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How to Cook Your Life by Doris D?rrie, Doris Doerrie
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DVD detailsActor: Edward Espe Brown Director: Doris D?rrie, Doris Doerrie Brand: Lions Gate Cinematographer: Doris D?rrie Cinematographer: Jorg Jeshel Composer: b:sides music production Composer: Florian Riedl Composer: Martin Kolb Editor: Suzi Giebler Editor: Suzi Geibler DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language) Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, NTSC, Widescreen Picture Format: 1.78:1 Running Time: 93 minutes DVD Release Date: 2008-05-06 Audience Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Studio: Lions Gate
DVD Reviews of How to Cook Your LifeDVD Review: taxes Summary: 4 StarsThe product arrived safetly and in good conditions, the only problem was that I have to pay 50US$ on taxes, so it was really expensive. Is there other way in reducing taxes?
DVD Review: Very enjoyable and thought provoking Summary: 4 StarsThis was quite an insightful movie. I missed it at the theater so was glad to pick it up in DVD.
DVD Review: Zen Is Cooking With Ed Brown Summary: 5 StarsIntriguing, amusing and full of Zen moments. This documentary has profound depth- on the surface the film appears to be about cooking but the koan of the film is without a definite answer. One can find oneself exploring awareness, stillness, meditation, ritual and even cooking. Roshi Ed Brown encourages us to explore food as a metaphor. I was touched when he was examining the old teapot.
What's cooking? I think I got it!
DVD Review: Getting it right: perfection in intention Summary: 5 StarsThis delightful and insightful film from German director Doris Dorrie (Enlightenment Guaranteed) demonstrates, in the tradition of great Buddhist teachings, the marvel of life that is and always has been right under your nose, right at your fingertips, right there waiting for you to really see it, really feel it, really smell and taste it.
Ostensibly a profile of American Soto Zen priest Edward Espe Brown , for 30 years the head cook of the California Tassajara Zen Center, the film is in the end more about how we relate to food, and ultimately how we relate to life. In Japan's Soto Zen tradition, cooking is more than just feeding the monks. It's about close attention to detail. It's about respect for the produce of the Earth. In the process, its as much about preparing yourself as it is a meal.
13th century Japanese Zen master Dogen elevated the position of cook within his monasteries to near the importance of the abbot. He saw in the handling and preparation of food a means for cooks to practice mindfulness, and through careful attention to detail maintain the health and morale of the monastic community. He wrote a treatise on the subject, Instructions to the Tenzo, that is still studied in Soto Zen monasteries. In fact you'll see in the film some of the cooks at Tassajara studying this very text.
These days Edward Espe Brown leads cooking, health and meditation seminars in the US and Europe, at which much of the footage for this film was shot. Director Dorrie doesn't shy from showing us more than the wise, Zen-master side of her subject, including segments in which Brown loses his temper with his students, as well as with a plastic wrapper and a bottler stopper. As he remarks to a class at the beginning of the film, he may have been practicing Zen for 40 years, but he's still a human being subject to nervousness and anxiety at the beginning of each new retreat. He notes as well that he still makes mistakes, that mistakes are part of the process of cooking, as they are with life. Perfection, he adds, is to be found in the effort.
While not a kinesthetic subject, Dorrie does a good job of keeping the viewer's attention by mixing up shots and breaking the film up into thematic units. Except for a small diversion on the homeless and a woman who survives by living off supermarket discards, Dorrie remains tightly focused. The understated jazz soundtrack is perfect accompaniment to themes of spontaneity and authenticity.
You won't come away from this film with a handful of new recipes, but you might have a new respect for cooking and the practice of mindfulness.
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Description of How to Cook Your LifeZen master & renowned chef edward espe brown is captured on film as he guides students through the mastery of cooking & the importance of how we treat our food. Studio: Lions Gate Home Ent. Release Date: 05/06/2008 Starring: Edward Espe Brown Run time: 93 minutes Rating: Pg13 Dorris D?rrie's jazz-inflected documentary should come with a disclaimer: Don't watch on an empty stomach. While it doesn't cover the basics of food preparation, How to Cook Your Life offers a delectable introduction to Buddhist living. Yes, subject Edward Brown is both pastry chef and Zen priest, but D?rrie's approach is more holistic than instructional. (For culinary specifics, viewers can always pick up Brown's bestselling how-to guide, The Tassajara Bread Book.) In other words, home cooking--as opposed to fast food and pre-packaged goods--isn't just healthier and better for the environment; it connects the creator to the product of their efforts. And it helps if they know more about the tools of their trade. Hence, the director of 2000's Enlightenment Guaranteed and a Buddhist practitioner herself, also interviews organic gardeners, cookware salespeople, and the like. Throughout, Brown shows students in the US and Austria how to prepare vegetarian pizza, fruit tarts, and other wholesome delights. All the while, he talks about the connection between the body and the spirit. Fortunately, Brown isn't some kind of holier-than-though type. Little things, like hard-to-open packages, can set him off, but he's just as quick to laugh. To him, cooking is a way to nourish yourself and others. As he likes to say, "When you wash the rice, wash the rice." (True, he sounds like Yoda at times; it's actually quite charming.) Like Super-Size Me, How to Cook Your Life is an elegy for those long-lost days of leisurely dinners with loved ones. --Kathleen C. Fennessy
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