| We ought
to know about our culinary past. Food and identity is terribly important,
but no one takes it seriously in England." This statement may seem like
a sweeping generalisation, but agent provocateur Tom Jaine is uniquely
placed to make it.
His culinary credentials
are impeccable. When Tom was 12, his stepmother married George Perry-Smith.
Christopher Driver described George's Hole in the Wall in Bath as "the
single most influential restaurant of the post-war years". As a boy, Tom
would whip out of his boarding school after lunch, and into The Hole for
a second lunch. "It was like being a papist in a Methodist school," he
says.
Even in the mid-I 950s,
restaurant life was considered a little racy. "I really liked being part
of the restaurant, it was so Bohemian," he explains. "George had sandals
and a beard and all that French stuff. I liked it. I liked the life. If
you're brought up in any game your environment does tell."
After reading modern
history at Baliol, Tom became an archivist. "I would have liked to be the
new Simon Schama, but archives don't allow that."
However, burrowing
away as a back-room boy didn't last, and scholarship, which in Tom's case
is prodigious, was temporarily consigned to the back burner when, in 1974
George bought The Carved Angel at Dartmouth, and suggested that Tom ran
it with Joyce Molyneaux. "George had been 100 per cent father to me. I
felt tremendous filial solidarity, and we had had lots of adventures, so
I thought, 'Oh, well, whoopee'!"
We hurtle into the
kitchen. Tom is baking bread for lunch. Excitably, he remonstrates with
the dough, or, rather, with the inferior, quick-action yeast he has used.
"This is really bad. It should be double the size."
He returns to The Carved
Angel. "I loved it, absolutely loved it. It was 10 years of bliss. But
I think that in this business you have to give up at 50. If you cook beyond
40, there must be something wrong with you. It's so punishing."
I ask Tom if The Carved
Angel made a lot of money when it became successful.
"We never made a large
profit. George will tell you that money and me don't quite mix. I don't
know what happened. George would say we didn't charge enough. He tried.
We were quite mean and not hideously extravagant."
Tom's slightly wacky,
professorial charm and wit tail off into a sort of boyish helplessness.
"I seem to be very good at business, but I'm just not."
|
Tamasin Day-Lewis
He makes another roll-up
and, with hilarity, goes on to recount the selection process for the Good
Food Guide, which he edited between 1989 and 1994.
"I had to be passed
by the boss of the Consumers Association. He thought I was a limp-wristed
fool from start to finish. I nearly blew it at the interview." After five
years, Tom returned to Devon and became a baker. "I was the world expert
on bread, built my own bread oven, and wrote my bread book, Making Bread
At Home."

'I was the world expert
on bread, built my own oven and wrote my bread book'
Then, seven years ago,
when publisher and food historian Alan Davidson needed to offload Prospect
Books to complete The Oxford Companion to Food, Tom, who describes Alan
as "my other father figure", bought the publishing company. "Alan's twin
prongs had been the ethnology and history of cooking. I've simply carried
on where he left off. The distinction is, I'm probably keener on the history."
Prospect publishes between six and 12 books a year. "We are not talking
Grub Street, we're talking micro-publishing. I never expect to sell more
than 1,000 books, and some only sell 50. I edit, re-write, typeset, design;
the authors get no advances, only royalties. We just keep afloat."
Last year's great success
was Traditional Foods of Britain, by Laura Mason with Catherine
Brown, which Tom describes as "the most important book in any sphere published
last year". It is a book that clearly helps define our contemporary culinary
identity, the issue closest to Tom's heart. "We are quite specifically
different from other European countries. Oh, we're brilliant magpies; we
garner and garnish from our imperial past, but our identity is in crisis. |
I don't
mean we should go out and eat historic dishes, but we should know what
makes us different, not so that it makes us more different, but self-confident
nations have that sense of where they come from."
The 17th- and 18th-century
facsimiles Tom publishes tell us precisely what made English food different;
that we used suet, which no other countries did; cooked puddings when others
didn't (the idea of the pudding cloth is specifically English); that in
the early 19th century, the French did not think our cuisine beyond the
pale but considered us the best roasters. Read William Ellis's The Country
Housewife's Family Companion of 1750 and you will see just how different
the recipes are to, say, a French book of court cookery.
"It is the most wonderful
book," says Tom. "It's one of the few 18th-century books that discusses
the diet, farming, medicine and household of ordinary English people. Most
books were about haute cuisine. Ellis's is almost a social-studies
book. The pig cookery is thrilling - how to salt pork and prepare flitches
of bacon. And the gruels, potages, barley and wheat: we don't cook with
grain these days, but the farmer or peasant did then." Tom is hoping that
Tomas Graves's delightful book Bread and Oil will underwrite the
Ellis, which has only sold 39 copies, but which cost him £5,000 to
produce.
Recent publications
include Helen Sabieri's brilliant Afghan food and Cookery, which
tells of the life, culture and hitherto undocumented cuisine of the Afghanis
and contains an inspirational chapter on cooking rice.
The most exciting future
publication will be George Perry-Smith and Joyce Molyneaux's recipes, which
will arc the past 50 years, the period in which George began the process
of redefining British food and taste.
No Arts Council grant
has been forthcoming to the valiant and valuable Prospect Books. What does
it say about our country, that we are not enabling someone whose driving
passion, appreciation, and deep understanding of food scholarship is unparalleled
to flourish?
If this slim volume
of an enterprise should cease to exist, we will lose something priceless.
Not elite and narrow, but fundamental, a utility, a slice of history that
should exist for future generations.
For a Prospect Books
catalogue, write to Allaleigh House, Blackawton, Totnes TQ9 7DL
(01863 712269; fax:
01803 712311;
email tom.jaine@prospectbooks.co.uk) |