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折扣价 $20.09 优秀的 品味巴黎:巴黎人对美食的热爱史 美国亚马逊Amazon
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《品味巴黎》是一本关于世界美食之都的美味烹饪史,由广受好评的《巴黎、巴黎》和《巴黎热情》一书的作者大卫·唐尼 (David Downie) 撰写。
“穿越时空的欢乐嬉戏。 。 。巴黎的街道和餐桌将不再一样,我对此感激不尽。” ——爱丽丝·沃特斯
大卫·唐尼以其标志性的诙谐和信息丰富的风格,开始探索“巴黎的历史是什么,使其成为美食爱好者的天堂?”早在玛丽·安托瓦内特说“让他们吃蛋糕吧!”之前(实际上是奶油蛋卷),巴黎的罗马人吃鹅肝,活牡蛎从大西洋涌来;一本中世纪烹饪书描述了由三十二部分组成的一顿饭,其中包括炖野兔、鳗鱼汤和蜜酒;大革命前一年,在凡尔赛举行的最后一次盛大宴会上,美食家路易十六品尝了三十二道主菜和十六道甜点;然而,1812 年,法国美食之父格里莫德·拉·雷尼埃 (Grimod de la Reynière) 为宾客提供了 52 道菜肴、15 种葡萄酒、3 种咖啡和 17 种利口酒。
沿着这座城市的历史和地理轮廓,唐尼在《巴黎之味》中带领读者踏上巴黎及其周边地区的内部美食徒步之旅,揭示了罗马肉店的位置、为当今食客提供服务的经典美好时代小酒馆和玛丽·安托瓦内特的餐厅。精致的菜园仍然供应农产品,不再供应给不幸的女王,而是供应给传奇人物阿兰·杜卡斯和他在凡尔赛宫内的时尚餐厅。一路上,读者会了解到为什么法国丰富的烹饪传统仍然使巴黎成为食品世界的最终仲裁者。
出版商 : St. Martin’s Press (2017年9月26日)
语言 : 英语
精装本 : 304 页
ISBN-10 : 1250082935
ISBN-13 : 978-1250082930
物品重量 : 1.05 磅
尺寸 : 6.39 x 1.15 x 9.57 英寸
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Customers say
Customers find the book’s information good, enlightening, and interesting. They also describe it as fun, entertaining, and lively. Opinions are mixed on the writing quality, with some finding it well-written and poetic at times, while others say it’s disjointed and difficult to read.
Paris papa from the text of customer reviews
Reviewer: Charlie G.
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Intelligent, informative and fun!
Review: Woe is me! I have never been to Paris! David Downie’s book is an entertaining reminder of what I’ve been missing. Part food tour book and part food history book, A Taste of Paris gives quite a comprehensive understanding of how Parisian food developed its unique style. I must admit that some things in the book were quite surprising, such as the description of a medieval process of cooking an entire boar for a banquet and serving it wrapped up inside its original pelt. One cannot unsee this (or unsmell it!) There are many colorful examples that will hold the reader’s attention, as he/she races from one chapter to the next. The pace is brisk, the writing is excellent and almost poetic at times. As we are taken from one arrondissement to the next, it would have been helpful to have had a map of Paris printed on the endpapers. I must visit Paris, and bring this book as a guide. Kudos to the author for his excellent research for this book, which must have taken a lifetime!
Reviewer: Susan M. Carter
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Paris Food History through the Ages
Review: David Downie comes through again, this time combining history and food in a very interesting book about food in Paris through the ages. I think he covered everything in both subjects so it’s a book for history buffs and foodies. I found myself constantly amazed by the amount of research it must have taken for him to fill in all the blanks and he didn’t leave a single blank by the end. If you love Paris, food and the writing of David Downie you must read this book.
Reviewer: Elatia Harris
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Paris and Food — How the Two Really Met
Review: It was not by accident that Paris became the world capital of gastronomy. But — how did it happen? David Downie, who in his marvelous books has walked you all the way around the City of Light, now walks you back in time to her secret history, through the centuries-long saga of how Paris was fed. The logistics are staggering, the characters unforgettable, and the stories of the kind you can dine out for a year on. Reading, you may just feel that gastronomy as we know it in the best Paris restaurants is the tender flower of mighty and continuous labor dating to the deep, deep past. As always, David Downie leads you to see Paris anew, through any lens he crafts for you. Don’t miss this one!
Reviewer: Curtis Hill
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Good Book About The History of French Food
Review: Good historical book – the title is a little misleading, it is really about the history of food in France (and before). I disliked that the author had a “snarky” attitude and I wish more current information was included.
Reviewer: Katherine Watt
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: So much food for thought
Review: This book kept me sane on a last crazy business trip to China this week! Such a fascinating trip through the history of eating in Paris! Well written, smart, inspired!Now I am waiting for the paperback to come out because I’ve yet to master the ability to revisit passages on Kindle that I want to research further. And I can’t wait to revisit the Mazarin Library to take a peek at some of those manuscripts myself.
Reviewer: George McCully
Rating: 1.0 out of 5 stars
Title: You Can’t Tell This Book by its Cover
Review: I ‘m very sorry to say it, but I found this to be one of the most irritating, least worthwhile, books I have read in a long time.The title is seriously misleadingââA Tasteâ must refer to the authorâs, because that is the main theme of the text. Though there are many references to historical documents, places and events, they are not connected by a coherent historical narrative in which one subject leads to another. The claim of âthe Parisian Love Affair with Foodâ is never addressed, much less demonstrated, and as for even the authorâs âloveâ of âfoodâ, there is no evidence here of a refined palate or much culinary knowledge on his part. Many names are dropped, but often this seems to be showing off, marketing his walking-tour business rather than teaching readers; street maps would have helped. The strongest takeaway as the central thread for me was the authorâs apparent fascination with himselfâhis constant padding of the text with often gratuitous insertions of his personal takes on everything (as if that is what readers care most about), instead of simply presenting an objective history in which we are interested, for which we were misled to buy the book.The prose style is breezy, smart-alecky, over-written and purportedly facetiousâmore suitable to short, light magazine articles than to nonfiction books. Servers in restaurants are many times described as dressed like penguins, as if that (cliché, after all) wereâwhat? Witty? Clever? Funny? Certainly none of those from the second time on. Unremitting and purportedly clever word-plays draw more attention to the writing than to the subjects at hand. I found no depth of insight or nuanced sensibility.Actually the pretext of a âhistoryâ and âthe Parisian Love of Foodâ are misconceived. Because so little is known about the early history of Paris, the text focuses on the author almost entirelyâe.g., the solid historical information in the first 24 pages of the book (after which I stopped counting) could easily have been fitted into two paragraphs. Charlemagne is adduced as if somehow representative of Paris, whereas he was born in either Belgium or Germany, and lived all over Europe wherever he was (almost always) fighting, keeping his court at Aachen, in todayâs Germany. The history of Paris is of course familiar from many other sources, but this book contains no illuminating attempt to create a specialized narrative fitting into that history.
Reviewer: Uno Amore
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: A Treat!
Review: Gave this as a gift to a chef friend, who loved it! Fun, witty, good information and some decent recipe ideas.
Reviewer: KD Shell
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Great read and well researched
Review: This is one of David Downie’s best books. It is lively, festive, and enlightening. He incorporates an indepth culinary history into a tour – really a romp – through the City of Light. There are many engrossing stories about the personalities and food preferences throughout centuries of Parisian history.
Reviewer: JORGE ZELAYA
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Very well written, funny and informative
Reviewer: Johanna Stobbs
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: This is a stunning book that pulls you right into the French way of life and the history of France’s love affair with food. Erudite, enthralling, engaging. An absolute must-read. You won’t be able to put it down. Bravo, David Downie!
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