food and faith: Grasp how food practices became core expressions of religious faith in Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, as well as in the Eastern traditions of Buddhism, Hinduism, and Taoism.
    1492 and food globalization: Track the great trading empires of the Venetians, Portuguese, and Spanish, and the "Columbian exchange," where plants and animals from five continents were transplanted across the world.
    Coffee, tea, sugar, and slaves: Discover how the trade in a group of superfluous luxury items in the era of European colonialism altered the focus of the global economy.
    Eating in the Industrial Revolution: Learn how capital-intensive, mass food production in the Industrial Revolution forever changed human diet and nutrition.
    Big business and food imperialism: Observe the vast industrialization of food production in the late 19th and 20th centuries; its economic and human consequences; and the ideologies, movements, and practices that arose to oppose it.

    A Global Richness of Culinary Cultures

    At the heart of the course, you delve deeply into classic food traditions around the world. Among civilizations of Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas, your inquiry highlights these traditions:

    Status and ritual in ancient Rome: Learn how Roman food reflected social rank, wealth, and sophistication, and investigate the dining habits of the upwardly mobile as well as the gastronomic eccentricities of the emperor Heliogabalus.
    The exquisite flavors of medieval Islamic cuisine: In a culture with no injunction against pleasure, learn how the medieval Muslims' sensual dishes—richly spiced, colored, or perfumed—reflected visions of a paradise on earth.
    Aztec food culture: In this unique New World tradition, discover the Aztec way of life—the indigenous foodstuffs, eating rituals, and "signature" foods, from chilies to chocolate.
    Sumptuous dining in the Renaissance: Study the sophistication and complexity of Renaissance-era food culture in the writings of Platina, Ficino, and Messisbugo, and witness the extravagance of banquets at the court of Ferrara.
    The genesis of French haute cuisine: Grasp the aesthetics of French 17th-century cookery, based in refinement and pureness of flavors and study four Gallic cookbooks that revolutionized culinary history.
    "Scientific" cooking in the 21st century: In our own diverse era, encounter the phenomenon of "molecular gastronomy"—technology-enhanced food creations designed to titillate and amaze the palate.

    A Colorful and Diverse Learning Experience

    Expanding on the lectures and in-studio demonstrations of food preparation techniques, the course guidebook presents a series of 39 hands-on activities—where you can learn how to make everything from Egyptian beer to Elizabethan "Chickin Pye"—that give you direct experience of how people cooked, ate, and thought about food in past eras. You also practice medieval eating rituals, track the rich evocation of food in art, and immerse yourself in the poetic ambiance of classic Japanese dining.

    Across the span of the centuries you sample important food writing from many cultures, from the world’s first surviving recipes written in cuneiform to the lavish dishes of Apicius of Rome, and from the classic medieval cookbooks of Taillevent and Chiquart to the 19th-century Guide Culinaire by Escoffier.

    And, throughout the series, the lectures pulsate with surprising and intriguing details of the human adventure with food:

    Dinner knives with rounded tips were developed to reduce the threat of violence at the table.
    The English word "dinner," from the Latin disjejunare, literally means "break-fast."
    The banana, which we know as a single fruit, actually exists in hundreds of diverse varieties.
    The world's first restaurant-based food culture was Edo-era Japan.
    The separation of sweet and savory flavors that we know today is relatively recent historically. Before the 16th century, meat and fish were often cooked with sugar, fruit, and syrups.
    The Middle Ages produced some of history's most outlandish and theatrical presentations of food, such as gilded boars' heads; "invented" creatures, mixing parts of different animals; and cooked peacocks spewing flames.

    Food: A Cultural Culinary History offers you an insightful and startlingly different view of our civilization that you won't find anywhere else, revealing the development of societies and cultures through the single factor that has driven human life more than any other. In the process, you discover the stunning richness of world cultures as seen in their distinctive food traditions, and greatly broaden your own enjoyment of fine food.

    Lectures:

    1 Hunting, Gathering, and Stone Age Cooking
    2 What Early Agriculturalists Ate
    3 Egypt and the Gift of the Nile
    4 Ancient Judea—From Eden to Kosher Laws
    5 Classical Greece—Wine, Olive Oil, and Trade
    6 The Alexandrian Exchange and the Four Humors
    7 Ancient India—Sacred Cows and Ayurveda
    8 Yin and Yang of Classical Chinese Cuisine
    9 Dining in Republican and Imperial Rome
    10 Early Christianity—Food Rituals and Asceticism
    11 Europe's Dark Ages and Charlemagne
    12 Islam—A Thousand and One Nights of Cooking
    13 Carnival in the High Middle Ages
    14 International Gothic Cuisine
    15 A Renaissance in the Kitchen
    16 Aztecs and the Roots of Mexican Cooking
    17 1492—Globalization and Fusion Cuisines
    18 16th-Century Manners and Reformation Diets
    19 Papal Rome and the Spanish Golden Age
    20 The Birth of French Haute Cuisine
    21 Elizabethan England, Puritans, Country Food
    22 Dutch Treat—Coffee, Tea, Sugar, Tobacco
    23 African and Aboriginal Cuisines
    24 Edo, Japan—Samurai Dining and Zen Aesthetics
    25 Colonial Cookery in North America
    26 Eating in the Early Industrial Revolution
    27 Romantics, Vegetarians, Utopians
    28 First Restaurants, Chefs, and Gastronomy
    29 Big Business and the Homogenization of Food
    30 Food Imperialism around the World
    31 Immigrant Cuisines and Ethnic Restaurants
    32 War, Nutritionism, and the Great Depression
    33 World War II and the Advent of Fast Food
    34 Counterculture—From Hippies to Foodies
    35 Science of New Dishes and New Organisms
    36 The Past as Prologue?

    Look also:

    Impossible: Physics beyond the Edge

    Interpreting the 20th Century: The Struggle Over Democracy

    Introduction to Judaism

    Introduction to the Study of Religion

    Italian Renaissance

    Joy of Thinking: The Beauty and Power of Classical Mathematical Ideas

    Late Antiquity: Crisis and Transformation

    Late Middle Ages

    Leonardo da Vinci and the Italian High Renaissance

    Life and Legacy of the Roman Empire

    Life and Work of Mark Twain

    Life Lessons from the Great Books

    Life Lessons from the Great Myths

    Lives of Great Christians

    London: A Short History of the Greatest City in the Western World

    Long 19th Century: European History from 1789 to 1917

    Luther Gospel, Law, and Reformation

    Geometry: An Interactive Journey to Mastery

    Understanding the Human Factor: Life and Its Impact

    St. Augustine’s Confessions

    World of Byzantium

    The Story of Medieval England: from King Arthur to the Tudor Conquest

    Medieval Europe Crisis and Renewal

    Popes and the Papacy: A History

    Introduction to Archaeology

    screenshot
    Food: A Cultural Culinary History [repost]

    Food: A Cultural Culinary History [repost]

    Food: A Cultural Culinary History [repost]

    Food: A Cultural Culinary History [repost]

    Food: A Cultural Culinary History [repost]

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