Things Worth Preserving


Book Description

Family, liberty, love, and country are things worth preserving. They are the themes of this epic tale of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, one of the most dramatic episodes of the Cold War. By 1956, the people of Hungary are fed up with living under Communist rule. Their anger erupts in a storm of revolution felt across the world. Among the millions swept up in the storm are...Pal Varga, a soap factory worker who warned his family in vain about it...Rudolf Varga and Julia Kun, young lovers whose dreams of marriage are threatened by the revolution..Boris and Theresa Varga, a Communist married couple more loyal to their country than to their political party...Kathryn Nerdin, an American teenager seeking a new love in face of the death of her boyfriend. From the embattled streets of Budapest, Hungary, to the peaceful neighborhoods of Provo, Utah, Things Worth Saving presents a tale in the tradition of Dr. Zhivago and A Farewell to Arms.




Saving Stuff


Book Description




Futures Worth Preserving


Book Description

Cultures as well as individuals continually balance the demands of nostalgia and sustainability as they construct historical narratives of ›futures worth preserving‹. The aim of this volume is to explore those narratives and the underlying assumptions which inform them. Drawing on a range of disciplines from the humanities and social sciences, the chapters investigate cultural assumptions about which aspects of the past deserve to be remembered and which aspects of the present should be sustained for the future. In the process, they reveal how contemporary definitions of sustainability are informed by a nostalgic yearning for the past, and how nostalgia is motivated by a reciprocal longing to sustain the past for the future.




The Art of Preserving


Book Description

A beautifully illustrated, comprehensive guide to turning your favorite fruits and vegetables into jams, chutneys, salsas, sauces and more. With Williams Sonoma’s The Art of Preserving, you can savor your favorite seasonal produce all year-round. Packed with creative and classic recipes for preserves—from Apricot Jam to Pickled Fennel with Orange Zest, Preserved Lemons, and many more—this volume provides inspiration for making the most of your farmers’ market or home garden harvest. Additional recipes showcase the many ways that preserved foods can be used in finished dishes, from savory starters and main courses to sweet desserts. Lush photography celebrates the natural beauty of seasonal produce, while step-by-step instruction are enhanced by helpful tips from preserving professionals. With more than 130 recipes, this comprehensive cookbook provides everything you need to master the art of preserving in your own kitchen.




Preserving Italy


Book Description

Capture the flavors of Italy with over 150 recipes for conserves, pickles, sauces, liqueurs, and more in this “engagingly informative” guide (Elizabeth Minchilli, author of Eating Rome). The notion of preserving shouldn’t be limited to American jams and jellies, and in this book, Domenica Marchetti puts the focus on the ever-alluring flavors and ingredients of Italy. There, abundant produce and other Mediterranean ingredients lend themselves particularly well to canning, bottling, and other preserving methods. Think of marinated artichokes in olive oil, classic giardiniera, or, of course, the late-summer tradition of putting up tomato sauce. But in this book we get so much more, from Marchetti’s travels across the regions of Italy to the recipes handed down through her family: sweet and sour peppers, Marsala-spiked apricot jam, lemon-infused olive oil, and her grandmother’s amarene, sour cherries preserved in alcohol. Beyond canning and pickling, the book also includes recipes for making cheese, curing meats, infusing liqueurs, and even a few confections, plus recipes for finished dishes so you can savor each treasured jar all year long. “Pack artichokes, peppers and mushrooms in oil. Make deliciously spicy pickles from melon. Even limoncello, mostarda and confections like torrone can come straight from your kitchen... The techniques may have been passed down by generations of nonnas, but they knew what they were doing.”—Florence Fabricant, The New York Times “Marchetti elevates preserved food from the role of condiment to center stage.”—Publishers Weekly










Preserving Everything


Book Description

The ultimate guide to putting up food. How many ways can you preserve a strawberry? You can freeze it, dry it, pickle it, or can it. Milk gets cultured, or fermented, and is preserved as cheese or yogurt. Fish can be smoked, salted, dehydrated, and preserved in oil. Pork becomes jerky. Cucumbers become pickles. There is no end to the magic of food preservation, and in Preserving Everything, Leda Meredith leads readers—both newbies and old hands—in every sort of preservation technique imaginable.







Politics and Preservation


Book Description

First Published in 1997. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.