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Last Chance to Eat: The Fate of Taste in a Fast Food World
 
 

Last Chance to Eat: The Fate of Taste in a Fast Food World [Hardcover]

Gina Mallet
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Gina Mallet doesn't beat us over the head with her urbanity, but she's travelled a lot in Europe and North America. She also seems to remember everything she ever ate. A former drama and restaurant critic, she delights in stating her opinions. Last Chance to Eat is an unsentimental celebration of lost tastes, including a clear-eyed appraisal of industrialized and genetically modified foods and a critical assessment of organics (she finds that, in some instances, they don't taste any better than those raised with chemicals). "What has changed most is our taste," she writes, adding that we "prefer food that tastes reliably the same each time we eat it." Mallet also plays consumer advocate. After visiting with a canny kibitzer at a fish market counter, she concludes that shrimp from Louisiana are "the best," while Tiger shrimps "taste of nothing." This willingness to engage, to do the digging, to find the right people to talk to, to ransack the memory so as to record and compare her distant and current tastes of foods is the hallmark of her text. It sizzles with little polemics about wild versus tame strawberries, wild versus farmed salmon, farmhouse versus factory cheeses, dry-aged versus wet-aged steak (the latter is stored and shipped in cryovac; try to find the former, she says, since the latter tastes tinny). Mallet muses about the disappearance of excellent sole and salmon: "There must be a philosophical reason for the saying that all good things come to an end. I just haven't found it."

Too frequently, food books present recipes with little or no comment on the ingredients used. Mallet's directions for her occasional recipes, however, are intensely personal, clear, and immediately practical. The dishes themselves are a mix of the conventional and the weird: Sauce Verte (herbs stirred with mayo) on the one hand, and Parmesan Crème Brûlée with Black Pumpernickel on the other. She closes with a plug for buying provisions on the Internet; not one to worry about the cost of air freight and other punishing economies of scale when it comes to the food we eat, she calls the Web "the best place to order the greatest food." The contradiction of using thoroughly modern means to shop for artisanal goodies doesn't go unnoticed: "It isn't nature restoring balance in food, it is technology." --Ted Whittaker

Books in Canada

Gina Mallet has written a wonderfully crabby-and timely-memoir Last Chance To Eat: The Fate of Taste in a Fast Food World. Mallet was the Toronto Star’s much feared drama critic during the 1970s and the early 1980s, and has since had stints writing perceptive restaurant reviews for the Globe and Mail. Her approach to restaurant reviewing acknowledges that people actually drink wine and talk during meals. From that I understood that she clearly loves and understands good food. This book takes my regard for her into a higher dimension.
She has some firm ideas about what does and doesn’t constitute good foods. But somehow, the book’s title, which seems more like a marketer’s than her own, is slightly misleading. This is much more a memoir of what constitutes good eating than a polemic against factory-produced food stuffs or the corporate/government conspiracy to permanently disable our tastebuds. Oh, the polemic is there in the book, and it is both articulate and sensible-and it is backed by convincing evidence that we have been assaulted by culinary cretins and over-zealous health Nazis for more than half a century. But when it comes to food, Mallet is a better lover than a fighter.
This book is a marvelous thing, and so is Mallet at the dinner table: a feisty, articulate woman in the midst of a lifelong feast. I learned more about why today’s eggs, cheese, and meat are devoid of flavour from Mallet than from the dozen or so other books I’ve read on the subject. Probably because she can not only explain why, say, most Bries now taste like chalk, she can also make you taste Brie as it should be tasted. Only very fine writers can do this, and it puts her in a very exclusive and small group of food writers. Virtually everything else that lands on her gourmet plate in this book is enlivened by those rare skills. She’s not always 100 percent correct, but she’s always 100 percent interesting, even on the tricky-for-Eastern-seaborders subject of Japanese cuisine.
Throughout the book she makes a useful distinction between nutritional commodities-fuel-and food, which for her lies somewhere between culture and art. It’s a useful distinction, and not just because Mallet’s combination of passion and astuteness enables her to build a convincing rhetorical framework for it. Because of the topical constraint the editors force on her, the book isn’t perfect. There are some oddities in the book, like her strange admiration for Martha Stewart, who is-or was-as much about décor as about food, and wasn’t an adequate replacement for the late Julia Child even before she went to jail. Still, each of the dozen or so recipes dotted throughout literally beg you to taste them, and the several I’ve tried were remarkable. Great read, great food, a truly feisty feast, and one of my favourite recent books in any category.
Brian Fawcett (Books in Canada)

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The egg that lay in my mother's palm was small by today's standards, small and pale brown. Read the first page
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3.0 out of 5 stars somewhat informative, mostly irritating, Oct 13 2009
By 
Andrea (Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Last Chance to Eat: The Fate of Taste in a Fast Food World (Hardcover)
[Cross-posted to LibraryThing and LivingSocial]

The Julie/Julia Project recently rekindled my passion for cooking and since food was on my mind, I picked up this book. Part memoir, part history of food, and part manifesto against the industrialization of food, Mallet argues that in the interest of having mass produced food with no fat or bacteria in it, we've sacrificed flavour. 'We' mostly being North Americans, whom Mallet seems content to write off as ignorant germophobes.

Mallet takes on five food items that she argues have gone by the wayside over the last few decades: eggs, cheese/dairy, beef, good quality fruits and vegetables, and fish. She shares anecdotes from her family's past and her own childhood and discusses the current state of these foods. Since Mallet is a food writer, I was expecting better. The book often felt disjointed and inconsistent - Mallet would allude to a particular experience or some bit of food trivia that was tangentially related to the topic at hand and rather than develop these threads, she left them hanging. At times, she seemed to contradict herself.

I think what bothered me the most was Mallet's tone. Throughout the entire book, she is somewhat pretentious and haughty and cannot mask her disdain for North American food culture. She makes valid points but I would be more inclined to hear her out if the points came from a well-researched, balanced perspective rather than anecdotes and an air of superiority.

There were some positive aspects to this book; it was informative and motivated me to learn more about certain foods that I consume, particularly eggs. I think we do need to be more mindful of what we eat, how our food is being produced, and where it comes from. This, however, is not the book with which to begin that process. I'd recommend Barbara Kingsolver's Animal, Vegetable, Miracle instead ' informative without constantly talking down to her readers.
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5.0 out of 5 stars don't go anywhere without it, Sep 20 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Last Chance to Eat: The Fate of Taste in a Fast Food World (Hardcover)
don't eat out or anywhere without this book .Last chance to eat is a guide to modern eating, controversial, funny and stuffed with the kind of information i wasn't quite sure i really wanted to know - until i read it.
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Amazon.com: 4.4 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)

12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Engaging mix of memoir, history, and polemic. Recommended, Nov 4 2004
By B. Marold "Bruce W. Marold" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Last Chance to Eat: The Fate of Taste in a Fast Food World (Hardcover)
`Last Chance to Eat' by Toronto culinary journalist Gina Mallet is an uncommon mix of memoir, culinary history, and polemic against the march of agribusiness and the resulting loss of important artisinal foods in the name of hygiene, often masking the interests of big businesses. It's an odd mix of Ruth Reichl's memoirs with Eric Schlosser's `Fast Food Nation' and Mort Rosenbloom's `A Goose in Toulouse'.

First of all, the book is very engaging to read. Like Reichl, the author has had an interesting family and life, so her childhood stories are entertaining.

Then, the book covers the history of several major food sources. These stories often amaze me when they show how recent (or how old) many major food developments have been. One interesting story is the breeding of beef cattle to yield an animal that would reach full market size in the shortest time. This is not a 20th century agribusiness development. It was done in the early 18th century in Scotland, before the American Revolution. A parallel development was the breeding of a cow that will produce a lot of milk. This story is directly connected to endangering a classic artisinal product, Normandy butter, produced from cows that give a very high butter fat milk. Unfortunately, these cows produce a very low volume of milk, so they are not profitable except to produce a high priced product.

Finally, it pokes its nose into corners of international food business in politics that most people probably don't even know exist. Most food channel junkies know about the wards against importing raw milk products into the United States. The current often ignored law limits import of raw milk cheeses to those that have been aged for at least 60 days. While there is bootleg cheese importing and small family run raw milk cheese operations in the united states which violate this regulation, the prospect which is not well known is that there is an interest in changing the ban to prohibit all raw milk cheeses. I felt a distinct jolt when the author stated that that would ban the import into the US of Parmesano-Reggiano! I felt a distinct discomfort in the pit of my stomach over that one.

The biggest surprise comes with the author's stories about the development of a food Codex that codifies how all food products are to be made worldwide. Although proceedings take place in Brussels, this is not just a European Union party. American representatives play a big part in the deliberations and the American reps are primarily representatives such as Kraft Foods employees who have a vested interest in putting down anything which will compete with American products.

Other stories are equally dismal, such as the deep drop in the egg business in the 1970s when the awareness of cholesterol dawned on us and superficial studies gave the egg a bad rap because its role in the good cholesterol / bad cholesterol picture was not well understood. In the same essay, the author repeats many of Eric Schlosser's muckraking descriptions of production henhouses. The author's egg story is leavened with a great tale of her family's attempt to raise chickens in food rationed England just after World War II.

Each of the five major essays on eggs, milk and cheese, beef, vegetable gardens, and fish combine personal observations with current and historical trends in food business. My only reservation about Ms. Mallet's polemical content is that unlike Schlosser's writing and the famous Rachel Carson book `Silent Spring', both of which Ms. Mallet quote, all of her warnings and charges are undocumented except by secondary sources rather than primary sources with notes giving chapter and verse on the sources. I believe Ms. Mallet is on the side of the angels and nothing she says disagrees with anything I have read elsewhere, but please note that her essays are more informed opinion than they are research.

This is a highly engaging read for all foodies and anyone else who enjoys good memoir writing. Recommended.

6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars tasty food porn, Nov 29 2004
By Misty A. Smith - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Last Chance to Eat: The Fate of Taste in a Fast Food World (Hardcover)
Last Chance to Eat is a great book for Alton Brown and Jeffrey Steingarten fans, for people who love good food but hate the fear, uncertainty, and doubt surrounding so much of it today, and for people who read cookbooks like novels. The author, in the context of her own experiences growing up in several different countries with a well-to-do family that centered around food, takes five important foods (eggs, cheese, beef, fish, and tomatoes) and chronicles their tragic decline. She enriches her personal narrative with enough scientific information to keep any kitchen geek happy, and while some of it's stuff most foodies already know, some of it's pretty surprising--and depressing. While cheese is by and large my favorite of all the foods discussed, my favorite part of the book was about eggs, from the hundreds of delicious ways Escoffier used them in his cooking in the early 1900s to the cholesterol scare of the 80s and the BS "science" that was behind it. I highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys eating, cooking, and talking about food.

8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Left, Right, and Center-Cut, Sep 5 2005
By Valjean - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Last Chance to Eat: The Fate of Taste in a Fast Food World (Hardcover)
Attempting to get a book published under the banner "people don't eat right"--even with great gobs of anecdotal evidence--would probably elicit little enthusiasm from potential publishers. Who wants to be scolded, especially about all those Big Macs you're tucking away? Ah, but wrap this theme around a weighty political or social commentary theme--say, people don't even know what food *tastes* like anymore and evil forces are conspiring to keep it that way--and you might have something to sink your teeth into. Consciously or not, Gina Mallet is in a scolding mood in "Last Chance to Eat" and while I appreciated her broadsides against food hypocrisy the barely-concealed "you people don't know what's good for you" tone was often hard to, well, stomach.

This perspective sours, for me, an otherwise superb extended essay on good, basic food and why we love it. The author is at her lamenting best when skewering nonsensical food regulation; the bit on a chapter dedicated to eggs (`The Imperiled Egg') displays in naked terms how the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and other bureaucratic dimwits drove the egg market to the point of extinction--for absolutely no scientific reason. This expose comes after a long paean to eggs in history, how gourmands from Escoffier to Julie Child have feted them, how wonderfully nutritious they are (eaten *properly*, of course), and segueing into their ill-deserved bad rap. Ms. Mallet's equally loving descriptions of beef, fish, cheese, and produce clearly show her love of The Real Deal; it's when she starts tut-tutting what's happened to the apparently glorious near-past of cuisine that she loses me.

Simply put, Mallet's gripes against her imagined food villains--the FDA excepted--hold little water (primary source references and research--not to mention footnotes--are nowhere to be found) and undercut the backside of her argument: that good food and "taste" are imperiled in our fast food/agri-business-dominated culinary wasteland. That a huge food conglomerate may strive to extend irrational bans on unpasteurized cheese, for example, might be no surprise. But to rely on "my friend Guy" as an authority (hey, he lives in *Paris*!) on the evils of big food business doesn't pump me with confidence. (For good measure we find Guy's politics are hardly confined to the food business: the cheese chapter culminates with a bizarre non-sequitor that importing can't be more diverse because according to him "this is all about trade." I've heard plenty of unsupported anti-trade arguments but this reaches a new low.)

The author uses a family narrative context--interspersed with interesting recipes--to present her arguments. This works reasonably well, though the uniqueness of her youthful experiences (daughter of a director of luxury hotels!) makes cozying up to her culinary perspective a bit difficult at times. Harder to swallow is the relentless "Philistine America steamrolling Noble France" subtext that I hope will even bore the French before too much longer.

Given how politically charged all our lives have become--from what we drive to what toilet paper we use--I appreciated Gina Mallet's attempt to stake out the high ground on food. (I like to think it's mine too.) When she stays optimistic--relating family stories, history, and her clear love of good food--I found her book very enjoyable and even inspiring. It's most of her pessimistic side--especially some very ill-informed economic rants--that drag down an otherwise intriguing effort.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 13 reviews  4.4 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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