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Spice: The History of a Temptation Paperback – Illustrated, August 9, 2005

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 165 ratings

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In this brilliant, engrossing work, Jack Turner explores an era—from ancient times through the Renaissance—when what we now consider common condiments were valued in gold and blood.

Spices made sour medieval wines palatable, camouflaged the smell of corpses, and served as wedding night aphrodisiacs. Indispensible for cooking, medicine, worship, and the arts of love, they were thought to have magical properties and were so valuable that they were often kept under lock and key. For some, spices represented Paradise, for others, the road to perdition, but they were potent symbols of wealth and power, and the wish to possess them drove explorers to circumnavigate the globe—and even to savagery.

Following spices across continents and through literature and mythology,
Spice is a beguiling narrative about the surprisingly vast influence spices have had on human desire.

Includes eight pages of color photographs.

One of the Best Books of the Year:
Discover Magazine, The Christian Science Monitor, San Francisco Chronicle 
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Editorial Reviews

From The New Yorker

Turner arranges his history of spices thematically, in a series of lively essays on their role in different aspects of human endeavor, such as exploration (Columbus was looking for cinnamon when he discovered America) and love (a fifteenth-century tract prescribes an ointment of honey and ginger for "Increasing the Dimension of Small Members and Making Them Splendid"). Turner's sedulous research is manifest on every page, as he follows spices across cultures and eras, with allusions that range from St. Augustine to the Spice Girls. The book's unlikely hero is the peppercorn, which has linked East and West since the time of the Romans and which typifies the way that spices, although no longer the luxury items they once were, have become quietly ubiquitous. Cinnamon and nutmeg are rumored to be the key to "capitalism's most closely guarded secret," the formula for Coca-Cola.
Copyright © 2005
The New Yorker

Review

Spiceis an erudite and engaging account of how foodstuffs can change the flow of history.” – New York Times Book Review

"Jack Turner handles his subject with discernment and confidence, his style appropriately brisk and animated. . . . Impressive and reassuring is his combination of sympathetic understanding and tough-minded rationalism. Although he never condescends to the past, neither does he ever blur the line that separates fascinating lore from the objective truths of science." –
Los Angeles Times


“A nifty grab bag of a book. Entertaining and informative.” –
San Jose Mercury News


“A hugely enjoyable book, written with erudition, style and wit.”
New Scientist


Spice is deliciously rich in odors, savors, and stories. Jack Turner quickens history with almost bardic magic, pouring his personality into his narrative without sacrifice of scholarship.” –Felipe Fernandez-Armesto


"Based on research that is broad and deep, Turner succeeds remarkably well in capturing the evanescent attractions of spice." –
Orlando Sentinel


“Stimulating. . . .
Spice is stuffed with memorable details. . . .Turner writes with pace and intelligence.” –New Statesman


“Jack Turner possesses the two ingredients most essential for the great historian–scholarly detachment allied to a passionate obsession with his subject. He also writes uncommonly well. A splendid book.” –Philip Ziegler


“Turner’s banquet É is, as he admits, a ramble, but it is a fascinating one — urbane, anecdotal and easily digestible.” –
Scotsman


“Sumptuous...Turner quotes well and widely from literature, and has a flair for anecdote.”
The Guardian

“Turner brings serious scholarship to bear on his subject, quoting from all manner of obscure texts in ancient languages. But his gentle, ironic wit makes him a light-hearted companion. . . . The book shimmers with life, with real people springing from every page, some of them millennia old. . . . Turner’s enthusiasm carries it all forward with terrific momentum.” –
The Tablet

“A fascinating and scholarly book that can help you improve both your cooking and your sex life. An excellent piece of work.” –Peter Mayle

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Vintage (August 9, 2005)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 384 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0375707050
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0375707056
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 11.2 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.2 x 0.85 x 7.95 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 165 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
165 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2024
Columbus, when he set out on his journey west, was hoping to find, among other things, spices. At that time there were two routes by which spices could be brought from India and the Spice Islands to Europe: the older land route and the sea route around Africa pioneered by the Portuguese. In his Introduction to Spice: The History of a Temptation, Jack Turner writes

"The Asian empires of Portugal, England and the Netherlands might be said with only a little exaggeration to have sprouted from a quest for cinnamon, cloves, pepper, nutmeg and mace, and something similar was true of the Americas."

Spice is a book in a nonfiction genre I call "History of Substances", which I find absolutely fascinating when well done. My three favorite examples are A Perfect Red, by Amy Butler Greenfield, which is about the red dye cochineal, The True History of Chocolate, by Sophie D. Coe, and this work. Unsurprisingly two of the three concern stuff that people put in their mouths and swallow -- indeed, it could be said that all three do, since some folks put cochineal in food to make it brighter red. Indeed, cochineal is still used to color foods today.

Some of these precious spices came from very few places. For instances, cloves grow naturally on only a few small islands, the Maluku Islands. Those who knew the locations kept them secret. Black pepper comes from a vine native to Africa now cultivated on the Malabar Coast of India. Although Turner tells the interlinked stories of several different spices, the 800-pound gorilla of the five is black pepper. Even today it is the world's most traded spice.

Columbus, of course, hoped to find a new sea route to India, which could have been used to bring pepper to Europe. He failed for two reasons -- first, he had grossly underestimated the size of the Earth -- India was much, much farther to the West of Europe than Columbus supposed. Second, of course, was the bloody continents in the way. But Columbus also succeeded in an unexpected way. In the Americas grow a series of plants of the genus Capsicum, which are now called red peppers. They are easy to cultivate and share the hot taste of black pepper (although the chemical responsible is different).

This was a fun book. I learned a lot and had fun in the process.
Reviewed in the United States on July 2, 2013
This book starts with the exciting stories of Columbus and Vasco da Gama and their far-flung voyages to find the Indies. Of course, now we understand that Columbus gravely underestimated the westerly distance to Asia and instead bumped into the unknown (to Europeans) continent of America. Probably Columbus's main motivation was to discover the source of Eastern spices. Whoever controlled this trade could earn a huge fortune because Europeans paid astronomical values for them. Vast fortunes were to be made by anyone who could cut out the Arabs and Venetians - the classic middle-men of the spice trade to Europe.

The book starts from this point and proceeds to try and answer the question: why were spices so incredibly valuable to Europeans? Aside from their rarity, beautiful smells and taste, there was something other-worldly about them, something exotic and unobtainable. The book is a very comprehensive analysis of this question and does very well at answering it. Along the way, there is a potted guide to Middle Age Europe, eating habits and hygiene, sexual mores, feasts, trade, and lots more beside.

While I enjoyed the first half of the book immensely, I found it tough going by the middle. I loved the chapters on explorations and the fight for control of the spice islands themselves, but found myself wanting more. However, the book is well-written and well-researched, and is a joy to read.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2005
`Spice - The History of a Temptation' by historian Jack Turner is a work of cultural and culinary history which is `culinary' in much the same sense as the writings of M.F.K. Fisher are not about cooking, but about hunger or desire for food. History of food is not as useful to the average amateur cook as food science, but ignorance of food history can lead to misstatements about food as easily as ignorance of food science can lead to misstatements about how cooking works. One of my most fascinating observations in my reading of several books on Medieval and Renaissance cooking was the pervasive appearance of spices in recipes from the twelfth to the fifteenth centuries. And, this prevalence was not only in the Mediterranean, but also as far north as England and Scandinavia. Conventional wisdom regarding modern cuisine says that the cookie spices (cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, and ginger) are common in savory dishes of the southernmost reaches of Europe such as Sicily, Crete, and Greece plus the great Renaissance trading ports such as Venice. Yet, here we have French kings and nobles in Paris using as much of these spices as the merchant kings of Venice and Genoa.

Our author and scholar answers this question and a lot more in this delightfully written and thoroughly researched book. Mr. Turner's writing may not be up to the level of M.F.K. Fisher, but it is every bit as good as the quality of writing in the typical journalism in depth pieces which appear regularly in The New Yorker. We can thank the wisdom of the editors at Knopf for giving us an excellent work of popular history on a subject which turns up now and then on food shows such as `Molto Mario' and Alton Brown's `Good Eats'.

One piece of conventional wisdom that the author dispels is the claim that spices were used to mask the bad taste and odor of spoiling food. In fact, it is much more logical to believe that food preservation by drying and salting was far advanced by 1200 CE The problem was not with spoiled food as with dull, salty, dry food in the winter. And, this problem was primarily a problem of the rich. Before 1600, the diet of the wealthy landowner was based almost exclusively on meat, preferably game. Fruits were avoided except as themselves a type of spice, since they were thought to be the source of undesirable humors. Vegetables were avoided as being the food for the common folk. This happens to be an eminent confirmation of the description of modern European cuisine, especially Italian cuisine, which is heavily vegetarian, as the cuisine of poverty.

So, the oriental spices were commonly used widely throughout Europe to liven food. And, my reading of aforementioned Medieval and Renaissance cookbooks with recipes from England and France confirms that these spices were used in virtually every dish. While much of the use was done to enliven salty, dry meats, an equal attraction of these spices, including pepper and citrus fruits was simply because they were rare and expensive. This situation is almost identical to the great interest in tulips in the 17th and 18th centuries, when people would pay the price of a comfortable house simply to own a single unusual tulip bulb. And, spices were expensive because they were almost all available from a very few south Asian islands, appropriately named the `Spice Islands'. And, as we all know, this was one of the major forces behind the Age of Discovery which opened with the voyages of Italian Christopher Columbus to the West and Portuguese Vasco da Gama to the South and East. Turner covers the relative success of these two explorers in some detail, but this book is about the spices, not about the explorers.

While my interest is primarily culinary, the book devotes two sizable chapters to spices used as perfumes and medicines as, for example, aphrodisiacs, and spices used as aids to spiritual rituals, as spices in incense censors. Both of these chapters maintain the high level of scholarship and readability. The author also covers in detail the roles of the Portuguese, the Dutch, the French, and the English in the struggle to control the spice trade. That the Dutch won this explains the tact that much of Indonesia was once a Dutch colony.

So, if, as the author thoroughly explains, spices have been transplanted around the world and are now much cheaper than they once were, why are they not even more commonly used than they were 500 years ago? Two reasons for the drop in spice interest are evident in their original attraction. If spices are much less rare, they are less interesting as a medium of conspicuous consumption. This interest, along with the interests of merchants, moved on to gold, jewels, furs, tea, and coffee. Also, the rise of better methods of food preservation lowered the need for spices to perk up dull meats. This was joined by a rising interest in the nobility for vegetables in their diets, prompted by Renaissance cooking writers (see `The Art of Cooking' by Martino of Como). But, the most interesting reason for the disappearance of the infatuation in the rich with Asian spices was the arrival of foods from the New World, most especially coffee, chocolate, tobacco, and the capsicum peppers or chiles. I was immensely pleased by the author's statement that the strength of heat from these little New World lovelies simply blew Asian black, white, and green peppers clear out of the water. Their cultivation spread so fast that some Europeans even thought they originated in Asia, since they grew so well in any reasonably hospitable climate.

If you are keen on having a good understanding of culinary history, you must read this book. If you just happen to like history, you will enjoy every page and wish there were more. I look forward to scholar Turner's next book!
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Top reviews from other countries

Jose J_D
4.0 out of 5 stars Very well documented and interesting.
Reviewed in Spain on November 5, 2020
It is really a thoroughly documented book. We learn the history of spices and the significant influence they had on humanity. Author expertise and knowledge is impressive. Really worth reading, particularly the final chapters on the reason why spices have run out of fashion. On the negative side, sometimes it is a bit repetitive.
jose h meirelles
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 2, 2016
Excellent book...may be a bit heavy on the Bible quotes, but I strongly recommend it.
Nigar
3.0 out of 5 stars pas mal
Reviewed in France on February 6, 2015
historical facts, passion, the importance of spices; never knew that spices could cause even political conflicts. It's to read the book for a historian, a cook and an artist :)
One person found this helpful
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GORDANA PODVEZANEC
5.0 out of 5 stars I love the book
Reviewed in Germany on December 3, 2013
Arrived in time. In good condition. Bought it for a present. Thank you for perfect and timely delivery. ;) ..
Susan Jane
5.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyed this history of the spice trade
Reviewed in Australia on October 14, 2015
Found this book on the history of the spice trade riveting! It is not the type of book I would read in one or two sittings but rather a book to dip in and out of. I particularly liked the section on the importance of spices in the Age of Discovery. Enjoyed historical facts such as Roman soldiers seasoning their meals with Indian pepper at Hadrian's Wall as they kept an eye on the Caledonians!