Cooking Apicius: Roman Recipes for Today (Paperback)
$14.80 - Save $0.78 (5%) - RRP $15.58 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 24 hours | |Short Description for Cooking Apicius To accompany the new scholarly edition of Apicius, Sally Grainger has gathered, in one convenient volume, her modern interpretations of 64 of the recipes in the original text.
Full description- Publisher: PROSPECT BOOKS
- Published: 30 October 2006
- Format: Paperback 128 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Classical History / Classical Civilisation | Food & Drink | General Cookery | National & Regional Cuisine
- ISBN 13: 9781903018446 ISBN 10: 1903018447
- Sales rank: 142,100
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Full description for Cooking Apicius
To accompany the new scholarly edition of Apicius, Sally Grainger has gathered, in one convenient volume, her modern interpretations of 64 of the recipes in the original text. These are not recipes inspired by the old Romans but rather a serious effort to convert the extremely gnomic instructions in the Latin into something that can be reproduced in the modern kitchen and which actually gives some idea of what the Romans might have eaten. Sally Grainger, therefore, has taken great pains to suggest means of replicating the particular Roman taste for fermented fish sauce. It may sound unpleasant, but actually is not too far removed from the fish sauces of the Far East, and any reproduction of Roman cookery must depend on getting this particular aspect right. Not all the recipes are for mad Roman luxuries such as lark's tongues and boar's bottoms; Grainger has taken care to include perfectly do-able and affordable dishes such as cucumber with mint dressing, duck with turnip, roast lamb with coriander, carrots or parsnips in a cumin-honey glaze, almond and semolina pudding, and deep fried honey fritters. The advantage of this manual over those that have come before is that it is more accurate and benefits from all the hard work that Sally Grainger and Christopher Grocock have put into getting the text of Apicius itself into some sort of working order.

