Dining in the Garden of Eden

Dining in the Garden of Eden is an international vegetarian cookbook, with recipes offered in the spirit of Eden to bring peace and joy to you, your family and friends, and a delicious way to repair the world.

Dining in the Garden of Eden has its roots in Ann Arbor, Michigan, as does the author. Susan Kling Finston began cooking in earnest as a graduate student at the University of Michigan, where her fondest memories are of dinners and Sunday brunches spent with in the kitchen and around the table with friends. The kitchen became both a haven after disappointments and the best place to celebrate the successes of daily life. Some of the recipes in Dining in the Garden of Eden are updated versions of classic American foods that Susan has been cooking for over thirty years. While serving as a Foreign Service Officer for the Department of State in Washington DC and at Embassies overseas, she adapted recipes from different cultures and cuisines including the Middle East, Africa, and Asia.

Why is it called Dining in the Garden of Eden? According to tradition, at the time of Creation Adam and Eve were brought into life in a paradise known as the Garden of Eden. They were stewards of nature, caretakers of all the animals in this paradise. They ate from the fruits of plants and trees as vegetarians, and there was no fear in the world. It wasn't until later after the expulsion from Eden, that they began to eat meat, and animals began to live in fear of human domination. There is a corresponding theory that by returning to vegetarianism, even just part of the time, we may help to repair the world and to bring harmony to our environment.

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Dining in the Garden of Eden

Dining in the Garden of Eden is an international vegetarian cookbook, with recipes offered in the spirit of Eden to bring peace and joy to you, your family and friends, and a delicious way to repair the world.

Dining in the Garden of Eden has its roots in Ann Arbor, Michigan, as does the author. Susan Kling Finston began cooking in earnest as a graduate student at the University of Michigan, where her fondest memories are of dinners and Sunday brunches spent with in the kitchen and around the table with friends. The kitchen became both a haven after disappointments and the best place to celebrate the successes of daily life. Some of the recipes in Dining in the Garden of Eden are updated versions of classic American foods that Susan has been cooking for over thirty years. While serving as a Foreign Service Officer for the Department of State in Washington DC and at Embassies overseas, she adapted recipes from different cultures and cuisines including the Middle East, Africa, and Asia.

Why is it called Dining in the Garden of Eden? According to tradition, at the time of Creation Adam and Eve were brought into life in a paradise known as the Garden of Eden. They were stewards of nature, caretakers of all the animals in this paradise. They ate from the fruits of plants and trees as vegetarians, and there was no fear in the world. It wasn't until later after the expulsion from Eden, that they began to eat meat, and animals began to live in fear of human domination. There is a corresponding theory that by returning to vegetarianism, even just part of the time, we may help to repair the world and to bring harmony to our environment.

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Dining in the Garden of Eden

Dining in the Garden of Eden

by Susan Kling Finston
Dining in the Garden of Eden

Dining in the Garden of Eden

by Susan Kling Finston

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$4.95 

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Overview

Dining in the Garden of Eden is an international vegetarian cookbook, with recipes offered in the spirit of Eden to bring peace and joy to you, your family and friends, and a delicious way to repair the world.

Dining in the Garden of Eden has its roots in Ann Arbor, Michigan, as does the author. Susan Kling Finston began cooking in earnest as a graduate student at the University of Michigan, where her fondest memories are of dinners and Sunday brunches spent with in the kitchen and around the table with friends. The kitchen became both a haven after disappointments and the best place to celebrate the successes of daily life. Some of the recipes in Dining in the Garden of Eden are updated versions of classic American foods that Susan has been cooking for over thirty years. While serving as a Foreign Service Officer for the Department of State in Washington DC and at Embassies overseas, she adapted recipes from different cultures and cuisines including the Middle East, Africa, and Asia.

Why is it called Dining in the Garden of Eden? According to tradition, at the time of Creation Adam and Eve were brought into life in a paradise known as the Garden of Eden. They were stewards of nature, caretakers of all the animals in this paradise. They ate from the fruits of plants and trees as vegetarians, and there was no fear in the world. It wasn't until later after the expulsion from Eden, that they began to eat meat, and animals began to live in fear of human domination. There is a corresponding theory that by returning to vegetarianism, even just part of the time, we may help to repair the world and to bring harmony to our environment.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940045370783
Publisher: Susan Kling Finston
Publication date: 11/19/2013
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 276 KB

About the Author

Dining in the Garden of Eden has its roots in Ann Arbor, Michigan, as does the author. Susan Kling Finston began cooking in earnest as a graduate student at the University of Michigan, where her fondest memories are of dinners and Sunday brunches spent with in the kitchen and around the table with friends. The kitchen became both a haven after disappointments and the best place to celebrate the successes of daily life. Some of the recipes in Dining in the Garden of Eden are updated versions of classic American foods that Susan has been cooking for over thirty years. After graduation, Susan left the warmth and comfort of Ann Arbor to explore the wider world. While serving as a Foreign Service Officer for the Department of State in Washington DC and at Embassies overseas, she adapted recipes from friends and colleagues encountered in different cultures in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. She also worked in the international division of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA). Since 2005 she has been working as an independent consultant for bio-pharmaceutical and other innovative companies, as well as universities and NGOs on a variety of trade policy and doing business issues relating to the enabling environment for assimilation of new technologies for creation of social and economic benefit.

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