Making Levantine Cuisine

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B01=Anny Gaul
B01=Graham Auman Pitts
B01=Vicki Valosik
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=HBJF1
Category=JB
Category=JBCC4
Category=JFCV
Category=NHG
COP=United States
culinary history
culinary nationalism
culinary tradition
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Eastern Mediterranean
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eq_society-politics
food history
food studies
foodways
global cuisine
Language_English
Levantine
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softlaunch
The Levant

Product details

  • ISBN 9781477324578
  • Weight: 513g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Jan 2022
  • Publisher: University of Texas Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Melding the rural and the urban with the local, regional, and global, Levantine cuisine is a mÉlange of ingredients, recipes, and modes of consumption rooted in the Eastern Mediterranean. Making Levantine Cuisine provides much-needed scholarly attention to the region’s culinary cultures while teasing apart the tangled histories and knotted migrations of food. Akin to the region itself, the culinary repertoires that constitute Levantine cuisine endure and transform-are unified but not uniform. This book delves into the production and circulation of sugar, olive oil, and pistachios; examines the social origins of kibbe, Adana kebab, shakshuka, falafel, and shawarma; and offers a sprinkling of family recipes along the way. The histories of these ingredients and dishes, now so emblematic of the Levant, reveal the processes that codified them as national foods, the faulty binaries of Arab or Jewish and traditional or modern, and the global nature of foodways. Making Levantine Cuisine draws from personal archives and public memory to illustrate the diverse past and persistent cultural unity of a politically divided region.

Anny Gaul is an assistant professor of Arabic Studies at the University of Maryland, College Park. Graham Auman Pitts is a visiting professor in the Elliott School of International Affairs at George Washington University. Vicki Valosik is the multimedia and publications editor at Georgetown University's Center for Contemporary Arab Studies.