The Raj at Table: David Burton
- £12.99 (Paperback)
Synopsis:
While the British were in India they developed a curious cuisine all of their own. As they made their mark on their host culture, the formidable memsahib - or English housewife - made sure that much traditional cuisine was rejected in favour of an impossible combination of European customs, and the results were frequently chaotic.
Anglo-India cooking was at its best when it achieved a kind of cultural balance; mulligatawny, kedgeree and Worcestershire sauce are all products of the Raj.
David Burton's book - subtitled 'A Culinary History of the British in India' - is now considered a classic, and was acclaimed by the Observer on publication as 'one of those rare and delightful works from which, once caught, you have no desire to escape'.
Tags:
- Categorised as:
- Non-fiction
- Sub-categories:
- Food & Drink
- Places:
- India
- Genres & Themes:
- Colonialism; Cooking; Recipes; Travelogue
- Selected edition:
- Paperback
- ISBN:
- 9780571143900
- Published:
- 04.07.1994
- No of pages:
- 256