Chapter 17 Give a Dog a Bad Name, British cooking and its place on the culinary leader board
DOI: 10.23912/978-1-908999-03-0-2334 | ISBN: 978-1-908999-03-0 |
Published: September 2013 | Component type: chapter |
Published in: Food and Drink: the cultural context | Parent DOI: 10.23912/978-1-908999-03-0-2005 |
Abstract
Ask any American, particularly those who have not yet visited Europe, and they will tell you that French food is magnificent while British food is ghastly. Visitors from the other side of the Atlantic long to be as glam as Gene Kelly or Leslie Caron, and they long to be that American in Paris – or better still a rose-tinted version of that city where the weather is always perfect and the food is always ambrosial. Somewhere along the time line between the Battle of Agincourt and the present day, British cooking has ended up pigeon-holed as a culinary alsoran to the French and there’s a widely held, if erroneous, view that the food in Britain is very poor indeed. This assessment may have been valid for a few impoverished decades after the Second World War but when it comes to cooks and cooking, things change quickly and today’s reality is very different.
Sample content
Contributors
- Charles Campion (Author)
For the source title:
- Donald Sloan, Oxford Brookes University (Editor)
Cite as
Campion, 2013
Campion, C. (2013) "Chapter 17 Give a Dog a Bad Name, British cooking and its place on the culinary leader board" In: Sloan, D. (ed) . Oxford: Goodfellow Publishers http://dx.doi.org/10.23912/978-1-908999-03-0-2334