Wednesday, July 2, 2008

How to Cook Your Life (2007)


How to Cook Your Life (2007)
This documentary profiles Zen Master Edward Espe Brown and shows the art of Zen and cooking. Espe Brown first became interested in baking as an 11-year kid when he realized the startling difference between mass-produced supermarket bread and the fresh homemade stuff. When he asked his mother to teach him how to bake, however, she said "No, yeast makes me nervous."

Brown became the head cook at the Tassajara Mountain Centre in California when he was in his early 20s, and has been practicing the art of Zen Buddhism and cooking for more than 40 years. As a chef, he is typically short-tempered and exacting, but as a Buddhist master he is exactly the opposite. Director Dörrie (Men, Naked) sets her camera on Espe Brown as he travels from the Scheibbs Buddhist Centre in Austria to Tassajara, offering cooking seminars based upon the principles established 800 years ago by Master Eihei Dogen Zenji, the founder of the Japanese Soto-Zen school. Master Dogen wrote about the necessity of treating food as if it was as valuable as your eyesight. From washing rice, to preparing vegetables, every action could be a path to Zen. Or as the master said, "When you're washing the rice, wash the rice." A charming taskmaster who regularly punctures his holiness with moments of self-deprecation and humour, Espe Brown's observations on modern culture, cooking and human foibles are often as acerbic and hilarious as they are profound.

Bitsnoop

Rapidshare Links

4 comments:

  1. Flash Your BuddhaJuly 7, 2008 at 2:47 PM

    Many thanks for this wonderful web site, and to the many people kind enough to share these files so we all can enjoy them.

    That being said - save your bandwidth and time and skip this one. It's embarrassingly bad and, IMO, doesn't deserve to be listed along side of some the fantastic material shared here.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Really? I loved it! But then I'm big into Bread & Zen. ;)

    ReplyDelete
  3. This documentary was wonderfully filmed, and quite moving in parts. It touched my heart and I'm sure it'll inspire many more! Thanks so much for sharing!!! ^_^ The only thing that seemed a little out of place were the German snippets and the NorCal hippies. Had they left that out, and focused more on the life and work of the chef, I think it would have been perfect! That said, it was worth the download, and I enjoyed it fully!

    ReplyDelete
  4. or directly from www.btscene.com

    ReplyDelete