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TEDxSanJoaquin - Ken Albala - Why We Don't Cook Anymore 

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Ken Albala is Professor of History at the University of the Pacific. He is the author or editor of 14 books on food including Eating Right in the Renaissance, Food in Early Modern Europe, Cooking in Europe 1250-1650, The Banquet: Dining in the Great Courts of Late Renaissance Europe, Beans: A History (winner of the 2008 International Association of Culinary Professionals Jane Grigson Award), and Pancake. He has also co-edited two works, The Business of Food and Human Cuisine, and two other edited collections are forthcoming this fall: Food and Faith and A Cultural History of Food: The Renaissance. Albala was also editor of three food series for Greenwood Press with 30 volumes in print and his 4-volume Food Cultures of the World Encyclopedia was just published this summer. Albala is also co-editor of the journal Food Culture and Society and general editor of the new series AltaMira Studies in Food and Gastronomy, for which he has written a textbook entitled Three World Cuisines: Italy, China, Mexico which will appear in the spring of 2012. He is currently researching a history of theological controversies surrounding fasting in the Reformation Era, and has co-authored a cookbook for Penguin /Perigee entitled The Lost Art of Real Cooking, the sequel of which will appear next year and is entitled The Lost Arts of Hearth and Home.
In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

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23 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 29   
@nbnvideo
@nbnvideo 10 лет назад
One of the best TED's I have heard. He is correct in everything that he says in this talk and I completely agree. Also, he speaks well.
@gabrielemariotti5780
@gabrielemariotti5780 4 года назад
One of the few good things of being Italian is that everything he said you kinda know by default, you know food, you share food, you are generally responsible of food consumption.
@blindbookworm8019
@blindbookworm8019 6 лет назад
It makes me sad that people don't cook. I'm visually impaired and I am the only one in my group who new how to cook. If a nearly blind person can cook and make it turn out great, then ANYONE can. Get with the program people!
@mahnoor1515
@mahnoor1515 3 года назад
He's also a great professor
@BritikHD
@BritikHD 8 лет назад
This is my proffesor! lol
@smb123211
@smb123211 11 месяцев назад
Bravo for Ken - his curiosity, enthusiasm, knowledge and conviction. We may not cook but still value a "home-cooked" meal, Sunday dinner, Thanksgiving, the feast after Midnight Mass, brunch. I got the "spend an hour" speech in high school in a Boys Only talk about "health" a zillion years ago (lol). He said we owed it to ourselves to fix a nice meal and enjoy it every day. As religious and civic gatherings decline, food is assuming a greater importance socially. I see two more problems - the mother to daughter chain that worked for years is gone and our affluence lets us pretend to cook / dine out. We went to a progressive dinner (food not politics) and in a $150,000 kitchen the wife told us she liked to cook except for handling food, cutting, dicing or using the stove. Her husband said, "We do cook!" (They get these packages where you add X to Y then stir in Z and put in microwave.) I taught my kids to cook and they do so today for their families.
@jennymunday7913
@jennymunday7913 2 года назад
I think the reason people insist on out of season produce is mainly because of cookbooks. "The recipe says I need peaches!" so you go to the grocery store in the middle of December and pick over sad tasteless peaches. Darling, pick a different recipe! That being said, frozen foods are great. I consider them to be like fresh produce more than anything.
@blindbookworm8019
@blindbookworm8019 6 лет назад
I did not know that Marie Calender was a restaurant
@troyeseffigy
@troyeseffigy 12 лет назад
all truth!
@josephludwig1126
@josephludwig1126 Год назад
How old is this video
@BobdelGrosso
@BobdelGrosso 10 лет назад
Whoa, you are preaching to the choir re: losing cookbooks. I have no use for the damned things. And most are loaded with recipes plagiarized from other cookbooks "tweaked" to give the impression of novelty. After 30 years of professional cooking I've got maybe as many cookbooks in my library. About a tenth are books I've edited; most are hand-me-downs; there are 3 that I open a few times/ year.
@kalbala1
@kalbala1 7 лет назад
I never use cookbooks either! I'm talking about cooking, not the books themselves!
@victorgonzalez2499
@victorgonzalez2499 6 лет назад
I happen to think that cookbooks can be an amazing resource specially when learning to cook and to culture oneself. I started cooking by learning to cook fro Vefa Alexiadou Greek Cuisine cookbook from Phaidon. Before getting that book I used to cook by intuition but it was very complicated coming up with ideas, knowing the ingredients, etc. I wouldn't disparage cookbooks.....
@screamingscarlette
@screamingscarlette 4 года назад
Jello guy!!!!!!
@Yottabee
@Yottabee 11 лет назад
Great talk! I was so intrigued, but this wouldn't play beyond 12:17 - how frustrating!
@josephmartinez1557
@josephmartinez1557 3 года назад
Why is he speaking so fast?
@noelsebz90
@noelsebz90 3 года назад
Slow down the video.
@cellom.9227
@cellom.9227 Год назад
He wants to fit in as much info as his time allots.
@jofraarche4399
@jofraarche4399 2 года назад
inpaindaily
@gabrielemariotti5780
@gabrielemariotti5780 4 года назад
This is likely to happen in a country with no food culture (like USA) where people don't even know how food grows or is processed. Sad.
@benhunter5993
@benhunter5993 4 года назад
Ken is American. We have the most prolific food culture in the world.
@gabrielemariotti5780
@gabrielemariotti5780 4 года назад
@@benhunter5993 AHAHAAHHAH that was funny
@benhunter5993
@benhunter5993 4 года назад
This is hilarious because it's the first time I've ever taken the time to even comment on a RU-vid video. My mom is Italian. Trust me I know the culture and compared to the United States, you have absolutely no ground to talk about "food culture". I'm sure you have your little narrow niche and it's cool. It's nothing like the scale of US food culture though.
@gabrielemariotti5780
@gabrielemariotti5780 4 года назад
​@@benhunter5993 Having "Food Culture" doesn't mean having a wide range of type of food....which by the way is nowhere near to old countries like Italy, Greece, Indian, China and so on. Most people in US eat burgers and have no idea how to cook at home, they just put their food in the microwave while drinking chemical-sweet-pepsi....when they see me cook a simple recipe they think I am a chef but the truth is that if you grow up in a Country with a strong Food Culture you develop a knowledge of food pretty quickly. Food Culture , it means having a rich knowledge that has been passed from one generation to the next. It means that your lifestyle revolve around food (quality food) and I'm sorry to say buy in US you have quantity but not quality. America is mass producing million of food products and export them around the world but it only means that you have a great Food Business not to be confused with Food Culture. Vastly different things my friend. (and the fact that your mother is Italian doesn't entitle you to compare Italian food with american food.)
@L30NARDO72
@L30NARDO72 4 года назад
@@benhunter5993 "USA has the most prolific food" starts talking about his Italian heritage just showing how the usa doesn't have a base, it just make version of other things
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