
Sausage
A Global History
Gary Allen(Author)
Reaktion Books (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 1. September 2015
Book
Hardback
160 pages
978-1-78023-500-4 (ISBN)
Description
* We know from murals that the ancient Egyptians made sausages from the blood of sacrificial cattle
* The word 'sausage' is derived from the Latin salsus, 'salted'
* The German Currywurst is so beloved that there is a museum dedicated to it in Berlin
* The popular pizza topping pepperoni is not Italian at all, but an American invention
* Mexican green chorizo is coloured with herbs, jalapeno chillies and tomatillos
* The Chinese have made sausages since around 600 BC
includes a selection of recipes
From bangers to Bratwurst, and Cumberlands to chorizo, every country has its own special sausages. There is a veritable alphabet of sausage, from the Cajun andouille - and its less spicy forerunner, a French saucisson of the same name - all the way to the Italian zampone. As this rich and engaging history shows, people worldwide have been making sausages for thousands of years. They can be made of blood, meat, fish or cheese; have a skin or be skinless; be dried, smoked, fermented or fresh; tubular, spherical or in a patty. The history of the sausage is one of relentless creativity and invention, as different cultures found countless delectable ways to transform otherwise unappealing scraps of meat.
Gary Allen peppers his account with examples from all over the world, as well as antique posters and advertisements, artworks and cartoons; together, they build a picture of a food that has been beloved - even as it's scoffed at - throughout human history.
* The word 'sausage' is derived from the Latin salsus, 'salted'
* The German Currywurst is so beloved that there is a museum dedicated to it in Berlin
* The popular pizza topping pepperoni is not Italian at all, but an American invention
* Mexican green chorizo is coloured with herbs, jalapeno chillies and tomatillos
* The Chinese have made sausages since around 600 BC
includes a selection of recipes
From bangers to Bratwurst, and Cumberlands to chorizo, every country has its own special sausages. There is a veritable alphabet of sausage, from the Cajun andouille - and its less spicy forerunner, a French saucisson of the same name - all the way to the Italian zampone. As this rich and engaging history shows, people worldwide have been making sausages for thousands of years. They can be made of blood, meat, fish or cheese; have a skin or be skinless; be dried, smoked, fermented or fresh; tubular, spherical or in a patty. The history of the sausage is one of relentless creativity and invention, as different cultures found countless delectable ways to transform otherwise unappealing scraps of meat.
Gary Allen peppers his account with examples from all over the world, as well as antique posters and advertisements, artworks and cartoons; together, they build a picture of a food that has been beloved - even as it's scoffed at - throughout human history.
Reviews / Votes
Allen explores, region by region, and sometimes country by country, some of the broad categories and local specialties. These are slim volumes, and so far from exhaustive, but theres an impressive overview here. From the German sulzwurst (a gelatine-bound sausage containing vinegar and/or pickles) to the Lebanese makanek (glazed with pomegranate molasses), from the beef sujuk (prevalent in Islamic countries) to Kazakhstans kazy (dried, smoked sausages made with salted horseflesh and garlic) to the Thai sai krok lueat (curry-flavoured blood sausages), the reader cant help but be struck by the range of ingenuity and perhaps sometimes desperation thats been applied to humanitys most mobile meat. * <i>Popmatters</i> * Praise for Gary Allens previous book with Reaktion, Herbs: Allens information-packed little book will send the recipient either scurrying to the kitchen to try his unfamiliar recipes or into the garden to plant up some of the exotica he describes . . . definitely a book I am glad to have on my shelves. * <i>Herbs</i> magazine *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
58 illustrations, 51 in colour
Dimensions
Height: 207 mm
Width: 131 mm
Thickness: 19 mm
Weight
359 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78023-500-4 (9781780235004)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Person
Gary Allen is an Adjunct Professor at Empire State College (part of the State University of New York). His books include The Herbalist in the Kitchen (2007), Herbs: A Global History (2012) and Sausage: A Global History (2015), both from Reaktion.