Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 216
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4422-6640-7 • Hardback • November 2017 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
978-1-4422-6641-4 • eBook • November 2017 • $48.50 • (£37.00)
Maria Paz Moreno is an essayist, poet, and literary critic. She is Professor of Spanish at the University of Cincinnati, Ohio. A native of Spain, her research focuses on the Literature and Gastronomy of her native country. Moreno is the author of seven books of poetry and several scholarly books and critical editions , among them El culturalismo en la poesía de Juan Gil-Albert [Cultural References in the Poetry of Juan Gil-Albert] (2000), , and De la página al plato. El libro de cocina en España [From the Page to the Plate: The Spanish Cookbook] (2012). She is the Editor of the Cincinnati Romance Review monographic issue Writing about Food: Culinary Literature in the Hispanic World (2012).
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter 1Before Madrid: The Flavors of the Iberian Peninsula
Chapter 2Too Many Kings Spoil the Broth
Chapter 3A New Era of Creative Cuisine
Chapter 4Madrid, A Gastronome’s Playground: Markets and Food Retailing through History
Chapter 5Historic Cookbooks
Chapter 6Historic Restaurants, Tabernas and Cafés
Chapter 7Madrid’s Traditional Dishes
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Essayist and professor Moreno’s comprehensive guidebook, part of the Big City Food Biographies series, covers the historical and contemporary food scene in a city that has become known for its inventive eating and drinking establishments. While the entries about the prehistory of Madrid tend towards the encyclopedic, the author hits her stride when she gets to the last couple of centuries, during which the change in cuisine has accelerated markedly. Illustrated with photos by the author and others, the book’s lush descriptions of neighborhood markets and restaurants, with particular emphasis on those that have been serving customers since the nineteenth century and before, will give tourists plenty of places to explore and armchair visitors reasons to envy them. Excerpts from historic cookbooks, including one for stuffing partridges with sardines and another that puts turducken to shame, are entertaining if occasionally appalling....[and] the adventurous will be tempted to experiment with them.
— Booklist
In this enjoyable and educational culinary history, Moreno, a professor of Spanish at the University of Cincinnati, enthusiastically explores the food of Spain’s capital. She methodically traces the culinary development of Madrid from the days when the Romans ruled the Iberian Peninsula, popularizing bread, olives, cheese, and roasted meat, to the mid-2000s, when Ferran Adrià and his restaurant, El Bulli, made molecular gastronomy a hit. Moreno provides brief historical sketches of the city, explaining that the cuisine was often influenced by the ruling class of the time: the Arabs introduced phyllo dough and nuts, the Bourbons and Hapsburgs indulged in sweets and pastries, and when Felipe V arrived in 1700, ‘he brought with him a French cook.’ Moreno describes cookbooks published over the centuries, as well as restaurant menus, both historic and recent, that highlight Madrid’s vibrant culinary scene. In vivid detail, she describes markets such as Mercado de San Miguel and Centro Platea (‘the largest gastro leisure space in Europe’) and introduces readers to Madrid’s two oldest restaurants, Lhardy and Sobrino de Botín. In a final chapter, Moreno provides recipes for the city’s most characteristic dishes, such as gambas al ajilio (garlic shrimp) and paella. Moreno’s informative guide is an excellent preview for those visiting the city.
— Publishers Weekly
Part of the Big City Food Biographies series, this book focuses on the culinary history and delights of Madrid, Spain. The first three chapters are a history of food and cuisine in Madrid from its origins up into the twenty-first century. The sixteenth century and the influences of the New World take center stage in this history, along with the transition from famines to abundance that occurred in the second half of the twentieth century. The last four chapters provide details on twenty-first century Madrid with its markets and retail food industry, historic cookbooks, historic restaurants and cafes, and its traditional dishes. Sprinkled throughout with black-and-white photographs of various time periods in Madrid's history in the last two centuries, along with specific recipes and ingredients of famous cuisines, this book illustrates the vibrant food of one of Spain's premier cities.
— American Reference Books Annual
An original and seminal work of meticulous scholarship, Madrid: A Culinary History will prove to be of special and particular interest to readers who are interested in the cultural history and cuisine and people of the city of Madrid. Enhanced with the inclusion of an eighteen page Bibliography, sixteen pages of Notes, and an eight page Index, Madrid: A Culinary History is unreservedly and wholeheartedly recommended for both community and academic library collections.
— Midwest Book Review
All readers will enjoy [the book's] thorough and well-balanced history and engaging anecdotes.
— European History Quarterly
In this captivating book, Paz Moreno guides readers through the exquisite details of Madrid’s fascinating food history. From before the establishment of the Hapsburg court in the mid-sixteenth century through today, Paz Moreno provides us with rich details of food trends, market places, cookbooks, and historic dining establishments, including “The Embassy,” Madrid’s first tea salon and underground sanctuary for Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi-occupied Europe. This is a must read for culinary historians and gastronomes alike!
— Carolyn Nadeau, Illinois Wesleyan University