A Christmas gift from my historian daughter. Victoria's relationship with food was complicated, and it is surrounded by folklore, gossip and misunderstanding. Yes, the Palace kitchens consumed enormous quantities of food, but then they had a lot of people to feed. And yes, she was a bit of a glutton, but in the first part of her reign probably had a BMI of no more than 18! What was true however was that she was very fond of fruit, desserts and ice cream, as well as mutton, and indeed whiskey, and ate all of these very regularly. This excellent book looks over the long reign of the Queen, and examines how tastes, convention, kitchen technology and diet all changed. Some of the detail was maybe unnecessary, but the descriptions of the unsanitary conditions of the early Buckingham House kitchens were compelling, and the challenges of feeding foreign Heads of State with their enormous retinues were delightful. The interest for me was discovering that contrary to myth the royal diet was actually rather varied, and that dining with Victoria, especially for a grand dinner with lots of courses and probably small portions of each, would have been great fun. Interesting stuff.