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The book of Jewish food : an odyssey from Samarkand to New York / Claudia Roden.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Knopf, 1996Distributor: New York : Distributed by Random House Edition: First editionDescription: xiv, 668 pages : illustrations ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0394532589
  • 9780394532585
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 641.5676 20
LOC classification:
  • TX724 .R53 1996
Contents:
A celebration of roots: of generations past, vanished worlds, and identity -- The Jewish dietary laws of kashrut -- The food of the ancient Hebrews-in the bible and the Talmud -- The Sabbath and festivals-the Jewish calendar -- The development of an Ashkenazi style of cooking -- Appetizers and salads -- The American story -- Soup - Bread -- Fish -- Poultry -- France-a mix of Alsatian "vieille France," eastern Europe, and North Africa -- meat -- Noodles, Kugels, and grains -- Vegetables -- Desserts and pastries -- Anglo-Jewry -- Drinks --Israel-forging a national style with gefilte fish couscous -- The sephardi world -- Many styles of sephardi cooking, with echoes from ancient Baghdad, Medieval Spain, and the ottoman world -- Spices and flavorings -- Pickles, relishes, and chutneys -- Cold vegetables, salads, and appetizers -- Georgian feats -- Savory pies -- Salonika -- Soups -- Yemen -- Fish Poultry -- The three Jewish communities of India -- Meat -- The babylooonian Jews in the land of the two rivers -- Offal -- Dafina and hamin-the Sabbath pot -- Tunisia-Berbers and "Livornese" -- Grain-rice, bulgur, pasta, and couscous -- Persia -- Bukharan Jews -- Jewish Italy -- Morocco-legacies from Baghdad and Andalusia in the Berber world -- Vegetables -- A Judo-Spanish stronghold in turkey -- Breads -- Deserts -- Aleppo (Syria) was the pearl of the Jewish kitchen -- Pastries, sweetmeats, and fruit preserves -- The lost Jews of China -- Drinks -- Ethiopian Jews -- Wine in the Jewish world.
Summary: In more than 800 glorious recipes interwoven with stories, reminiscences, and history, Claudia Roden traces the fascinating development of Jewish cooking over the centuries. The recipes - many of them never before documented - are the treasures garnered by the author during almost fifteen years of traveling around the world, tasting, watching, collecting recipes, talking to cooks and food sellers, and gathering the stories that spice this remarkable book. During her.Summary: travels Claudia Roden wrote down her affectionate memories of the people behind the thousands of recipes she collected. She presents to us only the finest of her myriad dishes and leavens them throughout with tales of her travels, with intriguing history, with jokes and stories shared in communities all over the globe - in tiny villages and in such once-great Jewish cultural centers as Aleppo and Salonika.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 635-636) and index.

A celebration of roots: of generations past, vanished worlds, and identity -- The Jewish dietary laws of kashrut -- The food of the ancient Hebrews-in the bible and the Talmud -- The Sabbath and festivals-the Jewish calendar -- The development of an Ashkenazi style of cooking -- Appetizers and salads -- The American story -- Soup - Bread -- Fish -- Poultry -- France-a mix of Alsatian "vieille France," eastern Europe, and North Africa -- meat -- Noodles, Kugels, and grains -- Vegetables -- Desserts and pastries -- Anglo-Jewry -- Drinks --Israel-forging a national style with gefilte fish couscous -- The sephardi world -- Many styles of sephardi cooking, with echoes from ancient Baghdad, Medieval Spain, and the ottoman world -- Spices and flavorings -- Pickles, relishes, and chutneys -- Cold vegetables, salads, and appetizers -- Georgian feats -- Savory pies -- Salonika -- Soups -- Yemen -- Fish Poultry -- The three Jewish communities of India -- Meat -- The babylooonian Jews in the land of the two rivers -- Offal -- Dafina and hamin-the Sabbath pot -- Tunisia-Berbers and "Livornese" -- Grain-rice, bulgur, pasta, and couscous -- Persia -- Bukharan Jews -- Jewish Italy -- Morocco-legacies from Baghdad and Andalusia in the Berber world -- Vegetables -- A Judo-Spanish stronghold in turkey -- Breads -- Deserts -- Aleppo (Syria) was the pearl of the Jewish kitchen -- Pastries, sweetmeats, and fruit preserves -- The lost Jews of China -- Drinks -- Ethiopian Jews -- Wine in the Jewish world.

In more than 800 glorious recipes interwoven with stories, reminiscences, and history, Claudia Roden traces the fascinating development of Jewish cooking over the centuries. The recipes - many of them never before documented - are the treasures garnered by the author during almost fifteen years of traveling around the world, tasting, watching, collecting recipes, talking to cooks and food sellers, and gathering the stories that spice this remarkable book. During her.

travels Claudia Roden wrote down her affectionate memories of the people behind the thousands of recipes she collected. She presents to us only the finest of her myriad dishes and leavens them throughout with tales of her travels, with intriguing history, with jokes and stories shared in communities all over the globe - in tiny villages and in such once-great Jewish cultural centers as Aleppo and Salonika.

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