Tastes and traditions A journey through menu history

Nathalie Cooke

Book - 2025

Menus are invaluable snapshots of the food consumed at specific moments in time and place. Tastes and Traditions: A Journey through Menu History provides glimpses into the meals enjoyed by royalty and rogues, those celebrating special occasions, or sampling new culinary sensations throughout history. It describes food prepared for the gods, meals served during sieges, and tablescapes immortalized in art. It explores how menus entertain adults, link food with play for children, reflect changing notions of health, and highlight the enduring human need to make meals meaningful. Lavishly illustrated, this book offers an engaging exploration of why menus matter and the stories they tell, appealing to food lovers and general readers, as well as p...rofessionals in the food industry.

Saved in:
1 being processed

2nd Floor New Shelf Show me where

394.12/Cooke
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 394.12/Cooke (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Illustrated works
Ouvrages illustrés
Published
London : Reaktion Books 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Nathalie Cooke (author)
Physical Description
191 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 26 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 172-181) and index.
ISBN
9781836390671
  • Introduction: Where Can Menus Take Us?
  • Chapter 1. Feasts for the Eyes
  • Chapter 2. Menus as Mementos
  • Chapter 3. Cultural Encounters
  • Chapter 4. Menus for Children and for the Children We Once Were
  • Chapter 5. Health on the Menu
  • Chapter 6. Riddle Me This Menus That Intrigue
  • Conclusion: What Menus Can Do
  • References
  • Further Reading
  • Acknowledgments
  • Photo Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Library Journal Review

Award-winning Cooke (English, McGill Univ.; Canadian Literary Fare) explores the evolution and significance of food menus in this engaging illustrated history. Cooke considers aesthetic, textural, and culinary elements of menus to make a compelling case for their importance not only as a record of cuisine but as a cultural artifact and communication tool. The book is cleverly organized around themes that highlight meaning ("Menus as Mementos"), design ("Riddle Me This: Menus That Intrigue"), and audience ("Menus for Children and for the Children We Once Were"). Throughout the book, Cooke asks readers to consider what the selected menus reflected at the moment and what might be learned from them in retrospect. Each chapter spans time and place and is accompanied by striking, full-color images of menus. This book will appeal broadly to nonfiction readers who are interested in culinary and cultural history as well as design. VERDICT An entertaining and beautiful look at the history and significance of menus.--Kate Bellody

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Food for thought. What are menus? What do they contain? And, ultimately, why do they matter? Cooke, a professor of English at McGill University, goes on a richly illustrated journey through three centuries to grapple with these questions, and more. Cooke approaches the broad banquet of menus the way a diner might approach a buffet--by sampling and savoring particular items. Her critical gaze falls first on the careful artistic and design choices menus can embody and on the artists like Picasso and Toulouse-Lautrec who have illustrated them. But above all, she writes, menus "pique our interest for the many, rich and varied stories they tell and…for the reminiscences they conjure for original diners and the journeys upon which they allow belated readers to embark." Menus transcend the ephemeral and in their afterlife illuminate the tastes and traditions of those who came before. Cooke uses dozens of stylish menus as launching points to meditate on the foodways they represent. As belated readers, we can, for example, study world's fair menus as documents that shed light on national values and priorities or look to the children's menus commonly found on early-19th-century rail lines for the messages they might tell us about coming of age. Some menus are meant to be mementos of specific events, like a coronation or a meeting between heads of state. These, too, invite the belated reader to consider issues of gastronomy, social history, and more. An adventurous eater ("I myself also have cricket flour on my shelf"), Cooke is an even more undaunted surveyor of foodways past and present who moves across time and culture "both to tempt readers to ask probing questions and to offer satisfying answers to sate their appetites." A handsomely illustrated and diverting celebration of a rich if overlooked genre. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.