Imagine the River Tiber as an alimentary tract. Picture a hungry saint. Think of erotic Renaissance fruit paintings, transubstantiation & a tiramisu cafe where magic is surely on the menu... This highly original interpretation of Rome's history, culture, art & religion takes the form of a book about food that's not really about food at all. During his first two years in Rome, David Winner found himself in turn amazed & overwhelmed by its physical, historical & cultural vastness. Then a chance encounter with an extraordinary pudding provided him with the means to start digesting his surroundings. That evening he was struck by the significance of the Roman attitude to food: a unique & unequivocal relationship between sustenance & existence, where every last aspect of life is (and always has been) 'pickled in alimentation'. In Al Dente, Winner takes us on a stroll through the city as he muses idiosyncratically on all things comestible & much else besides. Here we learn about Rome as metropolis & necropolis, about tasty vineyard snails & the food-&-sex scandal that sent Saint Jerome packing. The cinematic greats such as Argento, Fellini & Ferreri are discussed alongside historical political satire where grocery orgies were art & the penis was the subject of hagiographies. There are the bloodthirsty antics of an eighteenth-century executioner who worked for the pope, stories of immolation, architecture & artichokes, & a telephone interview with a nun who makes Eucharistic wafers. There's also a nice 1891 recipe for stewed lamb's head. Winner is a master of wit & diversity with a seemingly insatiable appetite for peculiar detail & disturbances on the cultural landscape. In Al Dente, his ability to explore the world around him as a series of interconnections provides an intriguing new portrait of a remarkable city
- a veritable trifle of Roman bedrock & apogee, cosmos & counterculture to be devoured with gusto. Buon appetito...