You and I Eat the Same: Dispatches (Volume 1) by Chris Ying and René Redzepi and MAD
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- ISBN 10 1579658407
- ISBN 13 9781579658403
- Published Sep 04 2018
- Format Hardcover
- Page Count 160
- Language English
- Countries United States
- Publisher Artisan
Publishers Text
Dispatches will be a biannual publication, produced by Chris Ying, MAD, and Noma. Twice a year we’ll choose a topic—the ocean, home cooking, insects, history, or farming, for instance—and identify the single most urgent and interesting issue surrounding that topic. The book will differ in form from one edition to the next, depending on the subject at hand and what we determine to be the most effective way to explore it.
Volume 1 will assert that immigration makes food better. It is fundamental to cuisine—to all human endeavor, really—and essential to innovation and more delicious things. We’ll do this by putting forward the idea that cuisine should not be divided by ethnicity but rather taken as a collective human effort. As a reference point, think about those incredible old Time Life cookbooks from the sixties. Each volume reported on the cuisine of a different country or region for a curious American audience. In a celebratory, earnest, naive way, they were part anthropological study and part recipe book. Now imagine another volume in the series, one that documented cuisine not as a phenomenon of a specific country or culture but of humanity as a whole: The Cuisine of Humanity.
The book will have some entertaining and informative features that drive home the similarities between different culinary cultures: photo essays on all the different ways humans like to wrap meat in flat breads; a basic primer on fire; a catalogue of every species of animal humans eat, etc. But the heart of the book lies in long-form writing that encourages readers to view immigration as necessary to cuisine. We’ll have pieces from respected writers from various fields that explore the ways in which food and people move between cultures, and the ways in which this freedom of movement makes cooking and eating better.
Volume 1 will assert that immigration makes food better. It is fundamental to cuisine—to all human endeavor, really—and essential to innovation and more delicious things. We’ll do this by putting forward the idea that cuisine should not be divided by ethnicity but rather taken as a collective human effort. As a reference point, think about those incredible old Time Life cookbooks from the sixties. Each volume reported on the cuisine of a different country or region for a curious American audience. In a celebratory, earnest, naive way, they were part anthropological study and part recipe book. Now imagine another volume in the series, one that documented cuisine not as a phenomenon of a specific country or culture but of humanity as a whole: The Cuisine of Humanity.
The book will have some entertaining and informative features that drive home the similarities between different culinary cultures: photo essays on all the different ways humans like to wrap meat in flat breads; a basic primer on fire; a catalogue of every species of animal humans eat, etc. But the heart of the book lies in long-form writing that encourages readers to view immigration as necessary to cuisine. We’ll have pieces from respected writers from various fields that explore the ways in which food and people move between cultures, and the ways in which this freedom of movement makes cooking and eating better.
Other cookbooks by this author
- A Work in Progress: Noma Recipes
- The Gaijin Cookbook: Japanese Recipes from a Chef, Father, Eater, and Lifelong Outsider
- The Gaijin Cookbook: Japanese Recipes from a Chef, Father, Eater, and Lifelong Outsider
- Ivan Ramen: Love, Obsession, and Recipes from Tokyo's Top Noodle Joint
- Ivan Ramen: Love, Obsession, and Recipes from Tokyo's Most Unlikely Noodle Joint
- Ivan Ramen: Love, Obsession, and Recipes from Tokyo's Top Noodle Joint
- Ivan Ramen: Love, Obsession, and Recipes from Tokyo's Top Noodle Joint
- Lucky Peach, Issue 8
- Lucky Peach, Issue 9
- The Mission Chinese Food Cookbook
- The Mission Chinese Food Cookbook
- Noma: Time and Place in Nordic Cuisine
- Noma: Nordic Cuisine
- Noma 2.0: Vegetable, Forest, Ocean
- The Noma Guide to Building Flavour
- The Noma Guide to Building Flavour
- The Noma Guide to Fermentation: Foundations of Flavor
- The Noma Guide to Fermentation: Foundations of Flavor
- Rene Redzepi Journal
- A Work in Progress: Notes on Food, Cooking and Creativity
- A Work in Progress: A Journal
- The Wurst of Lucky Peach: A Treasury of Encased Meat
- The Wurst of Lucky Peach: A Treasury of Encased Meat: A Cookbook

