Jason C. Anthony is the author of Hoosh: Roast Penguin, Scurvy Day, and Other Stories of Antarctic Cuisine, which is now available.
Writing
Hoosh, my first book, was a new way
to articulate my affection for Antarctica, an otherworldly place I called home
for several years. Like so many travelers to the polar regions, I found that the
experience of that strange, vast icescape, under an often ethereal light and marked
by traces of an astonishing history, changed me forever. Between 1994 and 2004,
I returned and returned to Antarctica to enjoy the hell out of a job that took
me by plane to the South Pole, across McMurdo Sound in an icebreaker, or into
small tent camps at –35°F in the middle of the polar ice cap. I’ve written
about Antarctica for years, publishing nearly two dozen essays and articles
about the place (many available to read at Albedo Images).
Writing
Hoosh has been a real joy because it
allowed me to step away from my usual descriptions of landscape and experience
and instead focus on the history of Antarctic exploration and settlement. More
specifically, it allowed me to have some fun exploring the idea of food as a
window onto Antarctic history and culture. Writing about Antarctic cuisine is an
ideal way to measure the tenous relationship Antarcticans have had with their
lifeless home over the last century. It provided great opportunities to sketch many
of the great characters in Antarctic history – the well-known expedition
leaders, their little-known cooks, and other expedition members – and to
highlight the various writers – known and unknown, historical and contemporary
– who have told such great stories about dining at the bottom of the Earth.
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