Always Home
A Daughter's Culinary Memoir
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
'A beautifully written celebration of food, home, and above all, family' - Jamie Oliver
'So charming and beautiful' - Gwyneth Paltrow
'The most delicious kind of memoir' - The Times
Stories and recipes from growing up as the daughter of revered chef/restaurateur Alice Waters: food, family, and the need for beauty in all aspects of life.
In this extraordinarily intimate portrait of her mother - and herself - Fanny Singer, daughter of food icon and activist Alice Waters, chronicles a unique world of food, wine, and travel; a world filled with colourful characters, mouth-watering traditions, and sumptuous feasts.
Across dozens of vignettes with accompanying recipes, she shares the story of her own culinary coming of age, and reveals a side of her legendary mother that has never been seen before. A charming, smart translation of Alice Waters' ideals and attitudes about food for a new generation, Always Home is a loving, often funny, unsentimental, and exquisitely written look at a life defined in so many ways by food, as well as the bond between mother and daughter.
'Singer's writing reminds me about everything important to me in life, the four f's: friends, food, family and fun' - Claire Ptak, owner of Violet bakery
'Fanny [is] a seductive wordsmith of deliciousness!' - Sally Clarke, owner of Clarke's Restaurant
'Fanny's confident, honest, warm words beautifully read like a foodie fairy tale' - Skye Gyngell, owner of Spring Restaurant
'A true delight to read, full of pearls of homely wisdom.' - Lily Cole
'A delicious book and deserving of all the praise already heaped on it.' - Bryan Ferry
'Joyful, witty and loving...A book like no other, an instant classic.' - Al Hilton, staff writer at The New Yorker
FEATURED IN VOGUE'S 'The 5 Best Books of 2020 (So Far)'
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this wondrous memoir-cookbook hybrid, Singer (My Pantry), daughter of Chez Panisse founder Alice Waters, recalls her upbringing in the restaurant business. Above all, she writes, the book is a celebration of her mother. Waters's signature passions are highlighted: the Edible Schoolyard Project, open-fire cooking (whether inside the restaurant or the governor's mansion), and the Chez Panisse children's book (which featured an eight-year-old Singer). Waters's quirks are revealed: her tendency to drink from bowls rather than mugs and to "jettison her silverware and delve in with her fingers," expressing "a primal impulse to be closer to the thing she was eating, to be more sensuously acquainted." The appreciation of beauty, "the total fabric of my existence," and flavor, "the prism through which most things were seen or dissected or understood," guide their summers in Provence, food-and-wine tours of the Pyrenees, and a "special tasting in the caves of Krug, the illustrious champagne house." A final mother-daughter road trip from Telluride, Colo., to Berkeley before graduate school has them bonding and collaborating on impromptu meals (a recipe for egg fettuccine boiled in river water and tossed with tomatoes and parmesan is one of dozens throughout the book). Singer's language is read-out-loud luscious, and her culinary coming-of-age story savory and sweet.