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History of Food
History of Food

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Author: Maguelonne Toussaint-samat
Creator: Anthea Bell
Publisher: Blackwell Pub
Category: Book

List Price: $64.95
Buy Used: $3.00
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New (2) Used (20) Collectible (2) from $3.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 1496640

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 824
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.6
Dimensions (in): 10.5 x 7.5 x 1.8

ISBN: 0631177418
Dewey Decimal Number: 363.809
EAN: 9780631177418
ASIN: 0631177418

Publication Date: November 1992
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: * Item in good condition- Typical Used Book and at a great price! * We carefully inspected this * Great customer service * Satisfaction Guaranteed!

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 8
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1 out of 5 stars Amusing but completely unreliable   March 19, 2006
 10 out of 12 found this review helpful

This fat volume about food and cooking, packed with anecdotes and trivia and stories, is amusing but completely unreliable.

As a source of information about the history of food, it is useless. Many of the assertions of fact here are questionable, and none of them are footnoted so you can check them out. The author seems to have taken snippets from here and there (mostly, apparently, from French sources), sorted them thematically, and uncritically assembled them into a continuous text. No doubt a large proportion of the assertions here are true, but there is no way of telling the difference between the true ones and the others!

What's more, the translation is poor. Not only are some gallicisms rendered word-for-word (and so only intelligible if you translate them back into French), but there are no translator's notes for topical references.

I cannot recommend this book for anyone seriously interested in the history of food.



3 out of 5 stars Charming, informative, and disorganized   January 3, 2006
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

This charming book is very readable, full of interesting facts, and is certainly worth picking up. It is organized, however, by food rather than by chronology. Within the food sections, it also does not follow chronology very well, so it is difficult to find information when using the book as a reference.

The book feels quite like an oral history. It seems as if the author simply sat down and started writing about apples or truffles or whatever without thought to much organization. It makes for very engaging reading, but a poor reference text.



1 out of 5 stars Poor evidence of sources   May 31, 2003
 14 out of 16 found this review helpful

Maguelonne Toussaint-Samat provides a rather feeble excuse for her limited bibliography and fails to provide adequate citations for many of her assertions. There is an obvious French slant on history throughout the book. And in some cases there appear to be insertions of "local legends" or Francophile dreams for which there is no other evidence than Toussaint-Samat's statement (i.e., fabricated quotations attributed to Charlemagne's biographer in the cheese story on pages 116-117 - look it up!). In a generalized, broad-spectrum work such as this it would be all but impossible to check every fact. But, that being said, the book contains hundreds if not thousands statements of fact and her uncritical (at best!) inclusion of information for which there is no evidence in the source cited brings the whole book, as an authoritative source, into question.


2 out of 5 stars It shows its age   December 31, 2002
 26 out of 29 found this review helpful

I have serious misgivings about the facts presented in this book. The original French text was written in the 20's. I was given this book as I am working on a masterwork on the cultural history of Olives and Olive oil. In this respect she often jumps to the wrong conculsion, and makes broad judgements that have been discounted by anthropology since the 1960's. For instance she lists oil stores in ancient Babylonia as being olive oil. We know from further scholership that this would have been sesame oil, and that olive oil was a fuel and not a consumptive in that culture at the time. This causes me to question the entire book. This may be an interesting read, but at least with respect to Olives and Olive oil, there is much better out there.


5 out of 5 stars Simply delicious   April 19, 2002
 7 out of 12 found this review helpful

I've been reading, re-reading, and browsing in this book since I bought it almost a year ago. I find it quite extraordinary. As a lifelong historian, I appreciate the exceptional research and the bright way the translator spins anecdotal hisotry into readable passages. As a single man who just started cooking some months ago, I find this book is also a "brain prompter." To be able to read about the history of the spices and foods which one prepares is like a double meal, one for the body and another for the mind.
While the book, naturally, follows strongly the French historical line, nevertheless, it's still fascinating to read, cull through, and refresh the memory about even simple foods like bread, pork, and fish. If you're a cook of any kind, with this book you'll be able to spark dinner conversations with snippets of history about what you've served.