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Sacred food : cooking for spiritual nourishment / Elisabeth Luard

Catalog Data

Author:
Luard, Elisabeth  Search this
Physical description:
256 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 29 cm
Type:
Books
Date:
2001
Notes:
"First published in Great Britain by MQ Publications Limited."
Contents:
Fertility -- Cultivation -- Harvest -- Birth -- Baptism -- Initiation -- Courtship -- Betrothal -- Marriage -- Death -- Remembrance -- Resurrection
Summary:
Food nourishes our souls and plays a vital role in both religious ceremonies and secular celebrations. Sacred Food takes readers on an evocative and personal journey exploring dishes that are traditionally served at significant moment in human life-birth, puberty, courtship, betrothal and marriage, death, and burial and remembrance-and illuminates how and why we celebrate with food. Elisabeth Luard reveals why we bury eggs in bread loves at Easter, bob for apples at Halloween, eat sweet things while courting, and make circular breads and sugared skulls at times of death and mourning. She examines the culinary instincts that unite and divide cultures and studies those foods that have universal significance, such as seeds, eggs, and grain proclaiming new life and hope.
Includes recipes for carnival, Chinese New Year, Christmas (Irish, Italian), May Day, Lent, Halloween, Iranian New Year, Kerala weddings, Mexican wedding, Provencale wedding, Provencale Christmas, Ramadan, Russian Easter, Shrove Tuesday, Swedish Christmas, Three kings cake, etc. Also includes information on aboriginal peoples of Australia, Afghanistan, Africa, Aga people of Bali, All Souls Eve, Americas, Amsterdam, Andalusia, Antarctica, Antipodes, Aprokreas, Araucani people, Arctic, Aryans, Ash Wednesday, Ashkenazim, Asia, Attica (Greece), Augustines, Australis, Austria, Ayurveda, Aztecs, Bali, baptism in Italy, bar mitzvah, Bathurst Island, Belgium, Bene Israelites, Bengal, Berbers, betrothal, birth baskets, birthdays, boarʼs head, Bolivia, bread, Buddhists, Carmelites, carnival, Celts, Champagne (France), Chanukkah, Cheese Sunday, Chile, China, Chinese New Year, Chingming, Chiristianity, Christians, Christmas, Irish Christmas beef, La consoada, Chirstmas in Tuscany, Chung Yung, Cochins, confirmation, conquistadors, convent sweetmeats, Copenhagen, Cree Indians of Canada, Czechs, dafina, Mexican Day of the Dead, Persian Days of the Dead, Shoro Nagashi, Denmark, Dominicans, Dragon Boat Festival, the Dreaming, Druids, Dubai, East Anglia (England), Easter, Eastern Europe, Eastern Orthodoxy, eggs, Egypt, England, farming year, fasting, Guy Fawkes, Feast of the Tabernacles, Figgy Sunday, Finland, first communion, France, funeral food, Germany, Chana, Ghaza, Goa, Good Friday Grape-harvest, Greece, Haiti, Halloween, Hallowmass, harvest, harvest home, Hindus, Holland, Holy Communion, Hong Kong, Hungary, hunting, Incas, India, Indonesia, Iranian New Year (No Rooz), Italians, Japan, Japanese New Year, Jewish New Year, Jewish Sabbath, Jews, Las Supper, Lent, Lofoten Islands, Lord of Misrule, Malta, Mardi Gras, marriage/wedding (Berber, Chinese, Eastern European, Indian, Japanese, Jewish, Mexican, Yemenite), May Day, May Queen, men only cooking, Mexico, Middle East, Morocco, Mothering Sunday, Muslims, New Orleans, Norsemen, Orthodox Church, Patmos (Greece), Passover, ancient Persia, Pesach, Portugal, Provence, Ramadan, resurrection, Reveillon, Roman Catholicism, Romania, Rosh Hashanah, Russia, Russians, sacrifice, San people of the Kalahari, Scandinavia, Scotland, Sephardim, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden, Swedish Lapland, taboo foods, Thanksgiving, Ukraine, Ukrainians, vegetarianism, Walpurgis Night, Whitsun, Yom Kippur, etc.
Topic:
Sacred meals  Search this
Cooking--Religious aspects  Search this
Food--Religious aspects  Search this
Food--Symbolic aspects  Search this
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_1040799