en
Buku
Jamal Hopper

Local Specialty Breads

Local Specialty Breads explores how regional breads serve as edible archives of human culture, blending culinary practice with anthropology to reveal how simple loaves encapsulate history, ecology, and community values. The book argues that bread is more than sustenance—it’s a cultural artifact shaped by geography, necessity, and tradition. Through vivid examples like Iceland’s ash-baked rugbrauð (born from volcanic landscapes) and India’s heritage grain naan, the text demonstrates how ingredients and techniques reflect resilience, from ancient famine workarounds to modern artisan revivals.

Structured in three parts, the book begins with baking science, explaining fermentation and terroir’s role in flour composition. A global tour follows, pairing breads with their stories: Japan’s pillowy shokupan mirrors post-war industrialization, while Mexico’s pan de muerto honors ancestral rituals. The final section confronts threats like industrial agriculture, spotlighting bakers preserving endangered recipes. Interdisciplinary insights—from soil data to oral histories—anchor each chapter, while simplified recipes (like shaping German vollkornbrot) bridge theory and practice.

What sets Local Specialty Breads apart is its dual lens: it celebrates bread as both cultural symbol and tactile craft. The tone avoids nostalgia, instead framing traditions as dynamic—seen in critiques of commercialized “artisan” labels or debates over recipe authenticity. By linking personal choices (like supporting heritage grains) to global diversity, the book transforms everyday bread into a call to safeguard humanity’s culinary legacy.
68 halaman cetak
Publikasi asli
2025
Tahun publikasi
2025
Penerbit
Publifye
Penerjemah
Ái
Artis
Ái
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