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9780375502750

Mindful Cook : Finding Awareness, Simplicity, and Freedom in the Kitchen

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780375502750

  • ISBN10:

    0375502750

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1999-11-01
  • Publisher: Villard
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List Price: $19.95

Summary

"With humor and vitality, Isaac Cronin's words renew our capacity to delight, to be filled with life. Flavorful recipes welcome our hearts and hands to cook and be nourished. Our presence in the kitchen makes all the difference." --Edward Espe Brown, Zen priest, author ofThe Tassajara Bread Book and Tomato Blessings and Radish Teachings The inner game of cooking--a book of essays, exercises, and recipes designed to help experienced cooks and nov-ices alike find joy and fulfillment in the experience of food preparation. Many people enjoy cooking; others dread it. This book is for people who want to learn to love it.The Mindful Cookdraws on two traditions--meditation, as practiced in East-ern spirituality, and mindfulness, as outlined by Western psychologists and in books like Diane Ackerman'sDeep Play--to help experienced cooks and novices alike find a sense of wonder and fulfillment in the essential human act of preparing food. Brief personal essays by food expert Isaac Cronin explore various aspects of food and cooking--history, preparation, the sense of the kitchen as place, balancing flavors, the joy of mistakes--and are followed by exercises that involve both meditation and hands-on ex-perimentation to help make the process of creating food as rewarding as the final result. Beautifully designed and including twenty-nine delicious recipes,The Mindful Cookenables us to nourish the soul, develop the mind, and eat well at the same time.

Author Biography

In the late 1970s, <b>Isaac Cronin</b> was one of the original participants in the California-based New American food movement. His hands-on experience harvesting food in-cludes several years as a commercial fisherman on Mon-terey Bay. As a specialty produce farmer, he introduced California-grown baby lettuce salad to New York restaurants. Cronin has authored five cookbooks and worked as the marketing director of a cookbook publishing company. He has helped popularize such foods as squid, garlic, and olive oil and regional Chinese cooking. His weekly column on seafood appeared in the Los Angeles Times and other California dailies for a number of years. He co-wrote the highly acclaimed independent film Chan Is Missing, the first feature directed by Wayne Wang. Cronin is married and the father of two children.

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

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Excerpts

Chapter Seven
The Six Flavors


The five colors blind one's eyes. The five tones deafen one's ears. The five tastes ruin one's palate.
--Lao Tzu, Tao Te Ching

When we consider the world's major spiritual traditions and their teachings about food, two distinct principles begin to emerge. The first of these is based on exclusion--the idea that certain substances should be prohibited from the diet, as an expression of piety and adherence to religious precepts. Both Islam and Judaism, for example, strictly forbid pork and other swine derivatives. There are also complete or partial fasts associated with various holidays throughout the year.

In contrast to this theme of prohibition and exclusion, other doctrines emphasize inclusion and the importance of a wide-ranging diet. Traditional Indian cooking identifies six distinct flavors, and stipulates that ideally each meal should include them all. The source of a particular taste--whether sweetness comes from butter or from bread, for example--is less important in an Indian meal than the simple fact of its presence.

For the Mindful Cook, the tradition of including a broad range of tastes is extremely satisfying because it provides us with access to a concrete way of approaching the essence of eating. Nothing is more basic to the experience of food than these building blocks.
Although it differs slightly from the Indian version, a consensus list of the tastes includes sweet, sour, bitter, salty, spicy, and plain. These tastes are all associated with specific foods, although a given food can evoke more than one. Each taste has unique benefits for cooking when present in proper proportion.

The Mindful Cook uses the concept of six flavors as a foundation for building balance and variety in a meal. And because they are on the tip of the tongue, so to speak, the experience of the six tastes can provide a way for recalling specific foods without need for written descriptions or detailed recipes.

Building balance is one of the key concepts in a sister art form, the art of wine making. My own experience with the fundamentals of wine production was centered on Champagne. I had the enviable task of writing a pocket guide to Champagne drinking. I spent a week in the Champagne region of France visiting producers and tasting their products. At a dinner given by Moët & Chandon in honor of visiting wine writers, I was presented with a gift from one of the founding families of this venerated house, the Pozzo di Borgos. In order to help wine lovers discover the original components of Champagne and other French wines, Moët had produced a tasting kit called Le Nez du Vin ("the nose of wine"). It consists of a series of fragrances distilled from the natural sources of various flavors found in wine, among them apricot, coffee, lemon, apple, vanilla, hazelnut, and honey. The essences are accompanied by cards that picture the source of the perfume and enunciate which wines and which regions embody these flavors. With the kit in hand one can learn to break down the components of Champagne, for example, which is made from twenty to thirty different batches of red and white grapes, each with a different flavor, by smelling a perfume and then sipping the wine. The fusion of flavors that creates the marvelous quality of the successful blend is then all the more appreciated. We will use this technique to discover the unity of the six flavors, by tasting each of them separately and then fully assembled in a whole that is larger than the sum of its parts.

Certain culinary experiences are so deeply satisfying because nothing seems left out. But a really successful meal requires more than the simple presence of all six flavors. When the flavors exist in proper proportion, both in an individual dish and in the meal as a whole, they balance one another. The various elements of a meal maintain their identities and at the same time become a harmonious creation. To put it in other terms, the flavors tell a whole story.

Many of us have strong personal attachments to one or more of the flavors that give us an entrée into the complex relationships between food and past occurrences. Proust's madeleine passage in Swann's Way, where a tea cake evokes an entire universe, is different only, perhaps, in the elegance of expression from what some of us have experienced. These attachments may or may not be related to the specific social/emotional connotations of the flavors that are generally thought of as the following:

A Lexicon of Flavors

Sweet = happy, wet, rich
Sour = unhappy, complaining, sharp
Bitter = resentful, lingering, melancholy
Spicy = energetic, lively, unexpected
Salty = difficult, harsh, dry
Plain = ordinary, usual, frequent

Excerpted from The Mindful Cook: Finding Awareness, Simplicity, and Freedom in the Kitchen by Isaac Cronin
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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