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Cover image for product 0471273449
Stalking the Green Fairy: And Other Fantastic Adventures in Food and Drink
ISBN: 978-0-471-27344-8
Hardcover
320 pages
May 2004
US $27.95 Add to Cart

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This is a Print-on-Demand title. It will be printed specifically to fill your order. Please allow an additional 1-2 days delivery time for paperbacks, and 3-5 days for hardcovers. The book is not returnable.
  • Description
  • Table of Contents
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  • Reviews
“Last October, James Villas was named best food writer at Bon Appètit’s sixth annual American Food & Entertaining Awards. After reading Stalking the Green Fairy, a collection of his essays, you’ll see why. The anthology contains some of his finest musings on food and drink, including stories he wrote for Bon Appètit on the joys of canned tuna and the importance of pork in southern cooking” (Bon Appètit, June 2004)

With this lively collection of essays on topics ranging from the pleasures of commercial peanut butter to the wonders of home-cured gravlax, former Town and Country food and wine editor Villas is in top form, displaying the humor, intelligence and strong-mindedness that have made him the South's proud answer to Jeffrey Steingarten. Whether defending Southern regional dishes beloved by "rebs," such as grits, fruitcake and pimento cheese, or attacking the pretensions of foodie snobs and "rubes" who think raw tuna goes with everything, Villas refuses to be pushed around by fashion. Instead, he is a man on a mission to understand and celebrate what is authentic about his greatest epicurean passions, from canned tuna to vintage champagne rose. Though eloquent in his forays overseas as he seeks out the perfect salade niçoise or the illicit history of absinthe (the green fairy of the title), North Carolina-born Villas truly shines when he's on American soil. His odes to such American staples as the Club sandwich, chicken salad, meatloaf, iceberg lettuce and chowder are classic, combining personal anecdote, his tory and the author's own enticing recipes. The book loses a bit of steam in the final section, where Villas's contrarian take on everything from lemongrass to sharing food in restaurants descends into crankiness. But at his best, in the grip of an enthusiasm, whether it's buying Château d'Yquem sauterne at auction or rhapsodizing about bulk shopping at Costco, Villas will delight foodies as well as his loyal fans. (Publishers Weekly, April 12, 2004)