Biblical Cooking Recipes: Traditional Bible Food, Feasts & History | Perfect for Christian Home Cooking, Bible Study Groups & Historical Food Enthusiasts
$50.05
$91
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Biblical Cooking Recipes: Traditional Bible Food, Feasts & History | Perfect for Christian Home Cooking, Bible Study Groups & Historical Food Enthusiasts
Biblical Cooking Recipes: Traditional Bible Food, Feasts & History | Perfect for Christian Home Cooking, Bible Study Groups & Historical Food Enthusiasts
Biblical Cooking Recipes: Traditional Bible Food, Feasts & History | Perfect for Christian Home Cooking, Bible Study Groups & Historical Food Enthusiasts
$50.05
$91
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Description
Since biblical times, the Judeo-Christian lifestyle has centered on meals. Extending hospitality to both friends and strangers was a divine command, and an invitation to dine was sacred. The Judeo-Christian bible is peppered with stories of meals; these range from simple meals put together quickly in order to feed a few unexpected guests, to elaborate feasts carefully prepared to please dozens of partygoers for many days. Cooking with the Bible looks at eighteen of these meals found in the Scriptures, providing full menus and recipes for re-creating some of the dishes enjoyed by the peoples of biblical times. While describing how ancient cooks prepared their foods, Cooking with the Bible also explains how contemporary cooks might use modern techniques and appliances to prepare each of the meals. In addition, the authors recount the lore of all the ingredients used in the book, detailing their origins, the history of their cultivation, their nutritional value, and their various uses. To set the scene for each meal, the book examines the scriptural text in detail, describes the backstory for each, and, in the process, traces Judeo-Christian history from the ancient city of Ur to the lands of Egypt to the holy city of Jerusalem. Along the way, the reader will learn about the history of the bible itself. In the Middle East, eating was not and is not for daily sustenance alone―it is a way of life, and Cooking with the Bible reflects that reality, providing multiple feasts for the body, mind, and spirit.Each chapter begins with the menu for a biblical feast. A brief essay describing the theological, historical, and cultural significance of the feast follows. Next come separate recipes for the dishes served in the meal, followed by more commentary on the dish itself, preparation methods used in biblical times, how the dish was served, and the lore surrounding individual ingredients and dishes. Recipes for a wide variety of breads, stews, rice and lentil dishes, lamb, goat, fish and venison meals, vegetable salads and cakes are detailed, all of them carefully tested. Make delicious dishes such as Rice of Beersheba, Rebekah's Tasty Lamb Stew, Date and Walnut Bread, Ful Madames and Scrambled Eggs, Pistachio Crusted Sole, Bamya, Goat's Milk and Pomegranate Syrup Torte, Haroset a la Greque, Pesach Black Bread, Watermelon Soup with Ginger and Mint, Date Manna Bread, Oven-baked Perch with Tahini, Braided Challah with Poppy Seeds and Lemon, and Friendship Cake.
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I am doing a summer program with a small youth class involving cooking and the Bible. This has (a) a Bible story, (b) some background and 'going deeper' material, (c) recipes of foods that might have been served at that Bible story event, and (d) a couple of related foods (recipes) that may or may not be based on ancient foods. We usually get the food to a certain point, like when it has to simmer or bake for a good while, and go over the Bible story then. Some recipes I have to get going in advance, like bread that requires rising time. The class has had 4-8 students, ranging in age from 4th grade to 12th grade, and it's worked pretty well. The "jobs" have a range of skills that I can match to the kids. If any ingredients are hard to find, there's usually a substitute or I look up a substitute. Sometimes the kids don't really want to try it (eggplant), but I ask them to try _some_ of the things. The adult class has begun to drop by and sample the food as well, since it's usually quite a bit more than the youths eat.

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