Why Some Like It Hot

Food, Genes, and Cultural Diversity

Gary Nabhan
Why Some Like It HotPublished: 06/07/2006
Publisher: Island Press
248 p. 5.5 x 8.25
Tables.
Index.
ISBN: 9781597260916
Paperback: $21.96
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Also Available: Hardcover



Biographies | Quotes | Table Of Contents

Read or listen to Gary Paul Nabhan's interview with Living on Earth.

"Mixing hard science with personal anecdotes, Nabhan convincingly argues that health comes from a genetically appropriate diet inextricably entwined with a healthy land and culture." -Publishers Weekly

Do your ears burn whenever you eat hot chile peppers? Does your face immediately flush when you drink alcohol? Does your stomach groan if you are exposed to raw milk or green fava beans? If so, you are probably among the one-third of the world's human population that is sensitive to certain foods due to your genes' interactions with them.

Formerly misunderstood as "genetic disorders," many of these sensitivities are now considered to be adaptations that our ancestors evolved in response to the dietary choices and diseases they faced over millennia in particular landscapes. They are liabilities only when we are "out of place," on globalized diets depleted of certain chemicals that triggered adaptive responses in our ancestors.

In Why Some Like It Hot, an award-winning natural historian takes us on a culinary odyssey to solve the puzzles posed by "the ghosts of evolution" hidden within every culture and its traditional cuisine. As we travel with Nabhan from Java and Bali to Crete and Sardinia, to Hawaii and Mexico, we learn how various ethnic cuisines formerly protected their traditional consumers from both infectious and nutrition-related diseases. We also bear witness to the tragic consequences of the loss of traditional foods, from adult-onset diabetes running rampant among 100 million indigenous peoples to the historic rise in heart disease among individuals of northern European descent.

In this, the most insightful and far-reaching book of his career, Nabhan offers us a view of genes, diets, ethnicity, and place that will forever change the way we understand human health and cultural diversity. This book marks the dawning of evolutionary gastronomy in a way that may save and enrich millions of lives.

"Gary Nabhan is one of the most important food writers we have in this country. In this eloquent and fascinating book, he shows us how our food and culture are so deeply rooted in our land and agriculture." -Alice Waters, owner of Chez Panisse

"Move over Dr. Atkins--here's someone who really understands what a body needs. In a homogenized world, it is delightful to be reminded that our cells and organs follow a much older and more complex set of instructions. Read it before you head out to the market for this week's shopping!" -Bill McKibben, author of Enough: Staying Human in an Engineered Age

"Gary Nabhan writes in novel and always interesting ways about food and culture and the genetic underpinnings that may account for differences in taste. His reflections on how different ways of eating affect the health of human societies provide substantial food for thought." -Andrew Weil, MD, author of The Healthy Kitchen and 8 Weeks to Optimum Health

"In this fascinating book, Gary Nabhan, a fine scientist and first-rate writer, reminds us that the relationships of our genes and food choices are not random, but rather brilliant demonstrations of biological and cultural evolution in action." -Paul R. Ehrlich, Bing Professor of Population Studies and Professor of Biological Sciences at Stanford University and author of The Dominant Animal: Human Evolution and the Environment.

 

Biographies

GARY PAUL NABHAN has been at the forefront of ethnobiology and nutritional ecology for three decades. He has been honored with a MacArthur "Genius"Fellowship and a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Society for Conservation Biology. His books and essays have won numerous awards, including the Burroughs Medal for nature writing, and have been translated into five languages. His original research that underlies this book has appeared in Nature, Science News, Slow, Journal of Clinical Nutrition, and Ecology of Food and Nutrition. A leader in the international Slow Food Movement, Nabhan grows native crops, Navajo-Churro sheep, and heirloom turkeys at his home in rural Arizona.

 

Quotes

"Move over Dr. Atkins--here's someone who really understands what a body needs. In a homogenized world, it is delightful to be reminded that our cells and organs follow a much older and more complex set of instructions. Read it before you head out to the market for this week's shopping!" --Bill McKibben
Mixing hard science with personal anecdotes, Nabhan convincingly argues that health comes from a genetically appropriate diet inextricably entwined with a healthy land and culture. --Publishers Weekly
"Gary Nabhan is one of the most important food writers we have in this country. In this eloquent and fascinating book, he shows us how our food and culture are so deeply rooted in our land and agriculture." --Alice Waters
 

Table Of Contents

Contents



Introduction



Chapter 1. Sailing Through Histories Encoded In Our Bodies

Chapter 2. Searching For The Ancestral Diet Did Mitochondrial Eve And
Java Man Feast On The Same Foods?

Chapter 3. Finding A Bean For Your Genes And A Buffer Against Malaria

Chapter 4. The Shaping And Shipping Away Of Mediterranean Cuisines

Chapter 5. Discovering Why Some Don’t Like It Hot Is It A
Matter Of Taste?

Chapter 6. Dealing With Migration Headaches Should We Change Places,
Diets, Or Genes?

Chapter 7. Rooting Out The Causes Of Disease Why Diabetes Is So Common
Among Desert-Dwellers

Chapter 8. Reconnecting The Health Of The People With The Health Of The
Land How Hawaiians Are Curing Themselves



Sources

Index

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