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Comment: All profits go to Housing Works -- NYC's largest HIV/AIDS organization. Minimal wear to cover. Pages clean and binding tight. Small white sticker on spine. Hardcover.
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Yucatán: Recipes from a Culinary Expedition (William and Bettye Nowlin Series in Art, History, and Cultur) Hardcover – March 30, 2014

4.9 out of 5 stars 86 customer reviews

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

*Starred Review* This is not just a cookbook; it’s also a labor of love that well documents places, people, and, yes, food on Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula. In fact, one south-of-the-border culinary maven who has blessed Sterling’s endeavor (through TV appearances) is Rick Bayless. Is there really a difference between Yucatan menus and dishes from other Mexican states? Sterling points to the extensive use of recados (curries) and alcaparrados (capers, raisins, olives, and almonds) as well as influences from Spain and Portugal, France and Holland, and Lebanon, Cuba, and Africa to create such dishes as sopa de lima and achiote. The more than 275 recipes are gathered in groupings based on the heartland, the coast, the cities, and the villages, populated, too, with excellent photographs of many Yucatan natives (meet 73-year-old Hernán Perrera Novelo, who still farms his plot). Ingredients are featured with a description and their culinary uses, including both familiar and indigenous, such as avocado, cashew apples, oscillated turkey, and lobster, to mention a handful. It will be difficult not to turn on all the burners and oven to try pilikanes, turkey in maize, fish-head soup, pan dulce, or crispy fried pork skin. --Barbara Jacobs

Review

"Lavishly produced, with hundreds of photographs, Yucatan is part travelogue, part history, part encyclopedia, written in an unexpectedly casual, engaging style."

(William Grimes The New York Times Book Review 2014-06-01)

"Endorsements from Mexican culinary expert Diana Kennedy come few and far between, so Sterling, the founder of Los Dos Cooking School, must know what he’s doing. At 500-plus pages and coffee-table size, the book is sure to be a long-term, definitive reference guide. " (Bonnie S. Benwick Washington Post 2014-07-25)

"Beyond Sterling's encyclopedic and meticulously-researched knowledge of Yucatecan food, his love for and connection to the region and its fare are evident on every page; it is rare to find such humble passion and vigor in a volume that is so comprehensive and informational." (Oliver Erteman Saveur)

"David Sterling’s Yucatán would be a remarkable book in any year and sets a high bar for future aspirants to The Art of Eating Prize. It’s an impressively synoptic portrait of a little-known region and its rich food culture, the product of years of immersive experience and study, whose genial prose, copious photographs, and approachable recipes work together beautifully to communicate the vitality of Yucatecan cooking."

(Harold McGee Art of Eating Prize 2015-03-02)

"Starting the book knowing nothing about the Yucatan, except that it looks like a nice place to go on vacation, I quickly realized I was in the hands of an expert. I was easily drawn into the narrative of this ideologically isolated peninsula, even when that narrative had nothing whatsoever to do with food. History, geography, biology – you’ll get a little bit of everything with this book. Of course, eventually it all ties back to food and cooking, and I don’t know if there was a single recipe in this book that I wasn’t interested in trying." (Katie at the Kitchen Door 2014-05-14)

"Sterling does a great job as a culinary travel guide, offering the inside scoop on the people, places, and ingredients of one of the world’s greatest regional cuisines." (Dave DeWitt Albuquerque's Local IQ 2014-05-01)

"David Sterling must have taken great joy in putting this book together, for it reflects tireless research that was surely driven by an intense desire to learn as much as possible about the cuisine and the culinary traditions of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula." (Karen Graber Mexconnect 2014-06-01)

"Whether you want to learn how to cook this cuisine or just want to take a trip (without the airplane ride) this book is worth the effort to consume." (Portland Book Review 2014-06-24)

"David Sterling has possibly penned the reader of the year with his six-and-a-half pound, 576-page Yucatán: Recipes from a Culinary Expedition, surely the most authoritative tome that land’s cuisine has ever seen."

(Star News Online 2014-07-18)

"In the lavishly illustrated book, Sterling, who runs a cooking school in Mexico, pulls together the various ethnic and cultural strands that make up Yucatecan cooking―influences from France, Spain and Portugal, Lebanon and elsewhere in the Middle East, Africa and the Caribbean." (Russ Parsons The Los Angeles Times 2015-04-24)
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Product Details

  • Series: William and Bettye Nowlin Series in Art, History, and Cultur
  • Hardcover: 576 pages
  • Publisher: University of Texas Press (March 30, 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0292735812
  • ISBN-13: 978-0292735811
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 1.8 x 11 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (86 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #291,969 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover
Very few people know my Mexico, the Yucatan.This books explains how I feel about the Yucatan with a grace and elegance I don't have.The book made us cry. My husband is from Merida.He taught me to love habanero peppers and cochinita. Many of the towns and restaurants are places we went on dates.The memories came rushing back as we flipped through the pages. For a brief time we were there again.

I lived in Merida for about 8 years before we moved to the States.

The cuisine is very different from the rest of Mexico. The book has recipes I never dreamed I would find in a book. Marquesitas and Pastel de Queso de Bola.

It is getting easier to find ingredients, but it is still hard. The book has great suggestions for adapting recipes and finding stores that sell the ingredients. I dream of Seville oranges and all the food I can make!

I have had some luck finding ingredients at Oriental stores. They have a similar tropical climate and have some of same fruits and spices. The year we discovered they sold pitaya my husband gave me some for Christmas! It is my favorite fruit

The book has authentic, yet practical recipes, beautiful pictures and cherished memories for me!

This book is something I have wished for for almost 15 years!
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
This is an amazing book, the kind of document every cuisine should have, mixing history and tradition with specific recipes from particular people. I especially love that the front section on vegetables, spice and other ingredients gives the names of things in Spanish, Mayan and Latin--the kind of detail that is often missing even from cookbooks that aspire to dig down to the roots of a cuisine.

I admit I had the tiniest misgiving when I read in the intro that Sterling has, in some recipes, substituted more-available ingredients for traditional ones--bacon, for instance, to give the flavor of smoke that would ordinarily come from wood fires. I generally dislike such adaptations--I want to know the "true" recipe, as it's traditionally made, and I can figure out how to adapt it if necessary.

BUT in every case of this that I have so far noticed in the book, Sterling is careful to explain what the substitution is and why it's made. He's not dumbing down the recipes, as far as I can tell. The result is a uniquely useful book--both an anthropological document, like Diana Kennedy's Oaxaca al Gusto, and a surprisingly practical kitchen companion. (Er, if you can lift it. It's huge! I think what I might do is take photos of particular recipes on my iPad and take that into the kitchen.)
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Format: Hardcover
This AMAZING book is many books in one. First it is like a first class trip to Yucatan. When you open it you are transported to this magical land of sun, jungle, sea and all its Maya history. So if you can't visit Yucatan, this is the book you want. It is a "coffee table book," a cookbook, a history book, a travel guide, a photography book, an encyclopedia, a dictionary. An inspiration. As a cookbook it is a definitive work. This. Is. It. David Sterling has made a gift to the people of Yucatan and to the world, researching and making available this unique fusion cuisine for everyone to prepare and enjoy. The photographs and stories, the explanations and techniques, all accessible to the home cook. And you definitely want to order it from Amazon because it is a hefty tome! I especially love the unique Yucatecan salsas and anything made with sour orange.
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Format: Hardcover
I can't come up with enough superlatives...so I'll just say this book is simply stunning! I started by randomly leafing through and looking at the photographs. Both the content and the layout are compelling. Then, I started reading, and the author had me at his mention of Diana Kennedy, who I have been following since her first book, and the experience kept getting better! I know the Yucatan peninsula relatively well, and loved the descriptions and photos of places and foods that I am familiar with; and was motivated to try to experience those that were unfamiliar. The holistic approach of culture, history, and food makes for an intriguingly complex reading experience, and a greater understanding of the Yucatan than would happen with an individualized approach. The section describing commonly used fruits, vegetables, herbs, and spices is an invaluable resource. The recipes are clear...I tried some unfamiliar ones...but this is a book that should not be consigned solely to the kitchen!
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
What a book! I have no enjoyed a book so fully in a long time. Sterling was able to go well beyond an excellent and exhaustive cook book providing a comprehensive, extremely acute detailed account of the Yucatan Peninsula. A historical and anthropological approach providing very useful, original information and details about its people and its culture. Sterling has a unique ability to approach his subject without an ounce of paternalism, condescendence. A lesson in how to approach a different culture. His sensibility and ability to grasp the essence of being Yucateco makes the book a required source of reference for anyone interested in Yucatan. The City of Merida should give the key of the city to David Sterling for his book, already a classic.
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