Cooked explores how cooking with fire, water, air, and earth connects us to our food and transforms ingredients. Michael Pollan apprentices under culinary masters, realizing cooking’s role in healthier living.
Main Lessons
- Cooking transforms raw ingredients into more digestible, nutritious forms.
- Cooking is a key human trait that has shaped our history and development.
- The fifth taste, umami, highlights our biological affinity for certain flavors.
- Processed foods dominate modern diets, often less healthy than natural foods.
- Cooking at home is inversely correlated with obesity levels.
- Fermentation releases nutrients and makes foods like bread nutritionally dense.
- Consuming foods further down the food chain is more energy-efficient.
- Industrial food processes often strip nutritional content from staples like bread.
- Fermented foods and beverages are central in many cultures, vital for nutrition.
- Modern sterilization and antibiotic overuse diminish beneficial microbes.
- Microbes in fermented foods aid digestion and bolster health.
- Humans and animals display a natural affinity for fermented drinks.
- Acquired tastes for strong fermented foods reflect cultural backgrounds.
- Cooking at home enhances our link to nature and relationships.