Available Formats
Kitchen Secrets: The Meaning of Cooking in Everyday Life
By (Author) Frances Short
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Berg Publishers
1st September 2010
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
641.5
Paperback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 12mm
268g
What's really going on in the kitchenWhilst cookery programmes are broadcast at peak viewing times and chefs regularly claim celebrity status, food writers announce the death of cooking. Parents, experts, campaigners and policymakers grow increasingly concerned about the proliferation of pre-prepared foods and a growing trend for eating alone and on the run. Kitchen Secrets explores the thoughts, values and opinions of home cooks, their practices and experiences, and the skills and knowledge they use to prepare and provide food. It offers new and challenging ways of thinking about cooking, examining and often contesting commonly-held beliefs and theories about the role of practical cookery lessons, dinner parties as showcases for culinary flair and the de-skilling effect of convenience foods. Kitchen Secrets lifts the lid on the modern range to see what's cooking.
'This groundbreaking piece of research will be of interest to all those who have wondered 'Is cooking dead' Short's answer is a theoretically sophisticated and empirically rich contribution to a debate which has been mired in anecdote.' David Sutton, Associate Professor, Sociocultural Anthropology, Southern Illinois University
Frances Short is an independent writer and researcher and is an associate lecturer at the Open University.