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Distributed for Reaktion Books

Ricelands

The World of South-east Asian Food

Distributed for Reaktion Books

Ricelands

The World of South-east Asian Food

Pad thai, pho, bao: the cuisines of Southeast Asia have ardent enthusiasts far beyond their native lands, and are now among the most-consumed dishes in the world. But the familiar take-out menus and thriving storefronts rest atop a compelling history of food, culture, and modernity. Award-winning photographer and writer Michael Freeman now offers here an all-encompassing guide to the cuisines of eight Southeast Asian countries.

            Ricelands takes the reader on a colorful and engaging tour of these popular tourist destinations through the richly layered cultures surrounding the various food traditions. Traveling across the landscapes of Thailand, Vietnam, Burma, Cambodia, Malaysia, Laos, Indonesia, and the Philippines, Freeman explores the origins of their respective cuisines, the defining characteristics of authentic dishes, and the evolution of the cuisines as they entered foreign cultures. From birds’ nests gathered in Thailand’s coastal caves to the less familiar dishes of Burma and Cambodia to the pungent durian fruit (and Westerners’ often aghast reactions), the author unearths unexpected treasures and tantalizing facts about Southeast Asia and its social history. The book also examines the cooking techniques, complex spices, and agricultural economies that underpin the countries’ food cultures, and considers how the informal nature of Southeast Asian eating fits into the rhythms of modern-day living.

           Vibrantly illustrated and elegantly conceived, Ricelands takes us into the heart of tropical Asia and the delicious foods that define it the world over.
 

176 pages | 150 color plates | 7 1/2 x 9 3/4 | © 2008

Food and Gastronomy


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Reviews

"Freeman, an English photographer, has produced a wonderfully intrepid, quirky Southeast Asian pictorial overview based on many years’ traveling, shooting, eating, and above all, thinking. . . . He asks us to care deeply about lands not just sustained by rice but literally sculpted by it. He writes at fascinating length about things that get jettisoned from most cookbooks—the sheer demands of this crop, the rural poverty of ’ricelands,’ the historical logic behind the brilliant ’vocabulary of taste.’"

Los Angeles Times

Table of Contents

1. The Paddy Field
 
2. Spice and Savour
 
3. Fire and Fixings
 
4. Wild about Wild
 
5. Crossroads
 
6. South-east by West
 
Recipes

Bibliography
 
Acknowledgements

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