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Beef: The Untold Story of How Milk, Meat, and Muscle Shaped the World [Hardback]

3.30/5 (232 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Format: Hardback, 256 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x23 mm, weight: 445 g, Illustrations
  • Pub. Date: 01-Oct-2008
  • Publisher: William Morrow & Company
  • ISBN-10: 0061353841
  • ISBN-13: 9780061353840
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  • Price: 38,29 €*
  • * This title is out of print. Used copies may be available, but delivery only inside Baltic States
  • This title is out of print. Used copies may be available, but delivery only inside Baltic States.
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  • Format: Hardback, 256 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x23 mm, weight: 445 g, Illustrations
  • Pub. Date: 01-Oct-2008
  • Publisher: William Morrow & Company
  • ISBN-10: 0061353841
  • ISBN-13: 9780061353840
Other books in subject:
Traces the history of cattle's role in shaping cultural and world affairs, evaluating its inspiration of art, warfare, and religion as well as its influence on food and labor, in an anecdotal account that shares recipes and covers such topics as the ancient Mediterranean bull-fighting rings and the perilous state of beef production in the western world. 35,000 first printing.

Traces the role of cattle in shaping cultural and world affairs throughout history, evaluating its inspiration of art, warfare, and religion as well as its influence on food and labor.



The cow. The most industrious animal in the world. A beast central to human existence since time began, it has played a vital role in our history not only as a source of food, but also as a means of labor, an economic resource, an inspiration for art, and even as a religious icon. Prehistoric people painted it on cave walls; explorers, merchants, and landowners traded it as currency; many cultures worshipped it as a god. So how did it come to occupy the sorry state it does today—more factory product than animal?

In Beef, Andrew Rimas and Evan D. G. Fraser answer that question, telling the story of cattle in its entirety. From the powerful auroch, a now extinct beast once revered as a mystical totem, to the dairy cows of seventeenth-century Holland to the frozen meat patties and growth hormones of today, the authors deliver an engaging panoramic view of the cow's long and colorful history.

Peppered with lively anecdotes, recipes, and culinary tidbits, Beef tells a story that spans the globe, from ancient Mediterranean bullfighting rings to the rugged grazing grounds of eighteenth-century England, from the quiet farms of Japan's Kobe beef cows to crowded American stockyards to remote villages in East Africa, home of the Masai, a society to which cattle mean everything. Leaving no stone unturned in its exploration of the cow's legacy, the narrative serves not only as a compelling story but as a call to arms, offering practical solutions for confronting the current condition of the wasteful beef and dairy industries.

Beef is a captivating history of an animal whose relationship with humanity has shaped the world as we know it, and readers will never look at steak the same way again.

INTRODUCTION xi
How to Eat Beef
xiii
Culinary Interlude: Rib Eye Steak
xv
Big Trouble in the Beef Business
xvii
SECTION 1: AUDUMLA 1
1 FROM HORN TO HOOF (The Ecological and Evolutionary Origins of the Cow: Prehistory-8000 B.C.)
3
The Thread in the Labyrinth: Picasso's Minotaur and the Spirit of Cattle
3
What Is a Cow?
9
Culinary Interlude: Nine Primal Cuts
14
Domestication: How the Cows Came Home
16
Meat, Milk, Muscle, and Dung
24
Pity and Fear: Ernest Hemingway's Bullfights
29
The Coconut Theory of Animal Husbandry
32
The Reddest Meat of All
36
Culinary Interlude: Bull's Tail Stew
37
Delamere's Cattle
38
2 THE FOOD OF THE GODS (The Origin of Religion: 8000 B.C.-400 B.C. )
43
Bull Gods on Hadrian's Wall
43
Culinary Interlude: A Mithraic Dinner with Meatballs
46
First Rites
48
Early Myths and Legends: The Cattle of the Sun and the Bull of Heaven
53
Culinary Interlude: Homeric Roast Beef
55
Early Myths and Legends Explained (Part I): Metamorphoses
57
Early Myths and Legends Explained (Part II): A Man of His Times
60
The Bible's One, True Bull God
64
Culinary Interlude: A Fatted Calf
70
The Cattle of the Sun, Revisited
71
A Lucky Killing
72
3 THE BROWN BULL OF ULSTER (Wealth and Honor: 400 B.C.-A.D. 1500)
75
King Servius Tullius Strikes Gold
75
Cow Heroes: Rustling for Fun and Profit
77
Culinary Interlude: Prophecy Broth
81
Monks and the Rise of Cheese
84
Culinary Interlude: Cheddar
86
Culinary Interlude: A Catalog of Noble Cheeses
90
A Medieval Banquet
92
Culinary Interlude: Beef y-Stywyd, or the Ribs of Henry IV
94
Cow Villains: The Reivers
95
Ole Lemurt's Hero
98
SECTION 2: THE CLOVEN HOOF 103
4 GENE POOLS AND PAINT POTS (The Birth of Modernity: The Sixteenth to Nineteenth Centuries)
105
A Perfect Teat: Dutch Milkers
105
Culinary Interlude: Jersey Cream and Fresh Berries
110
"All Is Useless That Is Not Flesh...": Bigger, Better Beeves
111
Culinary Interlude: Lumber Pye
115
Toro Bravo's Brave New World: The Conquest of New Spain
122
The Woman of Narok
132
5 CATTLE KINGS AND DAIRY QUEENS (The Industrialization of Food: The Nineteenth Century)
139
War, Pandemics, and Famine
139
Culinary Interlude: Steak Tartare
140
Chemical Solutions: Making Food Last Longer
149
Culinary Interlude: Roast Beef and Yorkshire Pudding
150
Cowboys and Barbed Wire
154
Culinary Interlude: Barbecue and Beef Jerky
163
Bubbly Creek and the Union Stock Yards
164
Cuchulainn Defeated?
166
Carnivore
170
6 THE $300 SIRLOIN (Cattle in the Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries)
175
Death of a Small-Town Butcher
175
Two Dodos: The Beef and Milk Industries Today
179
Culinary Interlude: The American Hamburger
182
A Dry Future
185
The Criollo Solution
191
Ethical Eating
197
Meden Agan: Japanese Wagyu Beef
201
Culinary Interlude: Wagyu Sashimi
204
Titus Salt, the Great Paternalist
204
EPILOGUE 209
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 213
ENDNOTES 215
INDEX 229