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Plats du Jour Paperback – 9 Nov. 2006
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Plats du Jour was first published in 1957. `Long before this book was
thought of,' wrote the authors, `we had separately evolved a system of
cooking by which a variety of dishes was replaced by a single plat du jour
accompanied, as a rule, by a green salad, a respectable cheese, and fruit
in season, and, wherever possible, by a bottle of wine. This conception of
a meal underlies this book.' It appeared at a time when dishes such as
pasta, risotto, soupe aux poireaux et aux haricots or mackerel au vin blanc
were still considered outlandish.
Plats du Jour was one of Jane Grigson's favourite books: if ever she
saw one in a jumble sale she bought it to give as a present. For, as the
well-known food historian, Alan Davidson, wrote, `it is a very good book
indeed. Its principal ingredients, the knowledge and amiable enthusiasm of
the authors, have given it a lasting value.' And he pointed out that it is
a very original cookery book, written in unpretentious language, in an
unprescriptive, relaxed way by two cooks with whom it is easy to identify.
(They were also running a small business during the two years they were
writing Plats du Jour). The delightful and eye-catching jacket which is
now the Persephone endpaper was designed by David Gentleman, who was 25 and
had just left the Royal College of Art. He has written in his book Art
Work: `My illustrations were based on drawings and watercolours made in
Provence, Burgundy and Italy... They were not wholly Mediterranean. The
cuts of meat were drawn in two butchers' shops, one in Essex and the other
in the meat-preparing room at Harrods, underneath the Food Hall. The front
cover shows a table at the start of a meal, while the back cover shows the
tail end of it, with only the debris and the sleeping cats left. I had come
across plenty of precedents for this before-and-after approach: strip
cartoons, medieval chests and illuminations, and paintings such as
Uccello's great narrative scenes from the Old Testament.' David Gentleman
believes that `Patience Gray and Primrose Boyd's admirable and practical
Plats du Jour [is] every bit as good as Elizabeth David' and many will
agree with him. In fact, in terms of sales and influence it was Patience
Gray and Primrose Boyd who were the pioneers in introducing English cooks
to French everyday cookery. Plats du Jour sold 50,000 copies in the first
few months after publication and 100,000 in the next three years, an
astonishing amount at the time. It was only in the 1960s that Elizabeth
David started to become a symbol of the transformation of English
middle-class eating habits. Before that Plats du Jour was the favourite and
influential French cookery book.
- Print length304 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPersephone Books Ltd
- Publication date9 Nov. 2006
- Dimensions14.1 x 2.5 x 19.4 cm
- ISBN-101903155606
- ISBN-13978-1903155608
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Product details
- Publisher : Persephone Books Ltd; New edition (9 Nov. 2006)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 304 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1903155606
- ISBN-13 : 978-1903155608
- Dimensions : 14.1 x 2.5 x 19.4 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 436,090 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 25,050 in Food & Drink (Books)
- 62,325 in Home & Garden (Books)
- Customer reviews:
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Before that 'Plats du Jour' was the favourite and influential French cookery book.'
ooOoo
~ 'PLATS DU JOUR OR FOREIGN FOOD'
~ A PENGUIN HANDBOOK
~ PATIENCE GRAY & PRIMROSE BOYD
~ ILLUSTRATOR: DAVID GENTLEMAN
'Primrose Boyd proposed joining forces with Patience Gray to write Plats du Jour, experimenting in the mid-1950s with dishes as then outlandish as goulash and paella. The illustrator David Gentleman, then just finishing his studies, designed a memorable cover and drawings. The book's success was the impetus needed for Prudence's break into national journalism, which came in 1958 when she beat 1,000 applicants for the job of putting together the women's page on the Observer. There was little consensus among the tweed-jacketed editorial staff as to what sort of thing might appeal to women: advice on household gadgets perhaps, but little else by way of inspiration. Handed carte blanche, Patience filled it to good effect. Women, she felt, did not want to acquire, but to learn. And she set about instructing them in European art, design, thought and habits. This almost surreal embrace of modern Europe did not last beyond the arrival, in 1961, of her new chief, George Seddon, who felt that daily problems of shopping, buying and choosing of more import to readers than modern architecture in Milan. Patience's departure from the Observer, and the passing of her children through schooling, coincided with her falling in love with the artist and sculptor Norman Mommens. Precipitately, they embarked on a Mediterranean odyssey that would take them to Carrara, Catalonia, the Greek island of Naxos and, finally, to southern Italy, where they settled, in 1970, in Apulia, in a farmhouse named Spigolizzi. Patience described this journey with passion and eloquence in Honey from a Weed , a book that combined learning, wide reading, folklore and cookery in a disconcerting and inimitable manner, and in which she gnomically referred to Mommens as 'the sculptor'. The darker side of life, when peasants and primitivity can overwhelm the outsider, she portrayed in her account of their season on Naxos, Ring Doves and Snakes.
Patience was a woman of strong emotions and opinions, her prose muscular and full of character. So, too, was her cookery. While Plats du Jour had been largely derived from books and home experiment, Honey was more in the way of field notes of an anthropologist, but one who had gone native herself. To her last years, she would not have the normal conveniences of refrigerators, gas cookers, electric light, telephones or water closets at Spigolizzi. It was only growing frailty, and the urging of her son Nicolas, that allowed some compromise with modernity. When she finished Honey from a Weed in 1983, Patience had no publisher in mind. The literary agent Deborah Owen tried to find a London house to take it, but only succeeded after she approached the former diplomat and food writer Alan Davidson, who ran, with his wife Jane, a tiny venture called Prospect Books. The final printed text was a credit to his diplomatic skills, just as the book was gloriously embellished by the drawings of Patience's then daughter-in-law Corinna Sargood. Its reception by enthusiasts for intellectual cooking, both in Britain & America, was rhapsodic, and it had all the makings of a cult classic.'
Before that 'Plats du Jour' was the favourite and influential French cookery book.'
ooOoo
~ 'PLATS DU JOUR OR FOREIGN FOOD'
~ A PENGUIN HANDBOOK
~ PATIENCE GRAY & PRIMROSE BOYD
~ ILLUSTRATOR: DAVID GENTLEMAN
'Primrose Boyd proposed joining forces with Patience Gray to write Plats du Jour, experimenting in the mid-1950s with dishes as then outlandish as goulash and paella. The illustrator David Gentleman, then just finishing his studies, designed a memorable cover and drawings. The book's success was the impetus needed for Prudence's break into national journalism, which came in 1958 when she beat 1,000 applicants for the job of putting together the women's page on the Observer. There was little consensus among the tweed-jacketed editorial staff as to what sort of thing might appeal to women: advice on household gadgets perhaps, but little else by way of inspiration. Handed carte blanche, Patience filled it to good effect. Women, she felt, did not want to acquire, but to learn. And she set about instructing them in European art, design, thought and habits. This almost surreal embrace of modern Europe did not last beyond the arrival, in 1961, of her new chief, George Seddon, who felt that daily problems of shopping, buying and choosing of more import to readers than modern architecture in Milan. Patience's departure from the Observer, and the passing of her children through schooling, coincided with her falling in love with the artist and sculptor Norman Mommens. Precipitately, they embarked on a Mediterranean odyssey that would take them to Carrara, Catalonia, the Greek island of Naxos and, finally, to southern Italy, where they settled, in 1970, in Apulia, in a farmhouse named Spigolizzi. Patience described this journey with passion and eloquence in Honey from a Weed , a book that combined learning, wide reading, folklore and cookery in a disconcerting and inimitable manner, and in which she gnomically referred to Mommens as 'the sculptor'. The darker side of life, when peasants and primitivity can overwhelm the outsider, she portrayed in her account of their season on Naxos, Ring Doves and Snakes.
Patience was a woman of strong emotions and opinions, her prose muscular and full of character. So, too, was her cookery. While Plats du Jour had been largely derived from books and home experiment, Honey was more in the way of field notes of an anthropologist, but one who had gone native herself. To her last years, she would not have the normal conveniences of refrigerators, gas cookers, electric light, telephones or water closets at Spigolizzi. It was only growing frailty, and the urging of her son Nicolas, that allowed some compromise with modernity. When she finished Honey from a Weed in 1983, Patience had no publisher in mind. The literary agent Deborah Owen tried to find a London house to take it, but only succeeded after she approached the former diplomat and food writer Alan Davidson, who ran, with his wife Jane, a tiny venture called Prospect Books. The final printed text was a credit to his diplomatic skills, just as the book was gloriously embellished by the drawings of Patience's then daughter-in-law Corinna Sargood. Its reception by enthusiasts for intellectual cooking, both in Britain & America, was rhapsodic, and it had all the makings of a cult classic.'
Before that 'Plats du Jour' was the favourite and influential French cookery book.'
ooOoo
~ 'PLATS DU JOUR OR FOREIGN FOOD'
~ A PENGUIN HANDBOOK
~ PATIENCE GRAY & PRIMROSE BOYD
~ ILLUSTRATOR: DAVID GENTLEMAN
'Primrose Boyd proposed joining forces with Patience Gray to write Plats du Jour, experimenting in the mid-1950s with dishes as then outlandish as goulash and paella. The illustrator David Gentleman, then just finishing his studies, designed a memorable cover and drawings. The book's success was the impetus needed for Prudence's break into national journalism, which came in 1958 when she beat 1,000 applicants for the job of putting together the women's page on the Observer. There was little consensus among the tweed-jacketed editorial staff as to what sort of thing might appeal to women: advice on household gadgets perhaps, but little else by way of inspiration. Handed carte blanche, Patience filled it to good effect. Women, she felt, did not want to acquire, but to learn. And she set about instructing them in European art, design, thought and habits. This almost surreal embrace of modern Europe did not last beyond the arrival, in 1961, of her new chief, George Seddon, who felt that daily problems of shopping, buying and choosing of more import to readers than modern architecture in Milan. Patience's departure from the Observer, and the passing of her children through schooling, coincided with her falling in love with the artist and sculptor Norman Mommens. Precipitately, they embarked on a Mediterranean odyssey that would take them to Carrara, Catalonia, the Greek island of Naxos and, finally, to southern Italy, where they settled, in 1970, in Apulia, in a farmhouse named Spigolizzi. Patience described this journey with passion and eloquence in [[ASIN:190301820X Honey from a Weed]], a book that combined learning, wide reading, folklore and cookery in a disconcerting and inimitable manner, and in which she gnomically referred to Mommens as 'the sculptor'. The darker side of life, when peasants and primitivity can overwhelm the outsider, she portrayed in her account of their season on Naxos, Ring Doves and Snakes.
Patience was a woman of strong emotions and opinions, her prose muscular and full of character. So, too, was her cookery. While Plats du Jour had been largely derived from books and home experiment, Honey was more in the way of field notes of an anthropologist, but one who had gone native herself. To her last years, she would not have the normal conveniences of refrigerators, gas cookers, electric light, telephones or water closets at Spigolizzi. It was only growing frailty, and the urging of her son Nicolas, that allowed some compromise with modernity. When she finished Honey from a Weed in 1983, Patience had no publisher in mind. The literary agent Deborah Owen tried to find a London house to take it, but only succeeded after she approached the former diplomat and food writer Alan Davidson, who ran, with his wife Jane, a tiny venture called Prospect Books. The final printed text was a credit to his diplomatic skills, just as the book was gloriously embellished by the drawings of Patience's then daughter-in-law Corinna Sargood. Its reception by enthusiasts for intellectual cooking, both in Britain & America, was rhapsodic, and it had all the makings of a cult classic.'




