"A wonderful cookbook . . . defiantly and hilariously unprecious, even as it demonstrates on every page the author's discernment as a gourmet. Periodically Meades erupts in wittily splenetic denunciations of holier-than-thou food ist rhetoric. [The Plagiarist in the Kitchen] instantiates a philosophy of food that is wiser and cleverer than anything you will read under the burgeoning academic rubric of "philosophy of food"." * Guardian *
"Meades returns now as defiant, playful, and possibly punch drunk as ever . . . The Plagiarist in the Kitchen is a cookbook in the mode of, say, The Futurist Cookbook, The Alice B. Toklas Cookbook, or a good old-fashioned M. F. K. Fisher." * Times Literary Supplement *
"Meades is one of our most eloquent and excellent iconoclasts . . . Although the prose is as opinionated and elegant as you'd expect, this is a brilliant, magnificently old-fashioned cookbook." * Mail on Sunday *
"The Plagiarist in the Kitchen is hilariously grumpy, muttering at us "Don't you bastards know anything?" You can read it purely for literary pleasure, but Jonathan Meades makes everything sound so delicious that the non-cook will be moved to cook and the bad cook will cook better."" -- Best Summer Reads * Guardian *
"Witty, forthright and full of excellent recipes. A welcome companion for self-catering holidays." -- Summer Reads * Spectator *
"Meades reasonably observes that 'no one reads a cookbook cover to cover', but for obvious reasons I did this one, and I don't regret it. It is quite the funniest I've read." * Sunday Telegraph *
"Meades was for 15 years from 1986 the restaurant critic of the Times, a calling he approached with polymathic wit, much copied, rarely bettered . . . The Plagiarist in the Kitchen is a personal food odyssey, a book of recipes, each with a story of how he came by it, and why exactly he is passing it off as his own." * Observer *
"The Plagiarist in the Kitchen, an intriguing read as any Meades follower will suppose - peppered with digressions, spleen, literary references, jests and arcane knowledge - is also a repository of sound European recipes." * Evening Standard *
"Meades is a hugely entertaining writer and the book is peppered with anecdotes and contrarian statements: "So far as I can recall I have not eaten guacamole," is just one example." * Restaurant Magazine *
"Meades has been compared, favourably, to Rabelais and, flatteringly, to Swift. The truth is that he outstrips both in the gaudiness of his imagination." -- Henry Hitchings * Times Literary Supplement *
"A human Enigma machine . . . Jonathan Meades is the Jonathan Meades of our generation" * Vanity Fair *
"The scope of his ideas, the force of his arguments, the sheer vitality of his sentences: these things come at you like negative ions after a storm, with the result that you soon start to feel an awful lot better - envious but revitalised, too" -- Rachel Cooke * New Statesman *
"Superb . . . The Plagiarist in the Kitchen is an incredibly generous book. It is a gift to the world from a man who has spent decades getting to know food better than nearly anyone else." * The Dabbler *
"More than just a cookbook; The Plagiarist in the Kitchen is a manifesto. And it has something to say to us about the times - and the places - we live." * CapX *
"I adore Meades's book, but not because I'll be doing much cooking from it. I love it because I want more of his rule-breaking irreverence in my kitchen." * New York Times *
"A must for every foodie . . . there's no Mary Berry-ish nannying about level tbs" -- Books of the Year * Spectator *
"Hilarious, insightful, and full of the food I love . . . a future classic in my book." * BBC Food Programme *
"Here [Jonathan Meades] has chosen 125 of his favourite recipes for an anti-cookbook, interwoven with brilliant anecdotes . . . all of which accumulates into a bracing polemic about the very idea of eating well. Buy it for the prose." * Daily Mail Event Magazine *