by Brigid Allen (Editor)
Food is a basic requirement of daily life, more essential and (some would say) more comforting than religion, love or sex. The emotional and social resonances connected with food have long been explored by writers in novels and poetry, drama and biography, diaries and letters, and this anthology brings together a splendid cornucopia of comment and opinion. Attitudes to food are as various as food itself: Montaigne adored fish but disliked fruit and salad, while the German philosopher Kant loved pulses and pork fat. The discovery of new foods occasions much interest, and the pineapple excites a succulent description by a visitor to Barbados in the seventeenth century. Through the use of printed and unpublished manuscript sources Brigid Allen provides aOh).0*0*0*O fascinating history of the eating habits of families and individuals: how and where they shopped, methods of cooking and cooking utensils, what time they ate and even what names they gave their meals. Dining in and dining out are both addressed, and the experience of travellers abroad entertainingly chronicled. This book is intended for anthology lovers, food historians, anyone interested in cooking and the literature of food; social historians.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 432
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Oxford Paperbacks
Published: 01 Dec 1995
ISBN 10: 0192825046
ISBN 13: 9780192825049