Slow Food

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2003-05-01
Publisher(s): Columbia Univ Pr
List Price: $50.00

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Summary

Take a breath.... Read slowly.How often in the course and crush of our daily lives do we afford ourselves moments to truly relish-to truly be present in-the act of preparing and eating food? For most of us, our enjoyment of food has fallen victim to the frenetic pace of our lives and to our increasing estrangement, in a complex commercial economy, from the natural processes by which food is grown and produced. Packaged, artificial, and unhealthful, fast food is only the most dramatic example of the degradation of food in our lives, and of the deeper threats to our cultural, political, and environmental well-being.In 1986, Carlo Petrini decided to resist the steady march of fast food and all that it represents when he organized a protest against the building of a McDonald's near the Spanish Steps in Rome. Armed with bowls of penne, Petrini and his supporters spawned a phenomenon. Three years later Petrini founded the International Slow Food Movement, renouncing not only fast food but also the overall pace of the "fast life." Issuing a manifesto, the Movement called for the safeguarding of local economies, the preservation of indigenous gastronomic traditions, and the creation of a new kind of ecologically aware consumerism committed to sustainability. On a practical level, it advocates a return to traditional recipes, locally grown foods and wines, and eating as a social event. Today, with a magazine, Web site, and over 75,000 followers organized into local "convivia," or chapters, Slow Food is poised to revolutionize the way Americans shop for groceries, prepare and consume their meals, and think about food.Slow Foodnot only recalls the origins, first steps, and international expansion of the movement from the perspective of its founder, it is also a powerful expression of the organization's goal of engendering social reform through the transformation of our attitudes about food and eating. As Newsweekdescribed it, the Slow Food movement has now become the basis for an alternative to the American rat race, the inspiration for "a kinder and gentler capitalism."Linger a while then, with the story of what Alice Waters in her Foreword calls "this Delicious Revolution," and rediscover the pleasures of the good life.

Author Biography

Carlo Petrini is a food writer and the founder and president of the International Slow Food Movement. He lives in Bra, Ital William Mccuaig is a translator living in Toronto

Table of Contents

Foreword ix
Alice Waters
Series Editor's Introduction xi
Preface xvii
Preface to the American Edition xxi
The Official Slow Food Manifesto xxiii
Appetite and Thought
1(36)
The Origins
1(7)
From ``New Epicures'' to Ecological Gastronomes
8(8)
An International Movement of Good Taste
16(4)
Pleasure Denied, Pleasure Rediscovered
20(6)
McDonald's Versus Slow Food
26(11)
In the Beginning, the Territory
37(28)
Cultivating Diversity
37(4)
At the Center, the Producer
41(10)
The Rebirth of the Osteria
51(3)
The Difficult Voyage
54(5)
The Salone del Gusto
59(6)
Educating and Learning
65(20)
The Praise of the Senses and the Paradox of Taste
65(7)
In the Schools
72(4)
From the Workshops to the Master of Food
76(5)
The University
81(4)
The Noah Principle
85(26)
Scenes from a Flood
85(5)
The Ark and the Presidia
90(9)
Quality, the Law, and Biotech
99(6)
The Slow Food Award for the Defense of Biodiversity
105(6)
Without Nostalgia: Acknowledgments
111(2)
Appendices
113(32)
The Slow Food Italian Presidia
113(7)
The Slow Food International Presidia
120(8)
Slow Food Award Winners
128(7)
A Chronology of Arcigola Slow Food
135(7)
Slow Food U.S.A. Today
142(3)
Notes 145(2)
Select Bibliography 147(2)
Index 149

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