All consuming Why we eat the way we eat now

Ruby Tandoh

Book - 2025

"Over the past seventy-five years, food has gone from a fact of life to national pastime; something to be thought about -- and talked about--24/7. Out tastes have been radically refashioned, painstakingly engineered in the depths of food factories, and hacked by craveable Instagram recipes. In this startling original, deeply irreverent cultural history, bestselling author Ruby Tandoh traces that transformation, exposing how cult cookbooks, bad TV, visionary restaurants, and now social media have all wildly overhauled our appetites. All Consuming is a deep dive into the social, economic, cultural, legislative, and demographic forces that have reshaped our world--and made us all foodies"--

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2nd Floor New Shelf Show me where

394.12/Tandoh
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 394.12/Tandoh (NEW SHELF) Due Oct 31, 2025
Subjects
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Penguin Random House LLC 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Ruby Tandoh (author)
Edition
First U.S. hardcover edition
Item Description
"A Borzoi book."
"Originally published in Great Britain by Serpent's Tail, an imprint of Profile Books Ltd., in 2025"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
293 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 277-289).
ISBN
9798217207862
  • Introduction
  • Home cooking. Craving content : or, the unsubtle art of selling a recipe
  • On the seventh day, they cooked : or, how newspaper supplements invented British foodies
  • Allrecipes : or, the chaotic recipes of the realist's internet
  • Tastemakers. The critic hits the road : or, real influencers and where to find them
  • Anatomy of queue : or, the pleasure and pitfalls of hype extension
  • - I like bubble tea : or, the cultural ingredients of a global mega-trend
  • Everything but the recipe. Dream home : or, fantasy and feeding, from magazines to Instagram
  • Now not to use a cookbook : or, the power and limits of writing about food
  • "Cook remaining 100 lobsters" : or, the modern cook's guide to entertaining
  • Impulse buy. Supermarket fugue : or, an experiential history of four superstores
  • The ice cream age : or, how to invent a hit ice cream
  • Tonic waters : or, the rise and rise of the magic wellness drink
  • Fast food. The automat is dead : or, on the past and future live of food machines
  • Wimpy : or, the good, the bad and the ugly of British American food
  • Epilogue
  • Further reading
  • Acknowledgments.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

British baker and cookbook author Tandoh dives into the world of food and predilection. Most of us live in a world of abundance, and there's a problem there, writes Tandoh, in the paradox of plenty: "The more we have, the less we seem able to enjoy it." That gives rise to diet fads, and "weird culinary nationalism," and a certain unbending devotion to certain foods at the expense of others. That plenty comes in information as well as food, with recipes available everywhere and with food trends (one, she notes, being smashburgers) spread worldwide thanks to the internet. Even so, she adds, most home cooks will tend to "cycle through the same couple of dozen recipes for the rest of our lives." Part of Tandoh's evident purpose is to shake those cooks out of complacency and try something new, even playful--for which she praises fellow cookbook writer Yotam Ottolenghi--and fun. One possibility: sausage and gochujang pasta, the latter being a Korean chili paste that renders an orange sauce--and orange, says one chef, "makes people hungry." Tandoh is a great explainer with a gift for a memorable turn of phrase, as when she renders judgment on bubble tea as representing a story "about displacement, ruin and growth," noting along the way that bubble tea is dominated by corporate chains because the machinery to produce it is expensive, lending a certain sameness to bubble tea shops. As to home entertaining, Tandoh says, smartly, "Delusional thinking transcends class," meaning that any such gathering is likely to blow any budget and produce entirely too much food, procured from the surfeit of massive supermarkets around the globe: "So many temples, and just one god." Tandoh's knowing classification of the three types of cookbooks is worth the price of admission alone. An entertaining, endlessly instructive look at why we like what we do in our "anarchic web of desire." Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.