Synopses & Reviews
An irresistible, charming, and inspired selection from the work of one of this century's great food writers.
Like M.F.K. Fisher and Julia Child, Elizabeth David changed the way we think about and prepare food. David's nine books, written with impeccable wit and considerable brilliance, helped educate the taste (and taste buds) of the postwar generation. Insisting on authentic recipes and fresh ingredients, she showed that food need not be complicated to be good.
A Book of Mediterranean Food, published in 1950, introduced the ingredients of a sunnier world (olive oil, garlic, eggplant, basil), celebrating their smell and taste and above all highlighting the concept that food reflects a way of life and should be a source of joy.
Subsequent books on French and Italian cooking and a stream of provocative articles followed. Later, David's monumental English Bread and Yeast Cookery became the champion of the Real Bread movement. Her last book, Harvest of the Cold Months, is a fascinating historical account of food preservation, eating habits, and the astonishing worldwide food trade in snow and ice.
Many of the recipes and excerpts here were chosen by David's friends and by the chefs and writers she inspired (including Alice Waters and Barbara Kafka). This collection will enable some of us to discover and others to remember what made David one of our most influential and best-loved food writers.
Review
"
As South Wind Through the Kitchen demonstrates, again, she was simply a superb writer.” - Lisa Cohen,
Newsday“The best food writer of her time” - Jane Grigson, The Times Literary Supplement
“As South Wind Through the Kitchen demonstrates, again, she was simply a superb writer” - Lisa Cohen, Newsday
“E.D. wrote as she cooked: with simplicity, purity, color, self-effacing authority, and a respect for tradition” - Julian Barnes, The New Yorker
“Edited to perfection and served with tasteful line drawings” - Publishers Weekly
About the Author
Jill Norman is
Elizabeth David's literary trustee. For many years she was a publisher, and later a publishing consultant. Author of
The Little Library of Culinary Classics, she is director of the European Patent Office in The Hague.