‘Scathingly funny and well-researched attack on ‘foodism’. As a polemicist, he’s highly readable and isn’t scared to slaughter holy cows. As well as tearing into the soft underbelly of contemporary food culture he provides belly laughs aplenty.’
(Guy Dimond
Time Out)
‘His eye for the absurd and the hypocritical is sharper than a flashing Sabatier. Making mincemeat of celebrity chefs and food historians, Poole’s pungent satire becomes more serious when he takes on the political implications of organic food or ready meals. To steal a line from Masterchef, writing about cooking doesn’t get tougher, or funnier, than this.’
(Victoria Segal
Guardian - Paperback Review)
’A feisty and inflammatory little book, and well worth thinking about in the event that your gift-giving ritual lacks either of those qualities.’
(Zoe Williams
Guardian, Best Food Books of 2012)
'Stephen Poole's You Aren't What You Eat rips into all aspects of foodie culture gleefully, eruditely and, as far as I can see, irrefutably. If there's any justice, it should put an immediate end to all those incomprehensible menus, absurd claims about the 'art' of cooking, and to chips inexplicably served in beakers.'
(James Walton
Spectator)
'An overdue and well-directed acid-tipped dart at the modern obsession with food.'
(
The Herald (Glasgow))
‘The more this book on gastronomy lays into its practitioners, the better it gets. He is brilliantly and consistently and winningly funny.’
(Jonathan Meades
Observer)
'Poole is very entertaining as he mocks all manifestations of foodism, from obscure ingredient-raves to gastroporn and the chefs who take it all too seriously — in Poole’s phrase, “bunny-broilers getting a Christ complex.'
(Alex Renton
Evening Standard)
‘Steven Poole puts the eating disorders of gastroculture through the food processor of his wit and chops it into meaty little bits.’
(
Saga Magazine)
‘Fearless new book takes a blowtorch to our modern obsession with the once-simple business of cooking and eating food’
(
Reader's Digest)