Simon Wroe's Blog
February 13, 2018
Here Comes Trouble
October 8, 2016
The World’s 20 Best Restaurants – 2050
May 4, 2016
A new non-fiction play asks why children answer the call of fundamentalism
My latest piece, on a play exploring the allure of Islamic State.
April 20, 2016
“Boy” smells like disillusioned teen spirit
My piece for The Economist on London’s lost youth.
April 7, 2016
W&N to publish new novel by Simon Wroe | The Bookseller
December 4, 2015
The knife skills of Chinese chefs. I could watch people chopping...
The knife skills of Chinese chefs. I could watch people chopping tofu all day.
September 21, 2015
CHOP CHOP - FIRST PAGE

They arrive in pairs most weeks, blushing like schoolgirls in
the kitchen heat.
Their eyes follow you around the room.
Their tongues loll rudely from their mouths.
Their snouts are rough from rooting.
When you hold one and feel the hair and fat and clammy skin
of it you wonder how different a person’s head would feel dead in your hands.
Sometimes when you pick one up from the peach paper your fingers get stuck in
its nostrils, like a bowling ball. Sometimes you can still feel old bogeys up
there. A strange feeling, that this head must have been alive once, because
only a living thing could produce something as useless as snot.
I’ve heard in fancy places they lather the snouts up and give
them a gentleman’s shave with a cutthroat razor. Most kitchens use a blowtorch
and burn the hair. It gives off a dark smell, which maybe the fancy places
won’t stand for. We throw ours on to the burners and turn them with tongs until
their eyes melt. Then we wrap them in a cloth and carry them over to the sink
and wash the char off. We do it gently, like an apology. Ramilov, in one of his
letters, says that’s what all cooking is: a smart apology for a savage act.
Before the heads are brined and boiled, before they are torn
apart at the jaws and the flesh is picked away from the gluey, shaking skin, we
cut off the pigs’ ears. A respite, I like to think, from the easy-listening
radio and the catcalls of the chefs. With those long rubbery ears gone the
heads look naked and sort of comical, like two old men at the end of the pier
who lost their toupees when the wind picked up.
I can’t stop looking at how they were killed. I don’t want to
look. It makes me sick to my stomach. It makes me think I might not be cut out
for this after all. A deep, yawning cleaver gash in the middle of each
forehead, pushing the animal’s tongue through its teeth with the force.
One chop. Sharp and swift.
One for each of them. Chop chop.
I suppose it’s something I’ll get used to in time.
Now into the pot with you, piggy.
Into the brine, swine.
August 12, 2015
Dinner at the World's Most Expensive Restaurant
March 6, 2015
Explore the science of flavour
We don’t all experience flavour the same way, and how we do so can be affected by food and drink’s colours, sounds – and music
March 5, 2015
Today is the UK paperback publication of Chop Chop. Thanks to...

Today is the UK paperback publication of Chop Chop. Thanks to all who have supported along the way.