The roasted and the boiled: Food composition and heat treatment with special emphasis on pit-hearth cooking

被引:162
作者
Wandsnider, L
机构
[1] Department of Anthropology, University of Nebraska - Lincoln, Lincoln
关键词
D O I
10.1006/jaar.1997.0303
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
Heat treatment is one of the major ways humans change the composition and chemistry of food tissues, making them more digestible, less toxic, and more durable. This paper reviews salient features of food chemistry and food composition and how heat treatment, especially pit-hearth cooking, affects that composition. Ethnographic accounts of cooking indicate that traditional populations relied on pit-hearth cooking especially to alter the composition of foods high in either lipids or complex carbohydrates. Historically, pit hearths were also used to process large quantities of food. Various kinds of pit hearths figure prominently in the archaeological deposits of the American Great Plains and elsewhere. The implications of this recurring phenomenon are discussed in terms of the coevolution of diet, cooking systems, and the appearance of Neel's ''thrifty'' genotype. (C) 1997 Academic Press.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 48
页数:48
相关论文
共 170 条
[1]   PROTON MAGNETOMETER INVESTIGATIONS OF BURNED ROCK MIDDENS IN WEST-CENTRAL TEXAS - CLUES TO FORMATION PROCESSES [J].
ABBOTT, JT ;
FREDERICK, CD .
JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 1990, 17 (05) :535-545
[2]   DIETARY CARCINOGENS AND ANTICARCINOGENS - OXYGEN RADICALS AND DEGENERATIVE DISEASES [J].
AMES, BN .
SCIENCE, 1983, 221 (4617) :1256-1264
[3]  
Anderson B. A., 1989, AGR HDB, V8-17
[4]  
[Anonymous], TEBIWA
[5]  
[Anonymous], 1990, BURNT OFFERINGS INT
[6]  
[Anonymous], ROOTS TUB PLANT BAN
[7]  
Armstrong, 1993, ARCHAEOLOGY MONTANA, V34, P1
[8]  
Barco M. del, 1973, Historia natural y cronica de la antigua California (adiciones y correciones a la noticia de Miguel Venegas)
[9]  
BARROWS DP, 1900, ETHNO BOTANY COAHUIL
[10]  
BASEHART HW, 1974, APACHEAN INDIANS, V12