About This Book
A series of gastronomic essays and diary-like sketches in which a keen gourmand examines meals, ingredients, and the rituals of dining. The pieces celebrate the pleasures of eating, defend appetite against asceticism, and argue that refined taste can enhance beauty, domestic life, and social bonds. Chapters range from ideal breakfasts and elaborate dinners to close studies of soups, seafood, poultry, vegetables, salads, cheese, and coffee, blending sensory description, culinary observation, practical advice, and cultural anecdote. The voice is persuasive and affectionate, urging readers—especially women—to regard eating as an aesthetic and social art rather than a mere necessity.
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