1st Edition

A Guide For The Greedy: By A Greedy Woman

By Pennell Copyright 2003
    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is surely the most extraordinary book on food and eating ever published in the English language. Miss Pennell, who was a correspondent for the Pall Mall Gazette at the height of its amusement and fashionability, was obviously the inspiration of the ‘Two Fat Ladies’. Writing about good food with good writing has never been done so successfully. Beginning with an essay on the virtue of gluttony it traverses past breakfast, sandwiches, dinner, supper, portage, soups, sole, oysters, partridge, salads and savouries, coming sadly to an all too soon a stop at cheese and coffee. Oh, but not forgetting a skirmish with the vegetables.

    This edition first published in 2005. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

    Introduction to Original Edition; Introduction; Chapter 1 The Virtue of Gluttony; Chapter 2 A Perfect Breakfast; Chapter 3 Two Breakfasts; Chapter 4 The Subtle Sandwich; Chapter 5 A Perfect Dinner; Chapter 6 An Autumn Dinner; Chapter 7 A Midsummer Dinner; Chapter 8 Two Suppers; Chapter 9 On Soup; Chapter 10 The Simple Sole; Chapter 11 Bouillabaisse; A Symphony in Gold; Chapter 12 The Most Excellent Oyster; Chapter 13 The Partridge; Chapter 14 The Archangelic Bird; Chapter 15 Spring Chicken; Chapter 16 The Magnificent Mushroom; Chapter 17 The Incomparable Onion; Chapter 18 The Triumphant Tomato; Chapter 19 A Dish of Sunshine; Chapter 20 On Salads; Chapter 21 The Salads of Spain; Chapter 22 The Stirring Savoury; Chapter 23 Indispensable Cheese; Chapter 24 A Study In Green and Red; Chapter 25 A Message from the South; Chapter 26 Enchanting Coffee;

    Biography

    Elizabeth Robins Pennell was a well-known columnist and biographer who collaborated with artist James McNeil Whistler on many travel writings.