(Page 2 of 2)
The foods of southern Europe are only one part of Wright's book. Islamic civilization brought couscous and cinnamon, citrus and sumac, eggplant and artichokes to the Mediterranean feast, along with practices like sweetening food with sugar, coloring it with saffron and flavoring it with pomegranate juice, rose water or almonds. Yogurt and stuffed vegetables arrived by way of the Middle East, along with kabobs and pilaf-style steamed rice. The author's discussion of the cuisines of North Africa, Egypt and the Arab Levant will be particularly interesting to readers who, like me, tend to think "Italy" when we hear a mention of Mediterranean foods.
Wright is particularly adept at showing how such foods, and their associated styles of cooking, were moved around the Mediterranean by migration and trade. Gyros and stuffed grape leaves came to Greece from Turkey, and dishes like spinach with raisins and pine nuts, almond and saffron soup, and a flavorful mix of rice and beans called "Moors and Christians" reveal the Muslim presence in medieval Spain. And in honor of Sicily's location at the nexus of this Mediterranean exchange, the book includes more than three dozen recipes from that rocky island.
At first glance, this book seems a jumble of topics, traditions, tastes and techniques. Broad reviews of political and economic history are interspersed with discussions of topics like shipbuilding, irrigation, spices and the Mediterranean grain trade. Recipes for seafood, lamb, pasta and vegetables are scattered throughout the book; recipes from different regions are shuffled together like a deck of cards. But two good indexes — one of general topics, the other of recipes — guide readers through the confusion; the recipes I tested were very good. Wright's enthusiastic investigation of Mediterranean cuisines is a fine feast for readers interested in culture, history, and most of all, food.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (1)
"Wright on!"
Posted by Michelle Van Vliet on July 22,2009 | 10:58 AM