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Nicola Humble

    The Literature of Food
    The Edible Series: Cake
    Persuasion
    Culinary Pleasures
    • Culinary Pleasures

      Cook Books and the Transformation of British Food

      • 342pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      Presents the history of Britain's culinary evolution through the cookery books which have inspired us over the course of a century, beginning with Mrs Beeton and leading to the rise of the celebrity TV chef.

      Culinary Pleasures
      4,1
    • Persuasion

      • 430pages
      • 16 heures de lecture

      Sous le vernis d'un genre, chacune des phrases de Jane Austen attaque les conventions, traque les ridicules, et finit avec une grâce exquise par pulvériser la morale bourgeoise, sans avoir l'air d'y toucher. Les héroïnes de Jane Austen lui ressemblent, elles aiment les potins mais détestent les bavardages, grossièreté et vulgarité. La pudeur, le tact, la discrétion, l'humour sont les seules convenances qu'elles reconnaissent... Et si Jane Austen mène les jeunes filles au mariage, c'est fortes d'une telle indépendance qu'il faut souhaiter au mari d'être à la hauteur ! A lire yeux baissés et genoux serrés pour goûter en secret le délicieux plaisir de la transgression des interdits. Anne Barbe, Libération, 1980.

      Persuasion
      4,1
    • The Edible Series: Cake

      A Global History

      • 144pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      Be it a birthday or a wedding—let them eat cake. Encased in icing, crowned with candles, emblazoned with congratulatory words—cake is the ultimate food of celebration in many cultures around the world. But how did cake come to be the essential food marker of a significant occasion? In A Global History , Nicola Humble explores the meanings, legends, rituals, and symbolism attached to cake through the ages. Humble describes the many national differences in cake-making techniques, customs, and regional histories—from the French gâteau Paris-Brest , named for a cycle race and designed to imitate the form of a bicycle wheel, to the American Lady Baltimore cake, likely named for a fictional cake in a 1906 novel by Owen Wister. She also details the role of cake in literature, art, and film—including Miss Havisham’s imperishable wedding cake in Great Expectations and Marcel Proust’s madeleine of memory—as well as the art and architecture of cake making itself. Featuring a large selection of mouthwatering images, as well as many examples and recipes for some particularly unusual cakes, Cake will provide many sweet reasons for celebration.

      The Edible Series: Cake
      3,8
    • The Literature of Food

      • 296pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      Covering every aspect of food within literary texts, from experimental cook books to the sumptuous dinner parties at the heart of every Victorian Novel, The Literature of Food is the first comprehensive study of its kind and a must-buy for students on literature and food courses.

      The Literature of Food