Trifle

by Alan Davidson, Diplomat and Food Historian, (1924-2003)Helen Saberi, Food Writer

This book traces the development and spread of that quintessentially English dish, the trifle. Nothing is more emblematic of English cookery. Trifles have been a perennial of English summer lunches, tennis parties, and schoolboy dreams of plenty. The authors trace their origins to the earliest recipe of 1596 and its gradual transformation from a mere cooked cream to the many-layered custardy extravagance we know today. The stages on its journey, described with the lightest of touch, are illustrated by recipes extracted from classic English cookery books. With their customary brilliance the authors have universalised the English experience, casting far and wide for examples, returning home with trifles from Laos, America, Australasia, Mexico, Eritrea, South Africa, Afghanistan, Malta, and even Norway, where Veiled Maidens are all the rage at teatime. The resulting recipes, handy tips and historical speculation amount to a ladleful of wit and amusement.

ISBN (Paperback) 9781903018729
Price (Paperback) £14.99/$20.00
Publication 2009
Pages 368
Size 187 x 137 mm
Readership general readers

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Metadata

  • isbn
    9781903018729 (Paperback)
  • original publisher
    Prospect Books
  • original publisher place
    Totnes (U.K.)
  • publisher
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • publisher place
    Sheffield (U.K.)
  • series title
    The English Kitchen