Ken Albala is a professor of history and food studies at the University of the Pacific. He is the author of Three World Cuisines: Italian, Mexican, Chinese and coauthor of The Lost Art of Real Cooking: Rediscovering the Pleasures of Traditional Food, One Recipe at a Time. He blogs at kenalbala.blogspot.com.
"Noodle Soup offers recipes (often engagingly free-form) and
techniques, as promised, but also a fascinating history lesson. It
teaches us about the oldest known noodles (from 4,000 years ago,
made from millet and found in northwest China), the evolution of
the word “lasagna” (from the Greek laganon and Latin laganum, flat
sheets of dough), macaroni as fashion statement, Thomas Jefferson’s
handmade pasta, and more, citing recipes, poems, and medical
treatises from the relevant eras."--Boston Globe
"The book is well researched and filled with personal anecdotes and
observations that demonstrate the author's passion for his subject.
Recommended." --Choice
"Albala has let his imagination run wild in this collection of soup
recipes that propel the definition of noodle soup right into the
surreal." --Booklist
"Ken Albala has spent years tossing ideas—and pretty much
everything else—into a pot of water with homemade noodles rich in
new flavors, textures, and colors. Now we all get to share the
results. These clever, doable, delicious recipes thrill the palate
and warm the soul. Let the choir sing out: soup's on!"--Nathalie
Dupree, PBS host and author of Mastering the Art of Southern
Cooking
"Ken meanders from classic Italian passatelli to cuckoo Cheetos
Noodles with touchdowns in Malaysia, Japan, and many
non-noodle-dense cultures along the way. He wrangles a slippery
subject with his trademark academic precision, but delivers
well-researched recipes in a colloquial, lively tone that has me
slurping up page after page."--Linda Miller Nicholson,
saltyseattle.com
"Ken Albala is a widely traveled food historian who knows his
noodles, and a home cook who became obsessed with noodle soups. His
wonderfully offbeat treatise brims over with history, culture,
recipes from near and far, inventions both brilliant and crazy, and
the sheer fun of playing with foods and traditions."--Harold McGee,
author of On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen
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