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The Oxford Companion to Food 2nd Ed

The Oxford Companion to Food 2nd Ed

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Author: Alan Davidson
Creators: Helen Saberi, Tom Jaine, Jane Davidson
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Category: Book

List Price: $65.00
Buy New: $21.46
You Save: $43.54 (67%)



New (39) Used (23) from $13.36

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 23 reviews
Sales Rank: 117051

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 2nd
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 907
Shipping Weight (lbs): 6.3
Dimensions (in): 11.2 x 9 x 1.8

ISBN: 0192806815
Dewey Decimal Number: 641.3003
EAN: 9780192806819
ASIN: 0192806815

Publication Date: October 15, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: NEW BOOK!!! ALL ORDERS SHIPPED SAME OR NEXT BUSINESS DAY!!

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Oxford Companion to Food

Similar Items:

  • The Oxford Companion to Wine, 3rd Edition
  • On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen
  • Larousse Gastronomique
  • The Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink
  • Food in History

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Alan Davidson's Oxford Companion to Food has been over 20 years in the assembling, but here it is; and it is superlatively worth the wait. In fact, superlatives fall silent. A huge and authoritative dictionary of 2,650 entries on just about every conceivable foodstuff, seasoning, cuisine, cooking method, historical survey, significant personage, and explication of myth, it is supplemented by some 40 longer articles on key items. Davidson himself (no relation to this reviewer) contributes approximately 80 percent of the 2,650 entries, thereby guaranteeing high levels of erudition, readability, and deadpan feline wit. Since this is a monument intended to last, nothing so frivolous as a recipe is included. A decision taken early in the development of the project to abjure issues whose significance is largely topical has also ensured an agreeable high-mindedness--nothing on those crucial but essentially dreary topics of BSE and GM foods, for example.

If a fault could be found, it would only be that it's often difficult to read to the end of an entry, as the abundant cross-referencing all too easily sends one off to another entry, thence bouncing off to another, and all too soon the original is forgotten. A random alphabet of seductions might include: Aardvark, Botulism, Cup Cake, David (Elizabeth), Enzymes, Fat-Tailed Sheep, Gender/Sex and Food, Hallucinogenic Mushrooms, Ice Cream Sundae, Jewish Dietary Laws, Kangaroos, Lobscouse, Microwave Cooking, Norway, Offal, Puffin, Queen of Puddings, Roti, Scurvy, Termite Heap Mushroom (or Taillevant), Umeboshi, Vegetarianism, Washing up (a very elegant little article), sadly no X, Yin-yang, and Zabaglione. As this might show, Alan Davidson's aim, borrowed from Dumas's great Grand Dictionnaire de Cuisine, that his work would appeal not only to persons of "serious character" but also those "of a much lighter disposition," is utterly fulfilled. --Robin Davidson, Amazon.co.uk

Product Description
Twenty years in the making, the first edition of Alan Davidson's magnum opus appeared in 1999 to worldwide acclaim. Its combination of serious food history, culinary expertise, and entertaining serendipity was recognized as utterly unique. Including both an exhaustive catalogue of the foods that nourish humankind-fruit from tropical forests, mosses scraped from adamantine granite in Siberian wastes, or ears, eyeballs and testicles from a menagerie of animals-and a richly allusive commentary on the culture of food, whether expressed in literature and cookbooks, or as dishes peculiar to a country or community, the Oxford Companion to Food immediately found distinction.
The study of food and food history was a new discipline at the time, but one that has developed exponentially in the years since. There are now university departments, international societies, and academic journals, in addition to a wide range of popular literature exploring the meaning of food in the daily lives of people around the world.
Alan Davidson famously wrote eighty percent of the first edition, which was praised for its wit as well as its wisdom. Tom Jaine, the editor of the second edition, worked closely with Jane Davidson and Helen Saberi to ensure that new contributions continue in the same style. The result is an expanded volume that remains faithful to Davidson's peerless work. The text has been updated where necessary to keep pace with a rapidly changing subject, and Jaine assiduously alerts readers to new avenues in food studies. Agriculture; archaeology; food in art, film, literature, and music; globalization; neuroanatomy; and the Silk Road are covered for the first time, and absorbing new articles on confetti; cutlery; doggy bags; elephant; myrrh; and potluck have also found their way into the Companion.



Customer Reviews:   Read 18 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Great resource   July 16, 2007
I value the Oxford Companion as a wide-ranging resource although it's very scope allows for general rather than specific accounts of the many food items it covers. Nevertheless, it is great to have at hand and it does come with comprehensive bibliographical information for those wishing to look at topics in more detail.


5 out of 5 stars Witty and Informative   December 5, 2006
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

If you like the dry acerbic wit of P.G. Wodehouse, if you like the straight-faced humour of the Economist, then you'll be a fan of the writing style here. This is a dense, information-packed book that works well as a coffee-table decoration, but you'll find yourself pulling it into your lap and curling up with a nice cup of hot tea/coffee and reading entries at random. The literary tone and multitude of cross-references make this a particularly good way to while away those lazy afternoons. (Remember those pulp adventure novels that, after each entry, asked you to make a choice? "If you choose A, go to p. 235; If you choose B, go to p. 322", etc. This is a little bit like that.)

There are no actual recipes per se, but there are many ideas and tidbits about how certain foods/ingredients are traditionally or commonly eaten in various parts of the world.

Here is one slyly humourous entry that had me choked (!) with laughter:
"CHEEKS of animals, because they usually yield rich, savory juices, are a good choice to include in stews, pies, and sausages. However, because cheek muscles are exercised constantly, the meat is tough and needs long cooking. COD cheeks, on the other hand, are tender morsels, perhaps because cod are not eating all the time and do not exercise their cheeks in making noises."



1 out of 5 stars Too many errors   July 30, 2006
 25 out of 35 found this review helpful

As many others have pointed out, this book is quite biased in it's handling of the cuisines of different countries. Yes this book is quite Anglo-centric, but what would you expect? There is also a clear dislike of all things American and the author would have you think that this countries sole contributions to the world of gastronomy are fast food joints and Coca Cola.

However, the reason I only gave it one star is the accuracy of the entries. We have a right to expect that reference works from this publisher be painstakingly researched to present information without error. But there are just too many factual errors to ignore. Three examples serve to make my point.

In an entry about ice cream sundaes, he refers to one of the towns as Two Rivers, Michigan. Two Rivers is in Wisconsin. Next, in an entry for chuck wagon he refers to wranglers as the assistants to the cook. Wranglers handled the movement of the herd and never, ever assisted the cook who almost always worked alone. Third, in an article about the United States, he writes of the emergence of fast food chains including "White Tower" Huh? I'll admit that sliders aren't for all palates, but the chain is White Castle.

There are just three that come to mind but I'm only up to the letter F. Should obvious, easy to research mistakes such as these be tolerated? For me, it brings the accuracy of the entire book into question.

I expected better from Oxford University Press.



5 out of 5 stars Great Reading, Some odd omissions. No recipes.   November 1, 2005
 19 out of 22 found this review helpful

`The Oxford Companion to Food', edited by the noted English culinary writer and diplomat, Alan Davidson is a foody reader's compendium to lots of interesting articles about sources, history, some people, and most places regarding food and drink. It is quite properly named a `companion' rather than an `encyclopedia', since, unlike the seemingly similar `Larousse Gastronomique', it contains no recipes whatsoever. This is not an accident or oversight, as Davidson clearly states in the introduction that this was an editorial policy from the outset.

This book has a distinctly British flavor about it with its selection of article topics. While there is an excellent longish article on Elizabeth David, easily the most important British food writer of the 20th century, there are no articles on either Julia Child or James Beard, the two most popular and well known American food writers. Alternately, there is an excellent article on M. F. K. David who is much less well known even among Americans. Child and Beard are mentioned but once at the end of an article on American cookbook writing. This choice is an excellent symptom of what this book is all about. It is not about cooking so much as the writing about food culture. While Child and Beard were cookbook writers par excellence, David and Fisher dealt less with food than they did with appetites, impressions, scholarship, and recollections?

The book is oddly selective in other ways. It has an article of goodly length on H. J. Heinz, but nothing on Milton Hershey. These two men are, in the United States, of at least equal renown; they were contemporaries, and both set up their businesses in Pennsylvania at about the same time. Another oddity is the fact that there is an article on Nepal, where, I suspect, very little grows, but no article on Senegal on the west coast of Africa and the ancestral home of many slaves brought to the new world and, therefore, the source of many food memories which contributed to `soul food' cuisine.

This is not to say this is not a valuable book. Many articles give fuller coverage to many culinary subjects than even books that specialize in some subjects. Two sidebar articles on pasta and chilis, for example, give fuller lists of the varieties of these two items than many good cookbooks on the subject. The pasta article is also careful to indicate the regionality of the names of some pasta shapes. I believe the pasta article, for one, could have been even better if it had given us pictures of the various shapes. I really feel that Orecchiette doesn't really look like ears, even though all texts describing it always say it does.

The book also avoids some common mistakes with accurate information on, for example, the components of the sharp vapors from a cut onion. Unlike lots of simpler minds, the article on same points out that these tearing fumes are really composed of many different components, which is part of the reason why most methods for avoiding them don't work.

The book is so dedicated to it's no recipe policy that it doesn't even give us articles on some basic preparations such as `buerre blanc'. It also does not even include recipes for such basics as mayonnaise or pesto.

This book is very good, but it is not as valuable a culinary resource as the aforementioned `Larousse Gastronomique' which provides thousands of basic recipes and pictures for just about everything imaginable, including uniforms of Renaissance culinary guild members. This book is also a bit pricy, listing at close to the price of a copy of Larousse. So, if you are a foody who must own every notable book on food, then buy this. But, if you are only interested in books to help you cook, get the Larousse. Note that the paperback version of this volume is published by Penguin and is therefore known as `The Penguin Companion to Food'.




5 out of 5 stars Exceptional   June 6, 2005
 8 out of 10 found this review helpful

Perhaps the single most useful, complete and amusing reference book in my collection. It touches on geography, geology, sociology and much else besides. The late editor and journalist Auberon Waugh called this 'The best book written on this, or possibly any other subject.'

The author took twenty-three years to compile this work, dying four years later. It is a work that will live on as long as there are books and a love of food.

It should be on the shelf of every educated person.


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