
Stephen Budiansky in The Wall Street Journal has a thought-provoking article about today's
food writing. Among the disturbing traits he notices is the use
of the word "preferably," as in "1 teaspoon paprika,
preferably sweet Spanish pimentón dulce" - a
sure sign of pretentiousness. And there's the hectoring that
accompanies too many recipes, "½ cup brown sugar, preferably
fair-trade organic."
To expand upon his argument that food writing is missing
an essential element of humor, he reviews four new cookbooks:
Change Comes to Dinner by Katherine
Gustafson, Culinary Intelligence by Peter
Kaminsky, The Locavore's Dilemma by Pierre
Desrochers & Hiroko Shimizu, and The Taste of
Tomorrow by Josh Schonwald.
Budiansky introduces the books with a note that
"Making a cause out of epicurean pleasure has become equally
de rigueur in food books. Four new ones all follow the basic
template: to amalgamate personal stories of culinary discovery with
exhortations to treat food as something meaningful and
earnest." Among the themes he finds in these
books are a surprising dislike of eating, self-absorption, and a
nanny approach. In short, as he writes, "...even with the best of
intentions, making a cause out of what we eat has a way of coming
back to bite us. And likewise that in place of so much earnestness,
the ingredient modern food writing could use more of is wit -
preferably, the dry kind."
Together, these four short book reviews provide a lot of food
for thought.