1. Southwest Asia and the ancient origins of cheese
2. Cheese, religion, and the cradle of civilization
3. Bronze, rennet, and the ascendancy of trade
4. Greece, cheese, and the Mediterranean miracle
5. Caesar, Christ, and systematic cheese making
6. The manor, the monastery, and the age of cheese
diversification
7. England, Holland, and the rise of market-driven cheese
making
8. The Puritans, the factory, and the demise of traditional cheese
making
9. The cultural legacy of cheese making in the Old and New
Worlds
Paul Kindstedt is a Professor of Food Science in the Department of Nutrition and Food Sciences at the University of Vermont. He has authored numerous research articles and invited conference proceedings on dairy chemistry and cheese science, as well as many book chapters. He is the author of Cheese and Culture: A History of Cheese and its Place in Western Civilization, and the co-author of American Farmstead Cheese (2005) with the Vermont Cheese Council. He has received national professional recognition for both his research and teaching and currently serves as the Co-Director of the Vermont Institute for Artisan Cheese at the University of Vermont. He is married and blessed with three children who are the joy of his life.
ForeWord Reviews-
Cheese, glorious cheese. Who knew the 9,000 years of innovation,
lore, history, and romance in your story? Who knew skim milk
cheeses initially flourished not for diet reasons, but because they
were cheaper for London’s working-classes? That higher-temperature
cooking techniques contributed to the development of dry and aged
cheeses? Or that economics, religion, social mores, climate,
and—well, nearly anything—has influenced the evolution of cheese in
all its forms, styles, tastes, shapes, and uses? Paul S. Kindstedt
knows, and now, through his impeccably researched, and carefully
assembled book, any cheese lover can know, too. Kindstedt’s
is a book written with scholarly rigor; yet, that detail-laden
precision also makes it palatable for foodies curious about how and
why food choices, production, and tastes have emerged over
centuries—the person jazzed to learn, for example, that ‘Grated
cheese seems to have occupied a special place in Greek culture’
indicated by a wounded soldier being served ‘an elixir consisting
of Pramnian wine on which (his slave) sprinkles goat’s-milk cheese,
grated with a bronze grater,’ or that the seasonal movement of cows
across south-central France inspired techniques for producing
longer-lasting mountain cheeses. Like the range of cheeses
available today, at times Cheese and Culture can be overwhelming,
and the chapter on regulation reads like an alphabet soup of agency
abbreviations and acronyms. But, like the veined or sharply
flavored offerings on a cheese plate, one could choose to skip it
and still be satiated.
Library Journal-
Kindstedt (food science, Univ. of Vermont) delivers an extensively
researched and comprehensive history of cheese and its place in the
development of Western civilization. Beginning with the ancient
origins of cheese making and moving through the classical,
medieval, and Renaissance periods to the modern era, the author
examines the traditional cheeses that came about during each period
and how they were tailored to the environment and culture of the
time. Finally, he explores the friction that has developed between
the United States and the European Union over issues surrounding
cheese making and trade, such as protecting traditional product
names, food safety regulation, and the use of new agricultural
technologies such as genetically modified organisms (GMOs) and
hormones. VERDICT: Incorporating archaeology, religion, and
literature, this detailed, accessible history will appeal to
readers who enjoy food histories.
Choice-
Cheese scientist Kindstedt (Univ. of Vermont) has written a lively
history of cheese through an examination of the cultural
environments from which specific types of cheese-making traditions
were born and, in some cases, have continued to the present.
Kindstedt begins as early as possible with archaeological evidence
of early fresh cheese making in the Fertile Crescent and its role
in pre-Christian religious ritual. He quickly moves on to the
introduction of rennet in cheese making and cheese in Greek and
Roman civilizations and incorporation into daily life, both mundane
and sacred. The last half of the book concentrates on the European
cheese-making tradition and the role of monasteries in the
development of aged cheeses. Surprisingly, Kindstedt does not spend
too much time discussing factory-made cheese and the move away from
traditional cheese making. But he does end with a timely discussion
on raw milk safety and multinational trade laws that impact
traditional cheeses, as well as a brief discussion on the artisanal
cheese movement. Cheese and Culture is a well-researched, concise,
and valuable addition to any food history collection. Summing Up:
Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through graduate
students; general readers.
"All honor and respect to Aristaious -- the Greek god who taught us
to make cheese -- and to Paul Kindstedt, who in Cheese and Culture
teaches us its glorious history ever since."--Rob Kaufelt,
proprietor, Murray's Cheese NYC
"From the Garden of Eden to the dairy industries of today, Paul S.
Kindstedt unfolds the monumental story of cheese. Vast in scope,
rich in detail, Cheese and Culture is a casein-inspired
epic."--Eric LeMay, author of Immortal Milk
"Cheese and Culture is the book both cheese professionals and
cheese geeks have been waiting for. Professor Kindstedt gives us
the mostly untold history of cheese and its societal import from
6500 BC to the present, answering all my cheese questions -- even
the ones I didn't know I had. Cheese and Culture is the most
comprehensive cheese book ever written by an American, a great
addition to our collective cheese library."--Gordon Edgar, cheese
buyer, Rainbow Grocery Cooperative, San Francisco, and author of
Cheesemonger: A Life on the Wedge
"In this painstakingly researched yet passion-laced book, Paul
Kindstedt shows us how cheese, from its rudimentary beginnings to
today's manufacturing, is inextricably linked to culture and, no
less, to our future. Cheese and Culture is essential reading for
anyone who loves cheese and, equally, cares about the future of
food itself."--Laura Werlin, author, Laura Werlin's Cheese
Essentials
"I love this book - accessible in its prose and style with the
breadth and depth of an academic work. All those interested in the
role that cheesemaking has played in the development of the world
we live in will come away after reading this book with context and
understanding, and an intellectual appreciation of why cheese
appeals to so many people at an emotional level. Paul Kindstedt has
produced a seminal work in Cheese and Culture."--Mateo Kehler,
cheesemaker, Jasper Hill Farm
"Paul Kindstedt has fashioned a remarkable book about one of
humankind's most distinctive foods. Drawing upon comprehensive
evidence from archaeology to contemporary artisan cheese making,
Dr. Kindstedt shapes the complex story of cheese. He examines the
impact of geography and climate, religion, social status and
wealth, transportation and commerce... to describe and explain the
8,500-year evolution of cheese from Neolithic humans to present-day
America. From archaeologists and anthropologists and historians to
cheesemakers and consumers who want to deepen their understanding
and appreciation of cheese, Dr. Kindstedt's book will enlighten,
entertain, and reveal the fascinating history and culture of
cheese. Bravissimi e complimenti!"--Jeffrey Roberts, New England
Culinary Institute, and author of The Atlas of American Artisan
Cheese
"Only a true scholar could weave together the complexity of
history, anthropology, language, geography, religion and science to
inform and enlighten our understanding of the evolution of cheese
making throughout the millennia. Kindstedt, first and foremost with
his discerning scientific mind, helps historians inform the
heretofore mysteries in the cheese making continuum."--Catherine
Donnelly, PhD, co-director, Vermont Institute for Artisan
Cheese
"Dr. Kindstedt's love and passion for the artisan cheese movement
is inspiring. In his latest book, he has presented a beautiful and
historically rich mosaic of the history of cheese on our little
green planet. With reference to the past, and detailed attention
paid to the present, as well as extrospection for the future, Dr.
Kindstedt has created an amalgamation of artisan cheese reference,
the like of which has not been attempted before."--Matt Jennings,
co-owner/executive chef, Farmstead/La Laiterie, Providence, RI
"This book will fascinate anyone who loves cheese. With a sweeping
perspective, from the earliest prehistoric domestication of goats
and sheep to the present, it chronicles how social, technological,
and political developments gave rise to the vast array of cheeses
we know and love."--Sandor Ellix Katz, author of The Art of
Fermentation, The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved, and Wild
Fermentation
"No cheese lover or cheesemaker's education will be complete
without reading of the epic journey of cheese as it influences and
is influenced by human civilization. Paul Kindstedt steers the
reader through a vast sea of history with the steady, inspired hand
and confidence of a seasoned captain of his subject. What a gift to
the world of cheese!"--Gianaclis Caldwell, cheesemaker, Pholia
Farm, and author of The Farmstead Creamery Advisor
"Given the vast amount that's been written about cheese down the
centuries, the surprising absence of a scholarly work on the
history of cheese is all the more remarkable. With Cheese and
Culture, noted dairy scientist and author Paul Kindstedt has
admirably filled this gap to an extent that should satisfy even the
most avid cheese geek."--Kate Arding, co-founder, Culture magazine
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