Wild fermentation : the flavor, nutrition, and craft of live-culture foods / Sandor Ellix Katz.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781603586283 (paperback)
- Physical Description: xxi, 297 pages : colour illustrations ; 26 cm
- Edition: Updated and revised edition.
- Publisher: White River Junction, Vermont : Chelsea Green Publishing, [2016]
- Copyright: ©2016
Content descriptions
Bibliography, etc. Note: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Fermented foods. |
Available copies
- 0 of 1 copy available at Tsuga Consortium.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
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- Baker & Taylor
Describes the benefits, worldwide traditions, and science of fermented foods, and provides recipes for such fare as brined garlic, ginger beer, tzatsiki, challah, tempeh, and apple cider vinegar. - Chelsea Green Publishing
âWild Fermentation [has] become a manifesto and how-to manual for a generation of underground food activists.ââThe New Yorker
The book that started the fermentation revolution, with recipes including kimchi, miso, sauerkraut, pickles, gundruk, kombucha, kvass, sourdough, paneer, yogurt, amazaké, and so much more!
Sandor Ellix Katz, winner of a James Beard Award and New York Times bestselling author, whom Michael Pollan calls the âJohnny Appleseed of Fermentationâ returns to his iconic, bestselling book with a fresh perspective, renewed enthusiasm, and expanded wisdom from his travels around the world. This self-described fermentation revivalist is perhaps best known simply as Sandorkraut, which describes his joyful and demystifying approach to making and eating fermented foods, the health benefits of which have helped launch a nutrition-based food revolution.
Since its original publication, and aided by Katzâs engaging and fervent workshop presentations, Wild Fermentation has inspired people to turn their kitchens into food labs: fermenting vegetables into sauerkraut, milk into cheese or yogurt, grains into sourdough bread, and much more. In turn, theyâve traded batches, shared recipes, and joined thousands of others on a journey of creating healthy food for themselves, their families, and their communities. Katzâs work earned him the Craig Clairborne lifetime achievement award from the Southern Foodways Alliance, and he has been called âone of the unlikely rock stars of the American food sceneâ by The New York Times.
This updated and revised edition, now with full color photos throughout, is sure to introduce a whole new generation to the flavors and health benefits of fermented foods. It features many brand-new recipes, including:
- Strawberry Kvass
- African Sorghum Beer
- Infinite Buckwheat Bread
- And many more!
Updates on original recipes also reflect the authorâs ever-deepening knowledge of global food traditions. For Katz, his gateway to fermentation was sauerkraut. So open this book to find yours, and start a little food revolution right in your own kitchen!
"A solid reference library will take you a long way in the fermentation game. By law (or just about), the first book in it should be the recently revised edition of Wild Fermentation by Sandor Katz. It provides know-how, recipes, [and] you-can-do-it spunk."âWired Magazine
More praise for Sandor Ellix Katz and his books:
âThe Art of Fermentation is an extraordinary book, and an impressive work of passion and scholarship.ââDeborah Madison, author of Local Flavors
âThe fermenting bible.â â Newsweek
âIn a country almost clinically obsessed with sterilization Katz reminds us of the forgotten benefits of living in harmony with our microbial relatives.â â Grist
- Random House, Inc.
âWild Fermentation [has] become a manifesto and how-to manual for a generation of underground food activists.ââThe New Yorker
The book that started the fermentation revolution, with recipes including kimchi, miso, sauerkraut, pickles, gundruk, kombucha, kvass, sourdough, paneer, yogurt, amazaké, and so much more!
Sandor Ellix Katz, winner of a James Beard Award and New York Times bestselling author, whom Michael Pollan calls the âJohnny Appleseed of Fermentationâ returns to his iconic, bestselling book with a fresh perspective, renewed enthusiasm, and expanded wisdom from his travels around the world. This self-described fermentation revivalist is perhaps best known simply as Sandorkraut, which describes his joyful and demystifying approach to making and eating fermented foods, the health benefits of which have helped launch a nutrition-based food revolution.
Since its original publication, and aided by Katzâs engaging and fervent workshop presentations, Wild Fermentation has inspired people to turn their kitchens into food labs: fermenting vegetables into sauerkraut, milk into cheese or yogurt, grains into sourdough bread, and much more. In turn, theyâve traded batches, shared recipes, and joined thousands of others on a journey of creating healthy food for themselves, their families, and their communities. Katzâs work earned him the Craig Clairborne lifetime achievement award from the Southern Foodways Alliance, and he has been called âone of the unlikely rock stars of the American food sceneâ by The New York Times.
This updated and revised edition, now with full color photos throughout, is sure to introduce a whole new generation to the flavors and health benefits of fermented foods. It features many brand-new recipes, including:- Strawberry Kvass
- African Sorghum Beer
- Infinite Buckwheat Bread
- And many more!
âA solid reference library will take you a long way in the fermentation game. By law (or just about), the first book in it should be the recently revised edition of Wild Fermentation by Sandor Katz. It provides know-how, recipes, [and] you-can-do-it spunk.ââWired Magazine
More praise for Sandor Ellix Katz and his books:
âThe Art of Fermentation is an extraordinary book, and an impressive work of passion and scholarship.ââDeborah Madison, author of Local Flavors
âThe fermenting bible.ââNewsweek
âIn a country almost clinically obsessed with sterilization Katz reminds us of the forgotten benefits of living in harmony with our microbial relatives.ââGrist