[MGSA-L] New memoir, deals with Cretan culture, Greek travel and food

Anagnostou, Georgios anagnostou.1 at osu.edu
Sat Feb 9 21:34:27 PST 2013


Sustained by Eating, Consumed by Eating Right
Reflections, Rhymes, Rants, and Recipes


[Sustained by Eating, Consumed by Eating Right]<http://www.sunypress.edu/images/Product/large/62593_cov.jpg>


Eric L. Ball - Author

SUNY Press



Summary


Returning to his hometown after a fifteen-year absence, a northern New Yorker confronts his unlikely Mediterranean past.

When Eric L. Ball returned to his hometown in northern New York after a fifteen-year absence that included time in Greece, he began building his version of the good life, largely revolving around growing, foraging, and cooking safe and wholesome foods. Yet, surrounded by family and old memories, he found himself grappling with the loss of his unlikely Mediterranean past and struggling to navigate the interplay of intellectual convictions and emotional needs as he strived to construct a fulfilling ethical life in the unsustainable modern world. In Sustained by Eating, Consumed by Eating Right, Ball shares his experiences and explores questions about food and drink, including the relationship between recipes and learning, the significance of the Mediterranean diet, how to cook authentic Greek foods in the United States, and how to obtain safe and healthy food in a toxic world. Ultimately, Ball considers broader questions about the evolving significance of family, the nature of freedom, the future of the environment, and thinking that one can change the world. The result is a bittersweet story that ponders questions about living a decent and fulfilling life when it comes to food and family.

“A fascinating account of a life devoted to deep appreciation of family, food, and cultural difference. So engaging and well-written you won’t want to put it down.” — Eugene W. Holland, The Ohio State University

“When Hippocrates asked Socrates what nourishes the soul, Socrates replied, ‘Knowledge.’ Plato, Socrates’ student, however, did not think such knowledge could be found in the kitchen. Eric Ball, a true philosopher and an honorary Greek, knows better. This delightful culinary odyssey explores the relationship between eating right and living right. Ball’s mental journey parallels a physical one as he travels from the grey skies of New York’s North County to the blue sea of Crete. Along the way, he forages for dandelion greens, hunts wild mushrooms, tenderizes spring lamb, and improvises mantinades over baklava and coffee. Practicing filoxenia, the ancient art of hospitality, Ball is the perfect host for thoughtful readers. Buy his book. St. Euphrosynos, patron and guardian of the Greek kitchen, will bless you.” — Anthony Di Renzo, author of Bitter Greens: Essays on Food, Politics, and Ethnicity from the Imperial Kitchen

Eric L. Ball is Associate Professor of Cultural Studies at Empire State College, State University of New York.


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Table of Contents

Prologue: Report to Euphrosynos

1. Salad Yard Rebellion

2. Garden Soil, Psychological Dirt

3. Hunting for Mushrooms and Total Freedom

4. The Other Side of the Family

5. Family Farmer Funeral

6. I Get By With a Little Help from My Parents

7. The Kid from the Country Goes Continental

8. Meet the Parents

9. Recipes

10. Cheesy Coincidence

11. Cretan Flesh, Cretan Spirit

12. Impromptu Gatherings

13. One Dream Ends, Another Begins

14. Kitchen Apprentice

15. Cooking Cretan in the United States

16. Kitchen Apprentice Redux

17. Love of Hosting Others

18. The Vine, More than One Way

19. The End of Nostalgia

20. Birthdays, Inc.

21. Food and Health

22. Thanks, but No Thanks

23. Personal, Political, Environmental

24. Hot Tempers

Epilogue: “Happy Name Day, Euphrosynos”

Acknowledgments
Endnotes

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