OP: The Mushroom Feast
Alfred A. Knopf, 1975. Hardcover. Very Good. First US printing. The late 20th century was a period of emergence for an unprecedented number of fine food writers, but among these only a handful could be said to be writers in the larger sense—individuals whose sensitivity to language and to style provide readers with satisfactions that went far beyond simple subject matter. English-born Jane Grigson (1928–1990) particularly exemplifies one of the “best of” in this category. Grigson is grounded in her approach, devoted to kitchen processes and to the tactile, sweaty labor that precedes the sensual pleasures of eating. With her unfailing loyalty and concern toward her readers and her delight in historical anecdote, she has remained one of the most influential and continually read food writers of the last half century. In The Mushroom Feast, first published in the UK by Michael Joseph in 1975, Grigson turns her attention to edible fungi and in the process produces one of her more charming