Pulp Fiction
Marketed as the taste of French summer, Orangina’s origins are complicated.
Marketed as the taste of French summer, Orangina’s origins are complicated.
Born into poverty on 8 June 1783, Antonin Carême’s spectacular confectionary constructions made him patissier to royalty.
The ‘way of tea’ is a ritual experience that embodies the natural world with all its imperfections.
Efforts by the German scientist Friedrich Accum brought about widespread awareness of the dangers of food adulteration, paving the way for legislation that protects what we eat today.
Alcohol was part of daily life in the colonial Maghreb. In 1913 the French banned alcohol in Tunisia, revealing a deep distrust of local drinks and their Jewish and Muslim makers.
Cloves, grown in Indonesia, crossed the globe in the Middle Ages, showing how interconnected the medieval world was.
Alcohol was an integral part of diplomacy in early modern Russia.
The real history of wine can be a dry – even bitter – beverage.
In England, Shrove Tuesday has not just symbolised feasting, fasting and family, but riot and rebellion, too.
The belief that you are what you eat emerged in 19th-century France, where the pleasures of the table were sautéed with philosophy and medicine.