Fermentation as Metaphor: From the Author of the Bestselling The Art of Fermentation
Author Sandor Ellix Katz
- Publish Date: September 01, 2020
- Format: Hardcover
- Category: Cooking - Essays & Narratives
- Publisher: Chelsea Green
- Trim Size: 8 x 8
- Pages: 128
- US Price: $25.00
- CDN Price: $25.00
- ISBN: 978-1-64502-021-9
Reviews
"This book is a must read for anyone eager to transform our society for the better." ―Rob Greenfield, author of Food Freedom
"A strange, wondrous book that does exactly what the title promises. Katz, a high priest of fermentation, poetically draws together threads that link the world of the microbiome to the macro: art, religion, sex, emotion, memory, activism, growth, death, family and one’s own sense of self."―Helen Rosner, the New Yorker, via Instagram
"This book is amazing... I’m a huge fan of [Sandor’s] so I think I can say this straight up: I think it is the best thing [he’s] written.... A meditative, analytical call for change."―Chef Dan Barber
"An amazing, beautiful meditation . . . A meditation in the classical sense of thinking and fermenting through your emotions and feelings about the world.... I knew this was going to be different and I am so thrilled it is."―Chef David Zilber, coauthor of The Noma Guide to Fermentation
"A swift, spicy, and timely read."―Bill Addison, Los Angeles Times
"The book’s full-page images are mesmerizing."―Saveur
“Having written his comprehensive guide to all things fermented, The Art of Fermentation, Katz turns philosophical, trying to find deeper meanings in what the physical nature of fermentation means in the wider culture.”—Booklist
"This is not really a food book. It’s something much deeper. It’s a manifesto for living and thinking in a new way."―Jeff Gordinier, Food & Drinks Editor, Esquire
"Katz taught us how to make sauerkraut and kimchi. Fermentation as Metaphor helps us think about them." ―Boston Globe
"Fermentation as Metaphor is audacious, often surprising."―The Guardian
"A new book by Sandor is always an event for us fermentos!"―Michael Pollan, via Twitter