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Dining with the Victorians: A Delicious History

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From traditional seaside holiday treats like candy floss, ice cream and fish ’n’ chips, to the British fascination for baking, the Victorian era has shaped British culinary heritage. Victoria’s austere attitude after an age of Regency indulgence generated enormous cultural change. Excess and gluttony were replaced with morally upright values, and Victoria’s large family became the centre of the cultural imagination, with the power to begin new traditions. If Queen Victoria’s family sat down to turkey on Christmas day, so did the rest of the nation. Food was a significant part of the Victorians’ lives, whether they had too much of it or not enough. The destitute were fed gruel in the workhouses – the words of Dickens’s Oliver are forever imprinted on our minds: ‘Please, sir, I want some more.’ The burgeoning street traders spilling over from the previous century devolved into a whole new culture of ‘mudlarks’, trotter boilers and food slop traders, to name but a few. Wealthy Victorians gorged with the newly emerging trend for breakfast, lunch and tea. Public dining became de rigeur, and the outdoor ‘pique-nique’, introduced a new way of eating.Victorians also struggled against many of these trends, with the belief that denial of food was a moral good. This was the era of educating and training in food management, combined with the old world of superstition and tradition, that changed British society forever.

272 pages, Paperback

First published October 13, 2014

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About the author

Emma Kay

38 books5 followers

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Pam.
717 reviews147 followers
August 2, 2024
This book covers ideas that have potential for the curious reader or for people interested in the research Kay has done. I found it very disappointing. Who is the reader? It’s not for an academic audience, although it shows lots of research. The casual reader will probably be bored immediately. I was. The style is awful with very long sentences that often take up nearly a page and it’s a mess of disorganized ideas.

I found some of her statements unreliable. They often either did not match other things I’ve read about food and the Victorian period or just did not seem right. For instance, in talking about the Irish influence on British eating, Kay says Champ or Colcannon often used cabbage to disguise the taste of spoiled potatoes. Besides being potentially racist, the fact is those dishes developed long before the potato blight and no amount of cabbage would disguise the fact that spoiled potatoes were inedible. That sort of “fact” tends to make you question the reliability of the author.

The book does include a few recipes but they are more for seeing what recipes of the day looked like. I wouldn’t actually use any of them. That is not the author’s fault as they are from cookbooks and memoirs of the time. There have got to be better books on this subject out there.
Profile Image for Nicki Markus.
Author 55 books298 followers
January 2, 2018
I loved the idea behind Dining with the Victorians, and the book was full of interesting information and anecdotes. However, I was disappointed with the quality of the editing. A few typos slip through in all books, but there were a number of grammatical problems in the prose, including some sentences that simply didn't make sense or meant something other than what the author intended. For example, at one point the author wished to say that lack of birth control meant that many children grew up in large family units. However, the sentence, taken as written, said that lack of birth control meant that children were large. The irritation this bad editing caused did spoil my overall appreciation of the book, even though in general I liked it. I would recommend it to casual history lovers, but it's probably not one for the scholars. I give it three stars for the interesting concept.
Profile Image for Siri Olsen.
310 reviews9 followers
April 20, 2022
An entertaining little read, full of interesting information on Victorian eating habits and anecdotes concerning the era and its people. It's not overly academic and targeted at a more casual audience, not necessarily a downside, but definitely a consideration. I also thought its coverage of meals and occasions for eating was quite impressive, and I overall quite enjoyed the book for what it was. I would recommend it to people interested in Victorian everyday life, as well as people with an interest in the history of eating and drinking.
Profile Image for Linda.
1,062 reviews10 followers
January 24, 2025
This is not a bad book, it's just not all that entertaining. The author had written a previous history: Dining with the Georgians, and this book tends to pick up where it ends. It covers most of the nineteenth century and a little bit of the early twentieth century in Great Britain. It has a nice insert of pictures and is very well documented.
Profile Image for Lori.
269 reviews10 followers
December 29, 2024
I had such high hopes, as I love this type of topic. There were worthwhile tidbits, but it seems like there was no one to proof the final manuscript. Misspellings, grammatical errors, and nonsensical sentences abound. It really diminished the experience of reading the book.
Profile Image for marz.
95 reviews
August 9, 2025
this was such a slog to get through because it’s like. it’s poorly written i’m so sorry but the grammar freaked me out a lot. like dude that’s not a sentence… also ideas just. go nowhere? feels like i’m being dangled off a small cliff. anyway. andrea broomfield i miss you and your nice writing.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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