Review: On Eating
A memoir between Long Island and San Juan, between oysters and plantains, asking whether you can eat for joy and justice simultaneously.
A memoir between Long Island and San Juan, between oysters and plantains, asking whether you can eat for joy and justice simultaneously.
A White Mountain Apache chef’s memoir of addiction, sobriety, and the discovery that the French kitchen’s ingredients had Indigenous names.
A Trinidadian student’s journey through America’s most elite culinary school, where the view from outside in changes everything.
Seventy plant-based recipes from across four African regions, where the food is not a substitute for anything but the tradition itself.
A pandemic memoir about cooking for a large family while watching recipe videos, and whether nightly dinner is a blessing or a curse.
A chef’s memoir about opening and closing a cult-favourite Brooklyn restaurant, cooking her father his last meal, and the demand for more joy.
The culinary icon reimagines school food with recipes that are local, seasonal, affordable, and beautiful.
Part memoir, part manifesto from the chef of Loch Fyne’s Inver, interrogating sustainability, gender, and what destination restaurants actually teach us.
A Swedish memoir tracing a life through food, where what we eat is inexorably intertwined with how we love.
A sommelier’s chronicle of the invisible labour behind New York’s most celebrated dining rooms.
A basement Edinburgh kitchen as portal: recipes from Eastern Europe and Central Asia cooked at home, each one a route back.
Twenty-two years as an undocumented immigrant, examined through Filipino recipes and colonial history.
A year of daily kitchen delights from the author of An Everlasting Meal, who treats cooking as a practice closer to prayer than to chore.
Recipes from a cook who has lived in enough places that the boundaries between traditions become flavours.
Jane Grigson’s 1971 celebration of seasonal ingredients, prophetic then and essential now, with the curried parsnip soup that justifies the reprint.
A memoir from age ninety-eight, where a coyote becomes a figure for everything that refuses to be domesticated.
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