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Pasta : The Story of a Universal Food

Part of the Arts and Traditions of the Table: Perspectives on Culinary History series
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This entertaining, comprehensive, readable book is full of fascinating tidbits.

Exploding the myth that Marco Polo discovered pasta in China and brought it back to Italy, this volume shows that pasta has existed in various forms throughout Middle Eastern, Asian, and even North African culinary cultures long before its appearance in the West.

Pasta is indeed the universal food. The book chronicles the infancy of lasagne, vermicelli and other forms of dried and fresh pasta, and the impact of rolling pins, hand presses, and pasta-making machines in the industrial age.

Serventi and Sabban then relate the history of stuffed pastas and sauces.

Equally important is the story of "bing," the Chinese pasta with a rich history.

The authors show that this enormously popular foodstuff is not merely a form of nourishment but the result of a lengthy process of cultural construction and the culmination of a wide array of knowledge, skills, and techniques.

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RRP £35.00
Product Details
Columbia University Press
0231124422 / 9780231124423
Hardback
06/11/2002
United States
English
xxi, 439 p. : ill.
24 cm
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