A Taste of Ancient Rome (Paperback)(English / Latin)
$23.68 - Save $1.25 (5%) - RRP $24.93 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |Short Description for A Taste of Ancient Rome A collection of over two hundred recipes from ancient Rome, tested and updated for today's tastes.
Full description- Publisher: University of Chicago Press
- Published: 02 May 1994
- Format: Paperback 244 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: General & World History | Ancient History: To C 500 CE | Food & Drink | General Cookery | National & Regional Cuisine
- ISBN 13: 9780226290324 ISBN 10: 0226290328
- Sales rank: 481,193
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Full description for A Taste of Ancient Rome
Modern Italians still refer to an elaborate dinner as "a meal worthy of Lucullus, " commemorating a Roman general famous more for culinary prowess than any apparent military skill. And our images of ancient Rome usually do include one of an outrageous feast of camel and flamingoes and nightingales' tongues. But, as Ilaria Giacosa reminds us in this fascinating book, Romans did not eat the exotic every day. Here are the real foods of Rome - the rustic and the refined - in more than 200 tested recipes adapted for today's kitchen. Drawing on the writings of Apicius, Cato, Martial, Petronius, Juvenal, and other observers, Giacosa recreates a 2,000-year-old cuisine, from a hearty winter soup of barley and ham to an elegant salad of truffles in an herbed vinaigrette, from appetizers to desserts. Each recipe includes the original (in Latin and translation) and a modern rendering, with substitutions for difficult-to-find ingredients. The repertoire is wide and includes along with more exotic creations solid, satisfying dishes that still grace many Italian tables: a frittata or omelet of young asparagus and sharp Romano cheese; roast chicken with leeks and a garden of green herbs; a salad with peasant bread and cracked olives; and a fresh cheese pie scented with bay and honey. You'll find recipes for breads, porridges, and sauces, including the ever-present garum, which, Giacosa notes, is not very different from the soy and fish sauces of Asia; a guide to preserving fruits and vegetables; seasonal menus for everyday and elegant dining; and a rich social history of Roman eating, drinking, shopping, and entertaining. This is cooking before tomatoes, pasta, oranges, lemons, or even coffee enteredthe Mediterranean diet. Yet with its intriguing sweet-sour flavor combinations, its lavish use of fresh herbs and fragrant spices, and its base in whole grains and fruits and vegetables, the foods of Rome will be a revelation to serious cooks ready to create new dishes in the spiri

