A witty and vividly remembered culinary memoir about how eating once was, and still can be, a joy. Food has never been more exalted as part of a lifestyle, yet fewer and fewer people really know what good food is. Drawing on enough culinary experiences to fill several lifetimes, Gina Mallet's irreverent memoir combines recollections of meals and their milieus with recipes and tasting tips. In loving detail, Last Chance to Eat muses on the fates of foods that were once the stuff of feasts: light, fluffy eggs; rich cheeses; fresh meat; garden vegetables; and fish just hauled ashore. Mallet's gastronomic adventures appeal to any palate: from finding the perfect grilled cheese ("as delicate tasting as any Escoffier recipe") to combing the bustling food department at postwar Harrod's for the makings of "an Elizabeth David meal." The search for taste often takes her far from the beaten path―to an underground "chevaline" restaurant serving horsemeat steaks and to purveyors of contraband Epoisses, for instance―but the journey is always a delight.
The best parts of this book were the mouth-watering recipes interspersed between the prose, and I've happily added several to my repertoire.
That having been said, I couldn't bring myself to read the entire thing: about two-thirds of the way through, I tossed the book aside. Mallet's pretension, crotchetiness and misty-eyed sentimentalism combined to turn me off whatever vague thesis she was chasing through her meandering memories and whimpered protests against modernity.
I'm no cheerleader for industrialized agriculture, but Mallet doesn't form a coherent critique of either the industry or the consumer capitalism which drives it.
There was a promising premise for this book, but it was a cross between a memoir, a rant against food today, a recipe book, and a lament for taste and food lost. It could have used some tighter editing, in my opinion, and a little less of the author’s memories. Which seemed scattered much of the time.
Gina Mallet’s writing reminds me of Elizabeth David’s writing which is always a good thing in my book. She writes insightfully about the industrialisation and heavy commercialisation of food and also writes about her life and history of eating.
Light and fun read for foodies - sprinkled with memoir-style anecdotes of food and cooking, a few recipes, and insights about the demise of quality in produce, meat, and poultry. Made me want to be a more selective shopper and supporter of local products, and pay more attention to ingredients and cooking techniques.
This book is sort of a combination of Fast Food Nation and The Omnivores Dilemma in that it looks at what our food consumptions and production used to be and now is, but it also mixes in a wonderful personal account as the author looks at this from her personal experience growing up in pre-WWII England and her experiences there to moving to America and how things have changed over the years.
It not only looks again at the unhealthy and unsustainable practices we now employ in our food supply network, but it also looks at how our relationship with food and eating have changed and not necessarily for the better.
As food science has increased our factual knowledge and overall productivity, we seem to have lost much of the pleasure and more practical knowledge of food, food prep and eating itself. We have gotten so caught up on the numbers and fears that the way our food is now produced inspire in us that food has almost become our enemy vs. a source of nourishment and please that it is alright to enjoy and I fear this is something we will never truly regain.
For all that this was not a gloom and doom, look how horrible the food industry is book. It was truly more a fond and happy look back with family, culture and food using the current changes as more of a back drop than as the main centerpiece.
Gina Mallet combines personal vignettes of family life in England during WWII (including recipes) with research about the ways in which government, science and business have DISTANCED us from the choices we make about the food we eat. You don't realize how great that distance is until you have read how eggs, cheese, meat, vegetables, fruits and fish have been "manipulated" in various ways at different times. It is interesting how she combines the history of food and chefs with information that we all need to take seriously, e.g. how the production of apples has been narrowly crafted by supermarkets. This book should provoke thought and reflection. Those of us who live in North America will realize that we are no longer close to our food, nor do we value it as we should - a sobering thought.
I enjoyed this book. I enjoyed how the author remeniced about the foods of her youth, her growing up in post war London and her tomatoes in Canada. I liked how for each character (food) she presented personal experiences and emotions surrounding her feelings toward these foods. I remeber the part about the date at the steakhouse and the perfect omlette in France. As a matter of fact I have perfected my perfect, SIMPLE omlette as per her recommendations. I however DO NOT get the cover image chosen for this book. WTF is that oyster looking thing doing on the cover of a book? How did it get there? Who said "That's great, lets use it"? Dreadful, Horrible and a disgrace to a great book. That said, I think I'll remove the dust jacket and re-read it soon...
Overall a very good representation of the fact that most Americans and Europeans are content to let the old and traditional dishes and ingredients go by the way side in preference to cheaper and faster food. The arguments are the same as Jeffrey Steingarten made in It must have been something I ate, unfortunately the author has nothing more to say than the fact that things are slipping away.
It's a little unfair to say that I read this book. But I did try. But I couldn't make it any further than about forty pages into the book. Mallet writes one hundred pages on the history of the egg!! If the first forty are any indication, I don't expect the next sixty to be any more interesting. I mean, just how do you make the history of the egg exciting? I don't deny it isn't possible, but Mallet is clearly not the author to do it (with apologies to those who enjoyed this book).
It took me several attempts to get through this book. I persevered because it was so hyped. I should have trusted my instincts. I would be interested to understand what the author was trying to accomplish. Yes, food has changed, been industrialized... sometimes the details were too deep, and others not deep enough. I couldn't follow if Gina Mallet is a fan of GM or not - some of the book seemed muddled, and some of it not that interesting, and not one recipe that I thought mmm. Maybe it's a cultural, age thing but on the whole, I just didn't get this book.
Gina Mallet's book follows five popular foods from the Second World War to our present day. She laments the loss of taste that has occurred through mass production, and the American desire to have it fast rather than good. I wasn't really expecting to enjoy this book as much as I did. I found it rather fascinating, and it made me very hungry for the good food I ate while I was in Europe. Thanks for the recommendation, Rachel.
This book is an interesting departure from most books about food. It reads almost like a story, with tales of the author's own childhood experiences and contrasting them to how things are now. And she makes interesting points. All in all, it was a very good read and I would recommend it.
Interesting and informative memoir shaped around the author's childhood memories of food. She argues that industrial food, for the most part, is devoid of taste and often not healthier than traditional foods, just more stable.
Very compelling and thought-provoking. The first section of the book was about the humble chicken egg and its gastronomic origins. I enjoyed this book - there's a healthy smattering of history along with the author's food-related observations and experiences.
Fascinating, delightful, and easy to read history of the transition of food from an adventure to savour and share to a barely nutritious, functional fuel. Makes you wonder, "Did eggs used to have a taste?" and "What does real cheese taste like?"
This book was interesting for a while, a little bit of a different spin as the author grew up in London. But after a while it became tedious, and it was due back to the library, so I let it go.
This was an interesting book. Part memoir, part food history, part comparing the US to UK/Europe and part what is currently happening in the food world. The author does a great job talking about 5 areas of food: eggs, cheese, meat, vegetables, and fish. She even included a few recipes if you are inclined to try making these dishes. If you want to learn more about food, this is a book to consider picking up.