“The most revolting dish ever devised”

Celebrity-cook-Elizabeth--002The late Elizabeth David was the saltiest of food writers, impatient with the world, with others, particularly about the failures of food/cooks. Now Tim Hayward has been given a taste of David’s pungent comments on food writers and cookbooks by the curator of her cookbook collection. Among them…

Inside a copy of The Cooking of Italy (1969) by Waverly Root, much admired US foodwriter,   “Waverley Root is a pitiful phoney.”

On the legendary 1969 French book Ma Gastronomie by Fernand Point, regarded by a generation of chefs as the bible of modern cuisine: “This is a really awful book.”

And in  Ulster Fare, published in 1945 by the Belfast Women’s Institute Club, she found “the most revolting dish ever devised….

Italian salad
1 pint cold cooked macaroni
½ pint cooked or tinned pears
½ pint grated raw carrot
French dressing to moisten
2 heaped tablespoons minced onion
½ pint cooked or minced string beans

Mix the chopped macaroni and vegetables; moisten with French dressing, flavouring with garlic if liked. Serve on a dish lined with lettuce leaves. Decorate with mayonnaise and minced pimento or chives.

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About Gina Mallet

Gina Mallet is the author of Last Chance to Eat, The Fate of Taste in a Fast Food World, which won the 2005 James Beard Award for writing on food, an account of the lost world of eating. She is a former theatre critic, and now the restaurant critic for the National Post of Canada.
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