André Simon Food and Drink Book Awards 2022

Andreě Simon Shortlist

Established over four decades ago to celebrate the very best of contemporary food and drink writing, the books nominated for the André Simon Food and Drink Book Awards 2022 cover themes which range from foraged foods to an exploration of grief through cooking, the remarkable medicinal history of alcohol to the colonial roots of the global wine industry.

There are seven food and four drink books in this year’s shortlist. The food books reflect theburgeoning trend of memoir in food writing, intertwining human  relationships and stories with food and recipes. As the shortlisted book Eat, Share, Love observes: food can be a universal language and sharing our intimate personal stories behind recipes has the ability to ‘build bridges.’ Unusually, five of this year’s food books also come from first-time authors. Each year the André Simon trustees are guided by independent assessors.

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Fozia Ismail is this year’s food assessor. She is a cook, scholar and founder of Arawelo Eats, a platform for exploring politics, identity and colonialism through East African food. Matt Walls is this year’s drink assessor, he is an award-winning freelance wine writer, author and consultant who contributes to various UK and international publications.

“This year’s André Simon Food & Drink Book Awards shortlist is a testament to the remarkable talent and diversity in the world of food and drink writing, as well as some impressive first-time writers. From memoirs to in-depth historical explorations, these books show the power of food and drink to bring people together, heal and inspire. Food is not just sustenance for our bodies but also for our souls. It is a privilege to celebrate and recognise these exceptional works.” –
Nick Lander, Chair of the André Simon Awards.

Click on the links below to read our reviews of the shortlisted food books
Breadsong Kitty and Al Tait, Bloomsbury Publishing
Cooking: Simply and Well, for One or Many, Jeremy Lee, Fourth Estate
Eat Share Love Kalpna Woolf, Meze Publishing
Lune: Croissants All Day, All Night,  Kate Reid, Hardie Grant
Motherland,  Melissa Thompson,  Bloomsbury Publishing
The Wilderness Cure,  Mo Wilde,  Simon & Schuster
The Year of Miracles,  Ella Risbridger, Bloomsbury Publishing

Breadsong by Kitty and Al Tait tells the inspiring story of how baking changed the lives of the dad and daughter team behind The Orange Bakery in Oxfordshire, transforming teenager Kitty’s life after suffering from crippling depression, accompanied by their favourite recipes. Cooking: Simply and Well, for One Or Many by Jeremy Lee is a masterclass in simple everyday ingredients uncovering the renowned chef’s rediscovery of home cooking; brimming with stories, wit and indispensable advice. Eat Share Love by Kalpna Woolf is an inspirational collection of recipes from home cooks around the world accompanied by the personal stories behind them,revealing touching tales of love, family, friendship, happiness, loss, laughter and much more.

Lune: Croissants All Day, All Night by Kate Reid is the ultimate guide to perfectly and precisely baking the world’s best-loved pastry and Kate’s journey from Formula One engineer to owner of the Lune Croissanterie where precision and innovation remain essential. Motherland by Melissa Thompson is a celebration of Jamaican food and the island’s complex cultural history, taking us on a journey from its roots to the modern dishes now eaten around the world, with in-depth research woven into the recipes and personal stories.

The Wilderness Cure by Mo Wilde is a diary of a wild experiment; a timely and inspiring memoir of Mo’s radical pledge: to live only off free, foraged food for an entire year. She sees foraging as one of the last acts of defiance in the concrete world. The Year of Miracles by Ella Risbridger is a heart warming mix of memoir and food writing. Ella charts a year through the lens of her kitchen, weaving touching reflections on grief, love and hope together with must-try recipes.

This year’s food assessor Fozia Ismail explains: “It’s been a really difficult decision shortlisting these wonderful books. Many of the shortlisted works have a strong narrative quality that speaks to the emotionally challenging times we live in today, as well as providing inspiring food stories and recipes that give solace, learning, and joy.  What an achievement for all the authors shortlisted and thank you for such wonderful work!”

The Shortlisted Drink Books 
A Sense of Place Dave Broom Octopus
Drinking with the Valkyries Andrew Jefford Academie du Vin Library
Imperial Wine Jennifer Regan-Lefebvre University of California Press
The Perfect Tonic Camper English William Collins

This year’s shortlisted drinks books delve into whisky, wine, colonialism and the history of alcohol and medicine, offering new perspectives. In A Sense of Place, former André Simon winner Dave Broom, travels around his native Scotland visiting distilleries from Islay to Orkney telling the story of whisky’s history, considering what whisky is now, and where it is going, with stunning specially commissioned photography by Christina Kernohan.

In Drinking with the Valkyries author Andrew Jefford shares his fascinating observations from half a century of wine discovery. This collection of revised essays, opinions, and articles explores the beauty of wine difference, offering a philosophy of wine founded on personal discovery. Imperial Wine by Jennifer Regan-Lefebvre provides a deep dive into the colonial roots of the global wine industry. This is the first book to argue that today’s wine industry exists as a result of settler colonialism and that imperialism was central to viticulture in the British colonies. The Perfect Tonic by Camper English is an interconnected history of alcohol and medicine. The book reveals how and why the contents of our medicine and liquor cabinets were, until recently, one and the same.

Matt Walls shortlist (2)

This year’s Drinks assessor Matt Walls discusses the shortlist: “After much deliberation, our final drinks shortlist contains four contrasting styles of book, all of which are equally absorbing. Dave Broom’s A Sense of Place transports you to Scotland so vividly you can almost smell the whisky, as he looks at its links to people, place, culture and community.

In The Perfect Tonic, Camper English covers the fascinating and peculiar medicinal history of beer, wines, spirits and cocktails with irrepressible flair and wit. In her eye-opening, meticulously-researched Imperial Wine Jennifer Regan-Lefebvre examines how deeply the roots of the international wine trade are embedded in Empire and settler colonialism. And finally, in Drinking with the Valkyries, Andrew Jefford lets us share his wonder of wine through his peerlessly precise use of the English language.”

The winners will be announced at an in-person awards ceremony on Tuesday 14 March, an event that’s become an annual celebration of Britain’s best food and drink writing.

About the André Simon Food & Drink Book Awards
The André Simon Food & Drink Book Awards were founded in 1978 to honour the charismatic leader of the English wine trade André Louis Simon who wrote 104 books throughout his lifetime. They are the only awards in the UK to exclusively recognise the achievements of food and drink writers. Past winners include Elizabeth David, Michel Roux, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, Nigel Slater, Rick Stein, Hugh Johnson and Oz Clarke.

There are two categories for entry: food and drinks. For the winner of each category there is an award of £2,000. In addition, there are awards of £1,500 in honour of John Avery and the Special Commendation Award of £1,500 – both of these are at the discretion of the judges.

The André Simon Food & Drink Book Award Trustees are Nicholas Lander (Chair), Sarah Jane Evans MW, David Gleave MW and Xanthe Clay. See further details on the awards, the judging criteria, judges and trustees via the website at www.andresimon.co.uk.

An interview with Yemisi Aribisala: Food Assessor 2021 – André Simon Food and Drink Book Awards

YemisiAribisala
How did you get involved with the André Simon Food and Drink Book Awards?

Salt of the earth Xanthe Clay, Columnist, Chef, and trustee of the food prize sent me a message inviting me to help assess the 2021 Food Books. My first interaction with André Simon was an email titled The André Simon Shortlist 2016 EMBARGOED. I was sitting in the Western Cape stunned that my book Longthroat Memoirs: Soups, Sex and Nigerian Taste Buds had been shortlisted and fretting whether Simon was like Nina Simone or Paul Simon.

It seems as though there are a mountain of great food and cookery books published every year, how many did you start with and what was your process in whittling them down to your longlist?

Books tend to arrive like summer rain- spots, drizzles then downpour. I am quite sure this is the yearly pattern. The truth is you have to get on top of the reading as soon as possible and you have to keep in mind that this is the sum of people’s YEARS of hard labour, sweat and pain that you hold in your hands. Without being able to meet all the people who make that thing in your hand possible, you have to conjure up their presence, interact with every single book with great reverence. And then decide what adds something unique to the existing cannon, has longevity, distinct gastronomical appeal and would be the choice of the great André Simon who founded the prize in 1965. Who would he give his 100 guineas to?

What makes a book worthy of the André Simon longlist for you?

You come across so many books as you’ve accurately noted- a book worthy of the longlist has got to offer brilliance that distinctly stands out. The index for comparison stretches backwards and forwards, if you see what I mean. If you imagine that the trustees have seen thousands of really great books on food and drink spanning the years, and that the trustees constitute that incredible sentient index that you are presenting your book to for comparison…their responsibility is to make sure a book longlisted or shortlisted is one that you want to own, read, cook from in 10, 20 years from now.

Did you notice any trends in food publishing while reading through the contenders?

The pandemic created a flood of talented home cookery books. And you would imagine that perhaps not much more could come out of there that the vibrant cookbook publishing world hadn’t seen already. It was truly fascinating. Following that, were the goodhearted one-pan books instinctively catering to the anxieties of people that hitherto hadn’t worried too much about churning meals out daily.

Was there anything in terms of voices or subject matter that you either felt was missing in this year’s selection of published books that you read in order to select your longlist or that you would have liked to have seen more of?

I definitely would have loved to see books on Sub-Saharan African food, West-coast Africa, books that come out of wonderful communities like Little Lagos, London – especially as this year had such a wonderful global reach. Also more food memoirs from all kinds of intermingling of life and cooking.

What do you think will be the future of food and cookery writing in the UK in the next 5-10 years?

I believe there will be more food memoirs taking us right into people’s lives, homes, rooms, pots and pans, helping us interpret humanity in broader, more open minded, kinder terms. I think this is welcome because the beauty of food books is they remove the tension of meeting others and knock in place the fact that we are all the same, we all eat, for pleasure, for sustenance…Every single one of us all want basically the same things in life. I believe the UK ‘palate’ will expand for sure especially where it regards migration and the wonderful offerings of delicious niches like supper clubs and underground dining…how they represent the true diversity of culture, taste and eating in the United Kingdom.

Lastly, I believe the pandemic has forced a balance in the nation’s perspective where food writing is concerned. Yes hedonism and escapism and beautiful photographs are necessary because pleasure is its own brand of necessity, but also the reality of budgets, feeding communities and prisons, and making sure children are nurtured will be the themes of books in the next decade. I hope so.

Yemisi Aribisala, is best known for her thematic use of food writing to explore Nigerian culture. Her first book, Longthroat Memoirs: Soups Sex & Nigerian Tastebuds won the 2016 John Avery Prize at the André Simon Awards and was shortlisted for the 2018 Art of Eating awards. Her writing has been published worldwide.

To find out more about the André Simon Food and Drink Book Awards click here