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The Ethnomusicologists' Cookbook: Complete Meals from Around the World | 
enlarge | Creator: Sean Williams Publisher: Routledge Category: Book
List Price: $28.95 Buy New: $19.87 You Save: $9.08 (31%)
New (20) Used (9) from $18.90
Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 381903
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 332 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 6 x 0.5
ISBN: 041597819X Dewey Decimal Number: 641.59 EAN: 9780415978194 ASIN: 041597819X
Publication Date: June 7, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Have you ever wanted to host a full evening of Indian food, culture, and music? How about preparing a traditional Balinese banquet? Or take a trip to the Hebrides and enjoy a Scottish feast? The Ethnomusicologists' Cookbook takes you around the world on a culinary journey that is also a cultural and social odyssey. Many cookbooks offer a snapshot of individual recipes from different parts of the world, but do nothing to tell the reader how different foods are presented together, or how to relate these foods to other cultural practices. For years, ethnomusicologists have visited the four corners of the earth to collect the music and culture of native peoples, from Africa to the Azores, from Zanzibar to New Zealand. Along the way, they've observed how music is an integral part of social interaction, particularly when it's time for a lavish banquet or celebration. Foodways and cultural expression are not separate; this book emphasizes this connection through offering over 35 complete meals, from appetizers to entrees to side dishes to desserts and drinks. A list of recommended CDs fills out the culinary experience, along with hints on how to present each dish and to organize the overall meal. The Ethnomusicologists' Cookbook combines scholarship with a unique and fun approach to the study of the world's foods, musics, and cultures. More than just a cookbook, it is an excellent companion for anyone embarking on a cultural-culinary journey.
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An original and rewarding book January 30, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
You will make friends and influence people with this book. You will be able to invite friends to amazing dinner parties at which you can serve food from all corners of the World and impress them with your knowledge. The World is divided into nine sections: Africa, East Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Middle East, South and Central America, North America, Oceania and Europe. Each section has between three and nine contributions, forty-seven in all, mainly from eminent ethnomusicologists and those, like me, interested in food. Each contribution is a complete meal for six people. That should keep you going for about a year without repeating yourself.
Start off somewhere exotic like Tonga. After 3 hours you could be serving `Otai' a coconut fruit drink to welcome your guests, followed by `Ota Ika' a tasty dish of raw fish seasoned wih lime juice, onions, garlic, chili pepper and tomatoes, and `Lupulu' which are baked packets of taro or spinach leaves containing corned beef, fish or chicken (the Tongans like corned beef the best), Puaka Ta'o, baked roast pork and sweet potatoes, finished off with tropical fruits, ice-cream and fruitcake.
For your next dinner party go to Estonia and try the recipes for cucumber salad, beet and herring salad, sauerkraut, blood sausage and creamed semolina on fruit soup. All good peasant fare. Helpfully drinks are also recommended: Saku brand beer and juniper berry soda. Have some bread too. Bread is sacred in Estonia and giving the heel to a young woman will ensure that she has large breasts.
Take your friends on a trip to Namibia and treat them to `Braaied', grilled goat or lamb chops, `Mahangu', sorghum or maize meal porridge with a spicy tomato sauce, `Ekaka', fresh spinach and Oshikuki, doughnuts or pumpkin fritters. These recipes are from Minette Mans' 88-year old Namibian mother.
I was flattered to be asked to contribute the Balinese section. I provided my family recipes for `Base Genep,' which is a spice paste used in many dishes, `Babi Kecap', pork in kecap sauce, which is eaten during the Balinese ceremonies of Galungan and Nyepi, `Lawar', spicy green beans, which accompanies all ceremonies, `Nasi Putih' steamed rice, `Krupuk Udang', shrimp crackers, `Tahu Goreng', fried tofu, and `Pisang Goreng', banana fritters. We serve most of these in my restaurant in Ubud, which Sean Williams frequented every day during her visits to Bali in the 1980s.
Every contributor was asked to write a bit about the role of music and food in their society. The links between music and food are strong and it is interesting to compare them. This is the first book of its kind and may be responsible for creating a new subject which Sean Williams calls gastromusicology. She is a Professor of Ethnomusicology at The Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington, and has studied Indonesian and Irish music since the 1970s. She contributed the recipes from Sunda, West Java and Ireland.
Not only are there anthropological essays with each contribution but there is also recommended listening. So you can entertain your guests with CDs of music from the gastronomic region of the moment. Further, there are recommended reading lists and internet sites to allow you to go into greater depth on your own and really impress your friends. Not just that but we were all asked to contribute a proverb. Mine was `Nasi sudah menjadi bubur' (literally `The rice has already become porridge') or `There's no use crying over spilt milk'. From Bolivia: `The angrier the cook, the spicier the dish'. Northern Ghana: `Eat the same food every day so you know what killed you'. Egypt: `An onion from a dear one is worth more than a goat'. Judeo-Spanish Morocco: `She went to buy cilantro and came back nine months pregnant'.
Sean Williams has thought about it all. She's aware that there are vegetarians and vegans out there and people who keep kosher. For them there's a helpful chapter called `I'm not eating that!' It gives dietary modifications. She's also created a special page on her web site which has more information about the meals and printable shopping lists so that you don't have to copy down all the ingredients before you go out shopping (http:// academic.evergreen.edu/w/williams/cookbook.htm).
The one criticism I have about the book is the lack of colour photographs (apart from the glorious cover). I rather think they are essential for a cookbook, but I understand that they increase the printing costs enormously. Sean Williams' web site, however, contains colour photographs of the dishes, which at least is some compensation.
Finally, I must mention the great tag line on the back cover: `It's Chapati and I'll Fry if I Want to!'. Alternatives, also from Indian cooking, which almost made it, were: `My Pappadum Told Me, `Oh, You Beautiful Dal,' and `Paperback Raita.'
I recommend this book warmly to delight body and mind and all the senses.
Murni Ubud, Bali
Unusual and engaging January 4, 2007 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
The idea of the cookbook is appealing, and so are many of the recipes, although ingredients may be hard to locate. The text gets sometimes gets bogged in pedantry, but that is probably to be expected, given its academic slant.
Good Food + Good Music July 13, 2006 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
It's hard to decide whether to just sit and read the recipes and the reflections and experiences of the contributors or actually get into the kitchen to try the recipes myself. This is a great and very interesting insight into food and cultures from people who've experienced it first hand. I highly recommend it.
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