TELEVISION

Cooking Across the Ages

Series: Cooking Across the Ages
4.7
(55)
Episodes
24
Rating
TVPG
Year
2020
Language
English

About

Embark on a fascinating international journey through human civilization, all through the lens of cooking. In 24 fascinating episodes, while he cooks, Professor Ken Albala welcomes you into his own home kitchen, encouraging you to explore unfamiliar cuisines as a type of gastronomic time travel that will allow you to get a taste of history like you've never experienced before!

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Episodes

1 to 3 of 24

1. Understanding Culture through Cooking

25m

What can you learn about different cultural groups of people through the lens of their cookbooks? A lot, as Professor Ken Albala illustrates by looking at two chicken recipes 200 years and a continent apart. Learn to cook a recipe from the 1748 French cookbook Le Nouveau Cuisinier Royal et Bourgeois, and another from The Can-Opener Cookbook of 1953.

2. Ancient Rome: Cooking with Apicius

39m

Are the recipes in De re coquinaria (the oldest complete recipe book in the Western tradition) bizarre and disgusting, or do they reflect a time of elegance and luxury? Historians have expressed a gamut of opinions. As you explore its sala cattabia, minutal of apricots, and botellum, you might be surprised to find three delicious, and even somewhat familiar, dishes.

3. Imperial China: Soybeans and Dumplings

32m

Examine the Chinese Wei dynasty's Qi Min Yao Shu, an encyclopedic manual containing "essential techniques to benefit the people," and learn about Chinese agricultural practices going back to antiquity. Explore the fermentation practices of the time, using both bacteria and mold, and follow a scaled-down recipe to create an intensely flavored fermented black bean dish.

4. Medieval Egypt: Chickpeas and Phyllo Dough

26m

From 14th-century Egypt, explore recipes that reflect the interchange between the many cultures of the Eastern Mediterranean of the time. Learn to make the sweet Byzantine specialty known as himmas kassa, and a super light and flaky phyllo dough stretched to the size of a table, just as Professor Albala remembers his grandmother doing.

5. Feast like a Viking with Meat and Beer

27m

Explore the oldest-known cookbook in Medieval Europe, the 13th century's Libellus de arte coquinaria. With its terse recipes of meat, fowl, fish, and sauces, it seemed to be written for a noble audience, not the common cook. Learn to make "hunter-style" fish pie with animal bones, as well as beer (much safer than drinking water at the time).

6. Medieval France's Touch for Sugar and Spice

41m

Meet Guillaume Tirel (known as Taillevent), the first celebrity chef who served in the 14th century as master chef in the French imperial courts. His Le Viandier was not an introduction to cooking but served as an aid to help people remember how to cook the classics. Dive into his recipe for a polysavory white stew of capons, along with individual tarts with banners for your guests.

Extended Details

  • Closed CaptionsEnglish

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