Delia Smith Delmonico's Restaurant Dione Lucas Egon Ronay Elena Molokhovets Eliza Acton Eliza Leslie Elizabeth Coleman White Elizabeth Craig Elizabeth David Elizabeth Raffald Fannie Merrit Farmer School Fannie Merritt Farmer Fanny Cradock Francois Pierre de la Varenne Francois Vatel Galloping Gourmet Gary Rhodes Georges-Auguste Escoffier Gino d'Acampo Gordon Ramsay Graham Kerr Grimod de la Reynière Harold McGee Harumi Kurihara Henry John Heinz Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall Irma Rombauer Isabella Mary Beeton James John Howard Gregory Jane Grigson Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin Jean-Étienne de Boré Jean-Pierre Clause Jean Paré Previous | Next | Jane Grigson© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedJane Grigson lived from 13 March 1928 - 12 March 1990, dying just one day shy of her 62nd birthday. She was a middle-class, well-travelled food writer writing for such an audience. She would spend three months every year in France. She brought a lot of historical context into her writing. She felt that no cook was original, and always tried to provide sources and historical content for her recipes, rather than presenting them as springing brand new from her mind. She never warmed up to frozen foods, and towards the end of her life, she had little patience for the "health concerns trends of the day" over things such as cholesterol. Her maiden name was McIntyre. She was born in Gloucester, but when she was two, her family moved to Sunderland (in Durham County, England on the North Sea, just south of Newcastle) where her father worked as a town clerk. The very first thing she ever had in print was a piece on the monk the Venerable Bede, who was also from Sunderland, for the Sunderland Echo newspaper. Jane went to Casterton School in Cumbria, then graduated from Cambridge University in 1949 with a degree in English. She married Geoffrey Grigson (1905 - 1985), a poet and a critic (it was his third marriage.) They had met in 1953 while both working for the publisher, "George Rainbird." The couple would have one child, Sophie Grigson, who would become a food writer as well. She and George would eventually have a holiday home in Troo, France, where they went for approximately three months every year. She took on various clerical jobs in galleries and publishers. Outside the food world, she is remembered for the work she did translating books from Italian into English, such as Pinocchio (which she did in 1959), Beccaria's "The Column of Infamy of Crime and Punishments" (which she did in 1963), as well as Giovannia A. Ciobotto's "Scano Boa." In 1966, she was a recipient of the John Florio Prize for Italian translation. Despite her intimate knowledge of Italian, however, she never did do a book on Italian food. In 1967, she published her first food book, "Charcuterie and French Pork Cookery." It was actually Adey Horton (1912-), whom she and George had met in France, who had been hired to write the book; he enlisted her to help with the research in 1963. Horton was impressed by Grigson's research, and handed the entire project to her. From translation she slid into editing, and in 1968, at the age of 40, became the cooking editor at the Observer newspaper, and kept that post until 1990. She died in the spring of 1990 in Broad Town, Wiltshire, where they had a farm house. Jane's papers have been stored at the Oxford Brookes Library since 2006. Before that, it was at the Guildhall in London. [1] Books1967. Charcuterie and French Pork Cookery 1971. Good Things 1979. Food With The Famous 1983. The Observer Guide to European Cookery 1984. The Observer Guide to British Cookery 1987. The Cooking of Normandy (for Sainsbury's) 1973. Fish Cookery 1974. English Food 1975. The Mushroom Feast 1978. Jane Grigsons Vegetable Book 1982. Jane Grigson's Fruit Book 1992. The Enjoyment of Food - The Best of Jane Grigson (posthumous) Awards1966. John Florio Prize for Italian translation 1978. Glenfiddich Writer of the Year Award (for her vegetable book) 1978. André Simon Memorial Fund Book Award (for her vegetable book) 1982. Glenfiddich Writer of the Year Award (for her fruit book) 1982. André Simon Memorial Fund Book Award (for her fruit book)
Bateman, Michael. Jane Grigson's piscine revisions: After 20 years, a book on fish by one of Britain's greatest cookery writers is republished. London: The Independent. 18 July 1993. Jane Grigson Trust. Jane Grigson. Retrieved July 2009 from http://www.janegrigsontrust.org.uk/about.html. MacLeod, Donald. The Cook's Books. Manchester: The Guardian. 3 January 2006. Slater, Nigel. English Heritage. Manchester: The Observer. 30 June 2002. Slater, Nigel. The quiet revolutionary. Manchester: The Observer. 10 June 2007. [1] Wroe, Nicholas. A handsome feast. Manchester: The Guardian. 10 September 2005. Other entries for: BiographiesAgnes Bertha Marshall, Ainsley Harriott, Alessandro Filippini, Alexis Benoit Soyer, Anthimus, Antony Worrall Thompson, Archestratus, Arnold Reuben, Athenaeus, Bartolomeo Scappi, Billy Reed, Catherine de Medici, Catherine Emily Callbeck Dalgairns, César Ritz, Charles Elmé Francatelli, Charles E. Hires, Charles Mason Hovey, Charles Ranhofer, Clarissa Dickson-Wright, Clementine Paddleford, Constance Spry, Delia Smith, Delmonico's Restaurant, Delmonico Potatoes, Dione Lucas, Egon Ronay, Elena Molokhovets, Eliza Acton, Eliza Leslie, Elizabeth Coleman White, Elizabeth Craig, Elizabeth David, Elizabeth Raffald, Fannie Merritt Farmer, Fanny Cradock, Francois Pierre de la Varenne, Francois Vatel, Gary Rhodes, Georges-Auguste Escoffier, Gino d'Acampo, Gordon Ramsay, Graham Kerr, Grimod de la Reynière, Harold McGee, Harumi Kurihara, Henry John Heinz, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, Irma Rombauer, Isabella Mary Beeton, James John Howard Gregory, Jane Grigson, Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin, Jean-Étienne de Boré, Jean-Pierre Clause, Jean Paré, Jennifer Paterson, John Cadbury, John Lawson Johnston, John Tradescant, Joseph Campbell, Josephine Garis Cochrane, Julia Child, La Maison Dorée, Laurie Colwin, Louis Eustache Ude, Louis Fauchère, Luther Burbank, Lydia Maria Francis Child, Madhur Jaffrey, Marcella Hazan, Margaret Costa, Marguerite Patten, Maria Parloa, Marie-Antoine Carême, Mars Family, Mary Randolph, Milton S. Hershey, Mithaecus, Nigel Slater, Nigella Lawson, Paul Blangé, Philip Harben, Pierre Blot, Pillsbury Bake-Offs, Platina, Raymond Calvel, Rufus Estes, Taillevent, Tate & Lyle, Thomas Laxton, Two Fat Ladies, Walter Tennyson Swingle, White Castle, William Cobbett |
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