Kitchen Person: Notes on Cooking & Eating
Author: Rachel Cooke
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 256
In 2009, Rachel Cooke started a monthly column for The Observer on cooking and eating: here are her fifty best. In Kitchen Person, unfussy eater Rachel Cooke chronicles several food upheavals since then: new TV cooks, Brexit, viral recipes, the home delivery phenomenon, and the global pandemic. She journeys from her childhood in Sheffield with Henderson's relish and Granny's lamb chops, to a job interviewing top chefs and eating in fancy restaurants, to learning to shop and cook well herself, all the time growing more knowledgeable and opinionated about food.
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 256
In 2009, Rachel Cooke started a monthly column for The Observer on cooking and eating: here are her fifty best. In Kitchen Person, unfussy eater Rachel Cooke chronicles several food upheavals since then: new TV cooks, Brexit, viral recipes, the home delivery phenomenon, and the global pandemic. She journeys from her childhood in Sheffield with Henderson's relish and Granny's lamb chops, to a job interviewing top chefs and eating in fancy restaurants, to learning to shop and cook well herself, all the time growing more knowledgeable and opinionated about food.
Description
Author: Rachel Cooke
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 256
In 2009, Rachel Cooke started a monthly column for The Observer on cooking and eating: here are her fifty best. In Kitchen Person, unfussy eater Rachel Cooke chronicles several food upheavals since then: new TV cooks, Brexit, viral recipes, the home delivery phenomenon, and the global pandemic. She journeys from her childhood in Sheffield with Henderson's relish and Granny's lamb chops, to a job interviewing top chefs and eating in fancy restaurants, to learning to shop and cook well herself, all the time growing more knowledgeable and opinionated about food.
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 256
In 2009, Rachel Cooke started a monthly column for The Observer on cooking and eating: here are her fifty best. In Kitchen Person, unfussy eater Rachel Cooke chronicles several food upheavals since then: new TV cooks, Brexit, viral recipes, the home delivery phenomenon, and the global pandemic. She journeys from her childhood in Sheffield with Henderson's relish and Granny's lamb chops, to a job interviewing top chefs and eating in fancy restaurants, to learning to shop and cook well herself, all the time growing more knowledgeable and opinionated about food.
Kitchen Person: Notes on Cooking & Eating