Siren Feasts

Regular price €179.80
397b
A01=Andrew Dalby
ancient Greek cuisine
athenaeus
Athenaeus 282b
Athenaeus 324a
athenian
Athenian Comedy
Athenian Red Figure Cup
Author_Andrew Dalby
Bad Tempered Man
Byzantine culinary traditions
Category=JBCC4
Category=NHC
classical gastronomy research
Cookery Books
Coryphaena Hippurus
cup
DIVINE INVENTIONS
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Evliya Celebi
figure
fish
Flax Seed
food anthropology
Greek Wines
grey
Grey Mullet
historical food culture studies
Mediterranean dietary history
Millennium BC
mullet
Musk Melon
Nea Nikomedia
Orchis Mascula
Parrot Wrasse
Party Games
Phoenician Wine
Prodromic Poem
Proport Ion
red
Red Mullet
sauce
Sea Water
social history of Greek foodways
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138140424
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Apr 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Cheese, wine, honey and olive oil - four of Greece's best known contributions to culinary culture - were already well known four thousand years ago. Remains of honeycombs and of cheeses have been found under the volcanic ash of the Santorini eruption of 1627 BC. Over the millennia, Greek food diversified and absorbed neighbouring traditions, yet retained its own distinctive character.
In Siren Feasts, Andrew Dalby provides the first serious social history of Greek food. He begins with the tunny fishers of the neolithic age, and traces the story through the repertoire of classical Greece, the reputations of Lydia for luxury and of Sicily and South Italy for sybaritism, to the Imperial synthesis of varying traditions, with a look forward to the Byzantine cuisine and the development of the modern Greek menu. The apples of the Hesperides turn out to be lemons, and great favour attaches to Byzantine biscuits.
Fully documented and comprehensively illustrated, scholarly yet immensely readable, Siren Feasts demonstrates the social construction placed upon different types of food at different periods (was fish a luxury item in classical Athens, though disdained by Homeric heroes?). It places diet in an economic and agricultural context; and it provides a history of mentalities in relation to a subject which no human being can ignore.

Andrew Dalby trained as a classicist and linguist and is now librarian of the London Goodenough Trust for Overseas Graduates