Teaching Taste

Teaching Taste by Karen Wistoft, published by Common Ground Research Networks in 2019, explores the significance of taste and eating within a civilization context. This 114-page book is written in English and delves into how meal communities shape opinions based on sensory experiences. It is structured into three parts: a historical analysis of Danish children’s cookbooks, a systematic exploration of taste education, and practical didactic strategies for teaching about taste.
Readers will find a comprehensive examination of the evolution of taste norms and the development of taste competence in children. The book identifies seven dimensions of taste, including pleasant, healthy, and moral taste, and provides didactic reflections along with concrete teaching examples. Aimed at educators and students in Home Economics and Food Education, Teaching Taste concludes with a ready-to-use teaching handout, making it a practical resource for those interested in the intersection of cooking, education, and social science.
Official synopsis Publisher
How we taste and eat is just as central in a civilization perspective as what we know and think. Meal communities are important contributors to the creation of a community of opinions based on sense, emotion and taste. This is the reason for writing Teaching Taste. The book consists of a historical, a systematic and a didactic part. The historical part analyses Danish children’s cookbooks. This part presents an answer to the question of ‘when’ when did the view of taste change from a norm that was met by following a recipe as accurately as possible to a sense and ability that everyone, including children, possesses and uses as a basis for cooking and enjoying food, and develops in order to become taste competent, confident and autonomous? The second, systematic, part presents a taste systematic basis for a didactics of taste. It includes an answer to the question of ‘what’ what is being taught when teaching revolves around taste? This part identifies seven dimensions of taste: pleasant taste, healthy taste, sensed taste, moral taste, religious taste, loving taste and trendy taste. These seven dimensions include didactic reflections and concrete examples. The third, didactic part presents the answer to the question of ‘how’ how can we teach about, through and for taste? The book is written for teachers, trainee teachers and students on courses in Home Economics, Food Knowledge and/or Food Education. The book includes several concrete teaching examples. It ends with a ready-to-use teaching handout.
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