In her essay “On Cookbooks: Collections and Recollection,” Alice Lowe travels through the decades, from her first casseroles to Julia and Jacques, from Betty Crocker to Virginia Woolf.
In it, she shares her love for Woolf and her thoughts on Woolf and food.
Here’s a teaser: “My time in England launched and nurtured my interest in Virginia Woolf; my retirement has enabled my studies and published work on her life and writing. Books by and about Woolf have increased as cookbooks decline. The Bloomsbury Cookbook: Recipes for Life, Love and Art weds literature and artwork by Woolf, her sister Vanessa Bell, and others of the legendary Bloomsbury circle, with anecdotes and stories, recipes and repasts both real and fictional. I haven’t allocated it to a shelf yet—is it a Woolf book or a cookbook?”
Visit Alice’s blog to read the rest.
[…] Read more about Virginia Woolf and cookbooks on Alice Lowe’s blog. […]