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Onions and Garlic: A Global History of Edible Ingredients - Perfect for Cooking, Culinary Studies, and Food Enthusiasts
$10.32
$18.77
Safe 45%
Onions and Garlic: A Global History of Edible Ingredients - Perfect for Cooking, Culinary Studies, and Food Enthusiasts
Onions and Garlic: A Global History of Edible Ingredients - Perfect for Cooking, Culinary Studies, and Food Enthusiasts
Onions and Garlic: A Global History of Edible Ingredients - Perfect for Cooking, Culinary Studies, and Food Enthusiasts
$10.32
$18.77
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SKU: 47893209
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Description
Look at any recipe for a savory dish and chances are it will start with this step: fry onions in a pan over medium heat. Onions—and their allium family relatives, shallots, garlic, chives, and leeks—are one of the most heavily used ingredients in cuisines all over the world. You’ll rarely find them in the spotlight, though—except for when they are fried into rings or used to repel vampires. In this book, Martha Jay gives alliums their due, offering an illuminating history of these cherished plants that follows the trail of their aromas to every corner of the globe and from ancient times up to today.             Going back to the earliest recipes from ancient Mesopotamia, Jay traces the spread of alliums along trade routes through Central Asia and into ancient Greece and Rome. Likewise she follows their spread in East Asia, where they have become indispensable, and of course into Europe and the Americas, where the onion—and its odor—gave rise to the name “Chicago” and the leek became the national symbol of Wales. Celebrated, denigrated, prescribed, and proscribed, onions, garlic, and their relatives can be found—as Jay lavishly demonstrates—in the histories of peasants and kings, in cuisine and art, in tales of colonization and those of resistance, and in medicinal cures and magical potions alike. Her book is a welcome celebration of some of the most important ingredients in the world.
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Reviews
*****
Verified Buyer
5
I really enjoyed this book: a brief history of the allium family, which includes not just onions and garlic but also leeks and chives. It covers evidence of early cultivation and how the crops have spread across the world. It explores the social and cultural history of the plants, including medical usage and superstitions through the ages. It also looks at the recent history of the plant, the development of familiar varieties through selective breeding, and the benefits and risks that come from this.It's a quick read, peppered with interesting facts along the way, including the origins of French onion soup and why Chicago is sometimes referred to as 'The Big Onion'.A very nicely produced hardback, it has illustrations throughout, and even some tasty sounding recipes at the back.This is the first in this series I've read, but on the evidence of this, I'll certainly look at others.

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