The Pedant's ambition is simple. He wants to cook tasty, nutritious food; he wants not to poison his friends; and he wants to expand, slowly and with pleasure, his culinary repertoire. A stern critic of himself and others, he knows he is never going to invent his own recipes (although he might, in a burst of enthusiasm, increase the quantity of a favourite ingredient). Rather, he is a recipe-bound follower of the instructions of others.
It is in his interrogations of these recipes, and of those who create them, that the Pedant's true pedantry emerges. How big, exactly, is a 'lump'? Is a 'slug' larger than a 'gout'? When does a 'drizzle' become a downpour? And what is the difference between slicing and chopping? This book is a witty and practical account of Julian Barnes' search for gastronomic precision. It is a quest that leaves him seduced by Jane Grigson, infuriated by Nigel Slater, and reassured by Mrs Beeton's Victorian virtues. The Pedant in the Kitchen is perfect comfort for anyone who has ever been defeated by a cookbook and is something that none of Julian Barnes' legion of admirers will want to miss.
The Pedant's ambition is simple. He wants to cook tasty, nutritious food; he wants not to poison his friends; and he wants to expand, slowly and with pleasure, his culinary repertoire. A stern critic of himself and others, he knows he is never going to invent his own recipes (although he might, in a burst of enthusiasm, increase the quantity of a favourite ingredient). Rather, he is a recipe-bound follower of the instructions of others.
It is in his interrogations of these recipes, and of those who create them, that the Pedant's true pedantry emerges. How big, exactly, is a 'lump'? Is a 'slug' larger than a 'gout'? When does a 'drizzle' become a downpour? And what is the difference between slicing and chopping? This book is a witty and practical account of Julian Barnes' search for gastronomic precision. It is a quest that leaves him seduced by Jane Grigson, infuriated by Nigel Slater, and reassured by Mrs Beeton's Victorian virtues. The Pedant in the Kitchen is perfect comfort for anyone who has ever been defeated by a cookbook and is something that none of Julian Barnes' legion of admirers will want to miss.
'The funniest piece of food writing - my own theoretical metier - that you will ever read'. Giles Coren, The Times
Julian Barnes is a Booker Prize-winning author who has written nine novels, a book of short stories, and two collections of essays. He has received several awards and honours for his writing including the Somerset Maugham Award for Metroland (1981), and four Booker Prize nominations: Flaubert's Parrot (1984), England, England (1998), Arthur and George (2005) and The Sense of an Ending (Booker Prize Winner 2011).
Julian Barnes's musings on cookery form the perfect bite-size
anthology for literary/foodie folk... with an introduction from The
Independent's Mark Hix, The Pedant in the Kitchen is as crisp and
tart (yes, yes, puns intended) a piece of writing about food as one
will find anywhere... it makes for compelling reading... Did I
mention that it's funny? Barnes hams up his own cack-handedness in
the kitchen delightfully... a sequel would be most delicious.
*Independent on Sunday*
All those preoccupations of the keen cook are examined with a wry
and truthful eye. His assessments of such writers as Richard Olney
and Elizabeth David are spot on...
*Spectator*
Barnes identifies in scintillating style the true gulf that exists
between food writers and their audience. Anyone who has eaten
cooked food should read The Pedant in the Kitchen. When you have
picked yourself, helpless with laughter, off the lino, it will save
you a fortune in cookery books and kitchen gadgets.
*Daily Express*
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