[Sca-cooks] Interesting facts about the BBQ guy.
Johnna Holloway
johnnae at mac.com
Sun Aug 1 15:17:34 PDT 2010
I posted a review/discussion of Rauchlen's new book on May 29th to the
Creating a Period Spits list. Guess I didn't post it here.
from May 29th
No one has posted any news for awhile, so I thought I would mention
that Steve Raichlen
(author of Barbecue! Bible, Barbecue USA,< http://
www.barbecuebible.com/ > <http://store.grilling4all.com/> )
is back with a new book.
This one is titled Planet Barbecue! It's going to be a very popular
book (Father's Day, anyone?).
Sue la Table < http://www.surlatable.com/category/id/103931.do > is
featuring
the book and Steve Raichlen equipment.
I like the book but I find it to be somewhat strange.
I am not sure I can express what's so funny, but here goes:
The Introduction is titled "The Discovery of Fire and the Invention of
Barbecue."
Rather breezy, very abbreviated, and no, there's no bibliography. He
does acknowledge
Dr. Richard Wrangham's book Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human
in the
Acknowledgements section on page iii.
Pages xiv-xvii cover "Time Line Two Million Years of Barbecue History
{ In 2,000 Words}."
The initial graphic is a caveman. I have already seen more than one
review that highlights the caveman and BBQ. One review noted "a
social structure in which some went out to get meat while others
stayed home to cook it, and everyone gathered around the fire.
Long story short: ``Barbecue begat civilization.'' And wherever Homo
erectus went, so did barbecue."
Raichlen mentions Taillevent, mechanical turnspits, and
the term barbacoa; even though the timeline account is short, it's not
that bad. It's just not sourced. (My preference would have been
to include a good world map and skip the timeline. It's not a book
that one is going to read for the history. Maybe a discussion of spice
rubs around the world or comparative methods could have been included
instead.)
Paperback copies of the book are on display right now at the larger
bookstores, like B&N and Borders.
I never saw the hardback in any of the stores, so I ordered the
hardback through Amazon.
Take a look and see what you think about the history/introduction.
As with all of his previous books, the attraction here are the recipes
(here 309 recipes from 60 countries)
and the grilling methods and instructions. These are great, although
laying your hands on
the South African Springbok that goes with the Monkey Gland sauce may
take some doing.
Overall, it's a nice attractive book with a good selection of recipes,
great pictures, and great instructions.
There's a special page with recipes here:
http://www.ecookbooks.com/t-Planet-Barbecue-Steven-Raichlen.aspx
Out in 2008 was another worldwide grilling book. This was Rick
Browne's The Best Barbecue on Earth.
It's worth seeking out too if grilling around the world is an interest.
Johnnae, playing librarian
On Aug 1, 2010, at 1:02 PM, Michael Gunter wrote:
>
> If you are at all interested in cooking over fire then you need to
> watch
> "Primal Grill" on PBS or on the internet. This guy is THE authority
> on all
> things BBQ or grilled.
>
> Some interesting facts about Steven Raichlen:
> Defeated Iron Chef Roksabaru Michiba on the original Japanese Iron
> Chef.
> He also hosts a French language TV show called Le Maitre du Grill.
> He holds a degree in French literature from Reed College and trained
> at the
> Cordon Bleu and La Varenne cooking schools in Paris.
>
> In 1975, Raichlen received a Watson Foundation Fellowship to study
> medieval
> cooking in Europe, as well as a Fulbright to study comparative
> literature.
>
> This guy is just freaking cool. I've learned a lot from watching his
> shows.
>
> Gunthar
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