Testicles

Balls in Cooking and Culture

by Blandine Vié, Food Journalist & Author
Contributor: Translated by Giles MacDonogh, Historian & Translator

Runner-up in the Society of Authors’ Scott-Moncrieff Prize for Giles MacDonogh’s translation from the French
Winner of the Prix Litteraire de la Commanderie des Gastronomes Ambassadeurs de Rungis
Shortlisted for Gourmand Magazine’s award for best translation

This is a translation of a book first published in France in 2005 with the addition of some material concerning how/where to buy the product in Britain.

It is part cookery book, part dictionary and part cultural study of testicles: human and animal. Their culinary use is the bedrock, although it would be impossible to ignore the wider implications of these anatomical jewels.

The book opens with a discussion of balls, of pairs, of virility and the general significance thereof; it then gives an account of culinary use of testicles, in history and across cultures. There follows a recipe section that ranges the continents in search of good dishes, from lamb’s fry with mushrooms, to balls with citrus fruit, to the criadillas beloved of bullfighters, and Potatoes Léontine, stuffed with cocks’ stones. To close, there is an extensive dictionary or glossary, drawing on many languages, which illustrates the linguistic richness that attaches to this anatomical part.

ISBN (Paperback) 9781903018835
Price (Paperback) £18.99/$40.00
Publication September 1, 2009
Pages 224
Size 234 x 156
Readership scholars, general readers

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LIBRARY COLLECTIONS

Complete Collection
Food Studies

Metadata

  • isbn
    9781903018835 (Paperback)
  • original publisher
    Prospect Books
  • original publisher place
    Totnes, (U.K.)
  • publisher
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • publisher place
    Sheffield (U.K.)