Spotlight Magazines Spotlight on Sinfin & Stenson Fields July 2015 | Page 14
Spotlight Magazine
A Good Read
Eating for England – Nigel Slater
Why is Snot Green? – Glenn Murphy
Subtitled ‘The
Delights and
Eccentricities of
the British at Table’,
this is an extended
love letter to British
food over the last
forty years. If you
have fond memories
of sharing a box
of Black Magic
at Christmas
or spooning jam over school rice
pudding, then this is for you.
Want to see a nine
year old boy (or
indeed, a thirtynine year old boy)
reading? Well, buy a
copy of this book and
that’s what you’ll get.
Anyone who owns one of Nigel Slater’s
cookbooks will know that there is
as much pleasure to be had from
reading the recipes as there is from
following them. He writes about food
with passion, knowledge and honesty,
admitting his fondness for Heinz
Tomato Ketchup , Smarties and other
non-gastronomic treats.
Here, he devotes short chapters
(often no more than a paragraph or
two) to a whole range of peculiarly
British delights. Some are drawn
from childhood memories, such as his
father’s unsuccessful experiment with
a coffee percolator (it ends up packed
away next to the Christmas tree lights)
or his mother’s blancmanges.
Others are more contemporary and
tells of the delight to be had from a
visit to the fishmonger or the ritual of a
Saturday farmers’ market. All are well
written, funny and evocative.
Whether you read this from cover to
cover, or simply scan the chapter
headings for whatever takes your
fancy, this is a perfect book for thinking
about food – and despite Slater’s
reservations the last chapter will
probably send you out to the shops for
a packet of Pink Wafers!
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In fact, you’ll get
more than that.
Written by a member
of staff from the
Science Museum, this book answers
those questions you’ve always wanted
to ask –
‘Could you dig your way to Australia?’
(Come on, admit it – you tried to on the
beach when you were seven),
‘Are people with bigger heads
cleverer?’ and’
Why do we walk on two legs?’ for
example – as well as some –
‘Do spiders have ears?’– that might
never have occurred to you.
Each question is answered in
conversational style, anticipating the
reader’s responses and taking the
explanation further.
Whilst there is a fairly heavy
concentration on the grosser side
of science – poo, snot and gas
feature heavily – there’s also plenty of
technical terminology and you really do
learn something new on every page.
Even how to stop an ice-cream
headache – so well worth a read for
that alone!
By Kath Bennett
www.spotlightlocal.co.uk • 01332 416 121 • [email protected]