
Pen Vogler
@penvogler
Publicist at Penguin Press. Food historian. Snapper up of unconsidered trifles. “Stuffed: A History of Good Food and Hard Times in Britain” out 2nd Nov
ID: 266184705
https://www.waterstones.com/book/stuffed/pen-vogler/9781838955748 14-03-2011 20:26:20
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Elliot Levey eithne nightingale Dr Karen E. H. Skinazi @DrAndreaHammel @philippesands Elif Shafak Joe Haddow Marcus du Sautoy Pushkin Press At 3.30pm we have the #BookWeek24 keynote with Simon Schama, Frederic Raphael in conversation with Mark Glanville, Woman in Art with Griselda Pollock and Jewish Flavours of Italy



Amongst endless new (sometimes self-indulgent) podcasts this one stands out for addressing a need in the wider world 👏 Sayeeda Warsi David Baddiel podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/a-m…


So looking forward to talking to Prof Diane Purkiss @uniofoxford OxfordLitFest on Saturday at noon Oxford Martin School about the history of food and politics in Britain - and why it matters today 🍜 🍓 🍞 oxfordliteraryfestival.org/literature-eve…

“For me it’s about connecting the dots. And that begins in the kitchen with cooking from scratch…” 👏 Helen Rebanks Retailers, manufacturers and politicians should learn about the health of the land, the body and the economy from people in the kitchen and the farm.

Interesting and - I think balanced? - piece about the latest skirmish in the centuries’ long bread wars… good to hear from so many breadxperts Andrew Whitley Giles Yeo Chris Young, Real Bread Campaign coordinator Chris van Tulleken 🏳️🌈 (and others 😉) theguardian.com/food/2024/mar/…

I’ve thought a lot about mutton and why we hardly eat it, but have only recently stopped to wonder why do we eat lamb… at Easter… when they’ve only just been born? Inspired by Mrs B, Dickens and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall asking here in The New Statesman



Meat from older animals is more obviously in season. Where did this hasty culinary tradition come from? 🖊️ Pen Vogler newstatesman.com/culture/food-d…

“Delicate roast lamb, without the barnyard-y taste of the older animal, is what people in many parts of the world expect as the centrepiece of the religious spring feast.” 🖊️ Pen Vogler newstatesman.com/culture/food-d…


I think Fake History Hunter is right - if you chuck something in a pot it becomes pottage - The Forme of Cury c. 1390 from Foods of England excellent edition has recipes for cabbage, turnips and this one … gourds in pottage.


Think the answer is… mostly piffle! Unless you are a) a world-class athlete b) an OAP. Fascinating programme - I learnt a lot from all contributors (except me - at the end). BBC Radio 4 bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00…


I really enjoyed talking to writer/cook Dr Neil Buttery for his podcast - esp for his deeply learnt knowledge of past recipes. Reminds me of William Kitchiner who said he wrote his cookbook with a pen in one hand and a spit in the other.

Who’s had nettle soup this spring? And who had it in the past? It’s hard to say. If foraging for food is an ancient stand-by for hard times, it’s remarkable - and perhaps revealing - how few records there are. My attempt to grasp this historic nettle in The New Statesman 👇


The lip-tingling foraged food is an ancient reminder of our right to live off the land. 🖊️ Pen Vogler newstatesman.com/culture/food-d…

As someone bred-and-buttered in Leeds, fantastic to learn about its effective and joined-up food and health strategy 👏 👏 👏 HENRY The Food Programme Sheila Dillon bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00…

Remarkable interview with Zelenskiy The Guardian Luke Harding reveals his psychological insight into Putin and Russia. theguardian.com/world/article/…