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Full Moon Feast

Food and the Hunger for Connection

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Full Moon Feast invites us to a table brimming with locally grown foods, radical wisdom, and communal nourishment.

In Full Moon Feast, accomplished chef and passionate food activist Jessica Prentice champions locally grown, humanely raised, nutrient-rich foods and traditional cooking methods. The book follows the thirteen lunar cycles of an agrarian year, from the midwinter Hunger Moon and the springtime sweetness of the Sap Moon to the bounty of the Moon When Salmon Return to Earth in autumn. Each chapter includes recipes that display the richly satisfying flavors of foods tied to the ancient rhythm of the seasons.

Prentice decries our modern food culture: megafarms and factories, the chemically processed ghosts of real foods in our diets, and the suffering—physical, emotional, cultural, communal, and spiritual—born of a disconnect from our food sources. She laments the system that is poisoning our bodies and our communities.

But Full Moon Feast is a celebration, not a dirge. Prentice has emerged from her own early struggles with food to offer health, nourishment, and fulfillment to her readers. She recounts her relationships with local farmers alongside ancient harvest legends and methods of food preparation from indigenous cultures around the world.

Combining the radical nutrition of Sally Fallon's Nourishing Traditions, keen agri-political acumen, and a spiritual sensibility that draws from indigenous as well as Western traditions, Full Moon Feast is a call to reconnect to our food, our land, and each other.

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    • Library Journal

      May 15, 2006
      Long on information, short on recipes, "food activist" Prentice's book takes us through her version of the 12 moons of the year. There's plenty of history and cultural information here, which makes the work interesting and enlightening; it would probably be useful to students of culinary arts. The recipes are varied and detailed, covering the mundane, like pot roast and potato-corn chowder, to a lesson in rendering lard and a recipe for "spring tonic nettle soup." Ingredients for some of the recipes might be difficult for those of us not in metropolitan areas to get our hands on; recipes are written in a rather conversational way. The tie-in between recipes and the calendar adds a nice touch that distinguishes this book from others, but there aren't really enough recipes to call this a cookbook. For large public and academic libraries.Elizabeth Rogers, CEF Lib. Syst., Plattsburgh, NY

      Copyright 2006 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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