Title

Bite Studio - Visual Editor
Random House Speakers

The Last Food of England

Anya Yeatman , Marwood Yeatman

(Enlarge Image)

Published by Ebury Press, part of Ebury Publishing

Format: Hardback

£25.00

Buy now

Availability

Available for dispatch within 1-2 working days

Details

EAN: 9780091913977
Published: 5 Apr 2007

-

About the book

Synopsis

The map of England bears names which used to resonate through kitchens in the land: Colchester, Cheddar, Hereford, Swaledale, Bath, Lincoln, York, Wensleydale - the list goes on. England has more breeds of livestock, fruit cultivars and vegetable seeds to its credit than any other country in the world. Sussex, for example, was known for its cockles, herrings, truffles, seakale, cabbage, alongside its middlehorn beef, Southdown mutton and Tipper beer. We tend to think that our native food has disappeared off the map completely - and in some cases it is undoubtedly endangered. But Marwood Yeatman shines a light on what remains, and highlights what could endure. His quest to find the 'last food' in England leads to his discovery of the last domestic faggot oven in use; the undertaker-cum-butcher who roasts his own oxen; the fisherman who regularly takes his life in his hands to catch oysters; green top milk being made deep in the forest; crayfish facing extinction; four types of English butter. This book is a wonderful voyage of discovery - an invitation to cook without recipes, travel without guides, and find history without museums. Take time to read about our fertile food heritage and the map of England will never look the same again.

Recommend this book

Add your recommendation

Only registered users can recommend books. Please use the buttons below to either create a new account, or sign-in to an existing account.

Register here or Sign in here

Press

What the critics say

Rarely does such a work come to our notice. This is food social history in a class of its own.
-

I am not a 'foodie' or a chef, but a feeder and a cook who neither eats to live nor lives to eat. There is a middle course: to live, and eat well too...There is so much more to life than food, so much connected to it, and so much to be missed by taking it for granted.
-

Food is everything: it gives meaning to the landscape, links the past to the present and secures man and beast to time and place.
-

It's time to reclaim the 'British blueberry' from its all-American image
- Jenni Murray, Radio 4

About the Authors

Inspired by the sight of Devon cattle and York ham on America's east coast, Marwood Yeatman set out on a mission to rediscover English food. It has taken him over 25 years to research and write this book. He and his wife, graphic designer and photographer Anya, live in a former pub in Fordingbridge, Hampshire, where they cure their own meats and grow native vegetables in the garden.

Anya Yeatman

More about Anya Yeatman

Marwood Yeatman

More about Marwood Yeatman

PageId: 21726 UserId: 5
This website makes use of cookies. See our Privacy Policy for more information.