Sausage in a Basket: The Great British Book of How Not to Eat

Sausage in a Basket: The Great British Book of How Not to Eat

by Martin Lampen (Author)

Synopsis

Martin Lampen was born in 1973. And in none of the four decades in which he's lived and dined in Britain has he eaten a single truly great meal. Why should this be so? Is it because we Brits regard any artificial drink with pineapple or mango flavouring as 'tropical'? Could it be something to do with our penchant for crinkle-cut crisps? And just why are British breadcrumbs yellow in a way that no natural substance is? Branded posh as a child for having a Club biscuit and a Mint Viscount in his packed lunch, Martin Lampen cannot promise to answer all of these complex cultural questions, but what he does give us is an indispensable and laugh-out-loud-funny A-Z guide to the not-so-wondrous world of British cuisine. All the joys and tragedies of British food are in here, from railway buffet cars and lamb shanks to coronation chicken and fruits of the forest. The book also contains tips on how to digest a scotch egg, how to converse at a dinner party, how to survive the annual family barbecue and what to order in a 'hummus bar'. This is a hilarious, nostalgic and irreverant look at British cuisine past and present in all its flavourless, stodgy splendour.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Edition: 01
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published: 08 Oct 2007

ISBN 10: 0747589186
ISBN 13: 9780747589181
Book Overview: MIXES NOSTALGIA AND CONTEMPORARY CULTURE from the knickerbocker glory of the 1970s to more recent curiosities such as 'meal deals'. GUARANTEED MARKET - for all those fans of the best-selling Is It Just Me Or Is Everything Shit? and Nice Cup of Tea and a Sit Down.

Author Bio
Martin Lampen was born in Plymouth, Devon in 1973. Now living in London, he works as a freelance design consultant on high-profile media projects. Martin is also the creator of the incredibly successful website www.bubblegum-machine.com, which eulogises catchy-yet-long-forgotten pop music, meaning he receives thousands of e-mails per year from Belgians enquiring about Mungo Jerry B-sides.