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T**.
Just enough.
Fun fact, you can eat this book. But read it first, or buy one to read and one to eat. If you read it, it’s a really good book. I think it’s great. If you eat it, boil first for 10 minutes, shred, cool, mix with 1 Tsbp soy sauce (low sodium if you have a bad heart like me) and tuck in!!
C**E
It is great to learn about cooking and the Japanese culture all at the same time.
This is an amazing read. You learn how to cook the Japanese way and learn about their way of life all at the same time.
L**E
Interesting quick read little book ...
... that provides a charming and well-written glimpse inside a Japanese Buddhist temple and its cuisine. Recipes helpful, but one doesn't need to try them to enjoy the author's experience and pronounced enthusiasm.
J**M
Super Fab!
Have been enjoying the stories and recipes! Lil tricky finding some of the ingredients, but they’re around...
J**.
41 recipes
Charming in its explanations and stories if that's what you like. I don't; I want recipes. There are 41. I counted.
A**S
Can you stop at just enough?
This is, above all, a cookbook. Specifically, a cookbook of traditional Japanese vegan recipes. The recipes come from Zen monasteries. When the author of this cookbook joined the Aichi Nisodo convent, she was seeking solutions to her emotional problems, not cooking instruction. But cooking was the solution which the Universe sent to her. With great skill and insight, Greenwood recounts how learning to cook (and to eat) taught her the simple Zen skills that helped her to reclaim her life.Most of you have heard the slogan “Buddha is in the details”. In this case, the ultimate practice of Zen is in the subtleties. Learning to use less flavoring and learning to “listen” for the innate flavors in gently cooked food were skills Greenwood gradually developed along with a practical understanding of “just enough”, the moment when you don’t feel the need for anything more.Greenwood is a white American woman. She deals with the issue of “cultural appropriation”. She acknowledges that she has “the privilege of platform”. If a Japanese nun had written this book, it very likely would not have made it into print in the United States. It is fortunate that Greenwood had the means to get this book published, and also took her responsibility to accurately present the skills and philosophy she learned in Japan so seriously. Perhaps most important, she recounts in detail how she put these skills into practice when she returned to the United States.Buy it for the recipes. Read it for the life lessons.(InannaWorks.com received a free copy of this book.)
T**R
Engrossing and interesting story - and cookbook!
I'm a midlife, armchair traveler in the Midwest who has sat zazen for almost 15 years but has not gotten to Japan yet, is mostly plant based but still addicted to sushi, and loves a good story. I enjoyed Gesshin Greenwood's first book, but jumped to buy this one because I love international cookbooks and Japanese shojin ryori vegan temple cuisine (or at least I love the concept and what I've been able to try of it). I have thoroughly enjoyed it, to the point of reading it straight through like it was fiction or non-fiction, because the mix of stories about Greenwood's journey through food and family, and then Zen and ordination, with recipes and temple cuisine matters, was so enjoyable. The food also looks great and I can't wait to get into the cold noodles now that July heat is upon us.I would recommend this to people interested in Zen, practice in Japan and/or good food that doesn't happen to feature animal protein.
Q**A
This book falls short
Whether it be as a cook book, or as a take of a spiritual journey I feel this book is lacking.
F**D
Great book
Great book and so inciteful.
K**R
Zen
Good authentic vegan recipes and life wisdom in every dish. Description enough to justify not having photos. This book gives us a good insight on Buddhism and their rich tradition in communal meal
Trustpilot
2 months ago
3 weeks ago