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Eating Wild Japan: Tracking the Culture of Foraged Foods, with a Guide to Plants and Recipes Kindle Edition
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Winifred Bird
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Print length264 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherStone Bridge Press
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Publication dateMarch 9, 2021
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File size4303 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Winifred Bird's insightful essays and illustrated guide to Japan’s wild edible plants — the first of its kind in English — is next-level reading for Japanese food lovers. "
—Travel and Leisure
"Eating Wild Japan satiates the mind, providing a detailed exploration of Japan’s intricate, ever important food culture."
—The Japan Times
"Beautifully written, light, intimate and — at times — funny."
—The Society of Environmental Journalists
"Bird is outstanding in illuminating the way food and subjugation have historically been tied together, causing the disappearance of foraging practices.”
—The Asian Review of Books
"Not only a superbly-written and engaging read but plays an important role in spreading and preserving the knowledge of the Japanese wilderness."
—Metropolis Magazine
"This investigative and engaging book educates, enthralls and entices the reader to explore what Japan’s rich woodlands have to offer."
—Tokyo Weekender
“Winifred Bird has done all the hard work of researching, translating and learning from Japanese experts to compile the first English language book on this topic… Bird writes with clear passion for plants and people and so these important environmental and social issues are lightened with optimism… There is inspiration to be found here, whether you travel to Japan or not, to reconnect with the plants and food of your local area.”
—Japan Society UK Review
"Eating Wild Japan isn’t just a book dedicated to lesser-known produce hidden in Japan’s countryside; it’s an exhibit on sustainable living, remembering the food of our past, and eating what is in abundance."
—AJET Connect Magazine
"A charming escape, as well as a practical guide for those who choose to explore on their own."
—Story Circle Network
"Winifred Bird has penned a delightful homage to those who practice the art of bringing wild foods deliciously to table. Eating Wild Japan triggered fond memories of outings with my mother-in-law in Shikoku unearthing edible shoots and roots that her kitchen wisdom later turned into a feast."
—Elizabeth Andoh, author of Washoku and Kansha
"Inspired by an engaging countrywoman neighbor and nearly a decade living in rural Japan, Winifred Bird sought out experts throughout the country to write this book on wild plants and seaweeds. The characters are just as fascinating as the plants and the recipes for how to prepare them found throughout the book. And although not intended as an official field guide, the descriptions and background included for the entries in the Guide to Plants are extremely thorough and informative. Eating Wild Japan fills a hole that much needed filling in the landscape of writing on Japanese food."
—Nancy Singleton Hachisu, author of Japan: The Cookbook
"A beautiful and thoughtful exploration of the deep relationship--past and present--between people and wild plants in one of the world's richest foraging regions. And filled with recipes that I am eager to try, for many of these plants, or their close relatives, are found in North America. Winifred Bird has captured the deeper meaning of wild edibles, both to the people who eat them, and to the wild landscapes these people cherish."
—Samuel Thayer, author of Incredible Wild Edibles and The Forager's Harvest
"Winifred Bird has created a fascinating, thought-provoking, and delightful book. A must read for anyone interested in the role of wild edibles in Japanese culture and cuisine. A scrumptious story that made me want to eat and travel with Bird as my companion."
—Gina Rae La Cerva, author of Feasting Wild: In Search of the Last Untamed Food
“Finally, someone has written a book on Sansai that can begin to answer some of my questions about different plants, how they’re consumed, and most delicious of all: a glimpse into the role they play in Japanese culture. Eating Wild Japan is a savory collection of essays into the world of Sansai, a sort of catch-all term for many traditional wild plants eaten in Japan. Lovers of foraging will find new things in its pages absent from North American and Euro-centric wild food literature.”
—Chef Alan Bergo, author of foragerchef.com and The Forager Chef's Book of Flora
“For actual and armchair travelers and for everyone who loves Japan—its people, culture, and authentic foodways—Winifred Bird's Eating Wild Japan is a charming and indispensable companion. There are many tasty recipes (most easily reproducible at home) and a fantastic guide to plants. But this is far more than a manual for cooking with gathered greens or seaweed. Bird's essays introduce us to the folks who protect and cultivate forests, fields, and shores as she walks us along the back roads and byways of quiet villages and outlying islands, gathering ancient, edible knowledge. Soon we're drinking green tea and snacking on dried persimmons, fiddlehead ferns, and local sansai tempura, made from weeds and wild mountain vegetables. Illustrated with simple line drawings by Paul Poynter, Eating Wild Japan will make you reconsider the essential connections between wildlands, conservation, and food.”
—Caroline Fraser, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning biography, Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder
“At once fascinating and practical, Winifred Bird's roving inquiry offers more than a curated guide to Japan's wild edible plants and their preparation. It's a blueprint for making our own journeys into distant foodways. The result is a deeper understanding of people and place--and a basket full of extraordinary ingredients to brighten the table."
—Langdon Cook, author of Upstream: Searching for Wild Salmon, from River to Table
"Eating Wild Japan is a thoughtful English-language introduction to the foraged flavors of Japan. This book transports you to a world guided by the nuances of the season, and after reading it you will never look at the landscape in Japan quite the same way again."
—Alexis Agliano Sanborn, Director, Nourishing Japan & Co-Host, Seasons by Seasons Podcast
“This is a terrific book, and the only one of its kind. A fascinating and knowledgeable history, many insightful stories about the roles these plants play in people’s lives, a useful wild plant guide, and delicious recipes. You’ll want to try them all!”
—Azby Brown, author of Just Enough: Lessons in living green from traditional Japan
“I long to encounter every enchanting forest, passionate preservationist, and bracingly bitter taste Winifred Bird vividly describes. I’m grateful to learn along with her about Japan’s traditional and contemporary wild food cultures that nourish connection to the nonhuman world—to incremental changes in season and climate—and to history. Her simple recipes offer insight into a delightful way of eating that you need not travel to Japan to try.”
—Hannah Kirshner, author of Water, Wood, and Wild Things
"This is a marvelous book, a book to savor while dreaming about wild plants and tempting dishes. Winifred Bird’s gentle walks through Japanese foraging landscapes are infused with tantalizing stories and flavors. Instructive and wise, Eating Wild tells of foraging to inspire closer attention to the weedy, wild world around us."
—Anna Tsing, co-editor of Feral Atlas: The More-than-Human Anthropocene (feralatlas.org)
--This text refers to the paperback edition.About the Author
Winifred Bird is a writer, translator, lifelong cook, and lover of plants both wild and domesticated. For almost a decade she lived in rural Japan, where she worked as an environmental journalist, grew organic rice and vegetables, and ate as many foraged foods as possible. She currently lives with her family in northern Illinois.
Paul Poynter (illustrations) is an artist, tree climber, and woodsman living in Matsumoto, Japan.
--This text refers to the paperback edition.Product details
- ASIN : B085BSGXV2
- Publisher : Stone Bridge Press (March 9, 2021)
- Publication date : March 9, 2021
- Language : English
- File size : 4303 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Not Enabled
- Print length : 264 pages
- Lending : Not Enabled
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Best Sellers Rank:
#819,103 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #160 in Japanese Travel
- #207 in Japanese Cooking
- #487 in Japanese Cooking, Food & Wine
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
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The essays begin the book. Her essays feature weeds, horse chestnuts, fiddle leaf ferns, bamboo and seaweed. Her research introduces her to cooks, fisherman and farmers who
provide her with local legends as well as recipes. Bird describes how foraging in the woods for edible plants was once considered a sign of poverty. She is treated to a 12 course dinner, with all but one course featuring bamboo cooked in different styles. She compares wild captured seaweed to farmed seaweed and prefers the taste and texture of the former. She hears that the god of the mountains lives in horse chestnut trees. The plant guide is next. Beautifully illustrated in pen and ink by Paul Poynter, the guide lists the scientific name of each plant, its toxicity, how to prepare it and suggests several recipes. The recipes are the final section. Preceded by a definition of the Japanese terms, the recipes sound interesting and worth trying. The weakness here is that the ingredients are not readily available in American supermarkets. However, the strength of Eating Wild Japan is in the essays. 4 stars.
Thank you to NetGalley, Stone Bridge Press and Winifred Bird for this ARC.
Foraged foods have always been an interest to me. I can remember being little and going mushroom hunting with my uncle and dad. And later as an adult, I've attended foraging classes at a nearby homestead. Learning about other foragers in other areas is right up my alley as a result. And what better place than Japan, where ingredients are treated with respect in most cooking.
Bird, who lives in Japan, undertakes several trips to see the various foraging areas and specialties of Japan. This can range from ferns in the mountainside, to seaweed from the coast, with plenty of other edibles along the way. She also describes the history behind the foraged item (due to famine, scarcity, etc.) and how it has evolved in the culture.
Overall, it was a very easy reading book. Not too technical when describing the foods, but still with enough information to get an overall sense of what was being eaten and how it persisted in diets. The book also had a guide at the end (and recipes throughout) to give it a holistic approach.
Very interesting, and I can only hope if I ever get to travel to Japan, I will be able to try some of these foraged foods.
Review by M. Reynard 2021
The book is divided into three parts: a collection of essays; an illustrated guide to plants and Japanese wild foods; and recipes. All three parts emphasize the culinary, cultural, and historical roles of foraged wild foods in Japan. Bird includes delightfully simple line drawings of plants and tools used for foraging in Japan.
The Japanese word sansai (山菜) means mountain vegetables, and traditionally refers to vegetables that grow naturally and are foraged in the wild rather than cultivated. Bird writes extensively on sansai, including its ecological impact, health benefits, and expression of hospitality. She dives into the history of sansai and the impact that agriculture has had on the tradition.
Japanese historically forage for bamboo shoots, chestnuts and other plants; but foraging is not limited to Japan’s mountainsides. Bird tells of the “sea folk” (primarily women) who dive deep to gather seaweed, oysters and other ocean delicacies.
She reminds the reader throughout that foraging is part of many cultures. Although the onset of an agricultural society has diminished its importance, in some cultures it has remained as a task essential for survival (most notably during times of famine) or as the source of delicacies—or both. She contemplates the dichotomy of this “paradoxical judgement,” concluding that “agriculture makes wild foods abnormal, and there are always two sides to abnormality: despicable aberrance and sought-after rarity.”
Eating Wild Japan is a rare peek at a small but engaging piece of life on Earth. Perhaps Winifred Bird, with this book, can lead an effort to carry on the tradition of preparing foraged foods as one more way to shrink our individual ecological footsteps. If nothing else, she teaches us old ideas that could become new ideas and another way to appreciate what we have and the joy of living in a smaller space. I was reminded of myself as a child, following my great-grandmother into the woods in search of sassafras leaves to be ground with a pestle into filé, an essential herb for gumbo and other dishes common to our region and heritage.
Eating Wild Japan is a charming escape, as well as a practical guide for those who choose to explore on their own.
Story Circle Book Reviews thanks Regina Allen for this review.
With the availability of food TV, Instagram, and apps (all of which I use and enjoy), I do still enjoy real books. This is one I would recommend as a detailed reference to Japanese regions, edible plants and how to cook with them. I especially enjoyed the extensive descriptions of plants, even though most aren't available in my region. Thank goodness for online suppliers, so I can try some of the great recipes.
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