HP Sauce My Ancestors' Legacy

HP Sauce My Ancestors' Legacy
Author: Nigel Britton
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 271
Release: 2013-06
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1481797034

Today we have television programmes such as Who Do You Think You Are to thank for the hundreds of thousands of enthusiasts who have now taken up the fascinating hobby of tracing their ancestors, learning about their careers and lives. The author was drawn to the history of HP Sauce and his family's involvement, having spent several years researching childhood anecdotes. His ancestors the Eastwood, Moore, and Britton families all had several business interests in the Victorian and Edwardian periods in the manufacturing industries that were commonplace throughout the North and Midlands of the United Kingdom during that period. HP Sauce perhaps being one of those most famous amongst them. With decades of rumours and myths about the true meaning of the acronym HP, and with the modern medium of the Internet adding to that speculation, the author set about to seek out the truth of his ancestors involvement with the sauce, and this interest brought about his book, HP Sauce: My Ancestors' Legacy and Its History from 1874 to 2013.

The Heinz HP Sauce Book

The Heinz HP Sauce Book
Author: H.J. Heinz Foods UK Limited
Publisher: Random House
Total Pages: 99
Release: 2023-06-01
Genre: Cooking
ISBN: 1473599156

The Official HP Sauce Book celebrating one of the nations' favourite sauces and store-cupboard icons (if not The Favourite!) Featuring 30 brand new recipes showcasing fun and innovative ways to cook with HP Sauce. Taking inspiration from HP Sauce's iconic history, there is something for every fan to enjoy, from the essential giant sausage roll and full English baps to epic chips in gravy. Plus quick, clever and delicious meals such as jerk inspired chicken, pies, Swedish meatballs and a Cheat's Pad Thai which will surprise and delight the whole family, especially when they all discover the secret ingredient! Beautifully designed and illustrated with specially commissioned recipe photography along with fascinating illustrations and vintage adverts from the Heinz archive, including the history of the House of Commons' famous square bottles, infographics, fun facts & stats and HP's most famous fans, this is the perfect, irresistible gift for brown sauce devotees of all ages.

The Nearly True Story of the Furrits

The Nearly True Story of the Furrits
Author: Nick Jackman
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 104
Release: 2015-05-10
Genre: Humor
ISBN: 1326245481

""I wonder if larks get vertigo?"" said Eric, squinting up at the clear summer sky. His left foot struck a large stone in the middle of the path. ""What's vertigo?"" asked Freda, trudging along by his side. ""It's a sort of dizziness you get when you think you're going to fall,"" said the Furrit, picking himself up, brushing the dust off his fur and wishing the trees and hedgerows would stop spinning around... And that's how it all begins. Eric and Freda are Furrits - small, stout, self-deluded animals who are convinced they're right and the rest of the world is out of step. But they are tolerated - more or less - by the hedgehogs, moles, rabbits, foxes, stoats and hares who share the Woodland; until one fateful day. Coming across a 'For Sale' sign in a field, it dawns (slowly) on the Furrits that the Humans are selling land. Always on the lookout for ways to make money, they decide to do the same...

Based on a True Story

Based on a True Story
Author: Elizabeth Renzetti
Publisher: House of Anansi
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2014-06-06
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1770893148

A delectable satirical novel about celebrity culture, journalism, truth, lies, consequences — about the fictions we tell ourselves and the fictions we tell others. Augusta Price (not her real name) is famous in England for playing a slatternly barmaid on a nighttime soap opera and for falling down drunk in public. Now, she has no job, no relationship with her long-lost son, and a sad shortage of tranquilizers — but she has had an improbable hit with her memoir (which is based on a true story, but only very loosely). But when Frances Bleeker — an insecure and not very successful American tabloid journalist — tells Augusta that a man she once loved has written a book, Augusta becomes terrified that her life story will be revealed as the web of lies it really is. She sets out on a trans-Atlantic journey from London to California to seek revenge on her former lover — a journey that will require the reluctant help of Frances.

Based on a True Story

Based on a True Story
Author: Anthony Holden
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 345
Release: 2021-10-28
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 147115470X

From poker to poetry, poisoners to princes, opera to the Oscars, Shakespeare to Olivier, Mozart to Murdoch, Anthony Holden seems to have rolled many writers’ lives into one. Author of 35 books on a ‘crazy’ range of subjects, this cocky Lancashire lad-turned-bohemian citizen of the world has led an apparently charmed life from Merseyside to Buckingham Palace, the White House and beyond. As he turns 70, the award-winning journalist and biographer – grandson of an England footballer, son of a seaside shopkeeper, friend of the famous from Princess Diana to Peter O'Toole, Mick Jagger to Salman Rushdie – spills the beans on showbiz names to literary sophisticates, rock stars to royals as he looks back whimsically and wittily on a richly varied, anecdote- and action-packed career – concluding, in the words of Robert Louis Stevenson, that ‘Life is not a matter of holding good cards, but of playing a poor hand well’.

The Food Industries of Europe in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries

The Food Industries of Europe in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
Author: Alain Drouard
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 285
Release: 2016-03-16
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1317031547

The industrialization of food preservation and processing has been a dramatic development across Europe during modern times. This book sets out its story from the beginning of the nineteenth century when preservation of food from one harvest to another was essential to prevent hunger and even famine. Population growth and urbanization depended upon a break out from the ’biological ancien regime’ in which hunger was an ever-present threat. The application of mass production techniques by the food industries was essential to the modernization of Europe. From the mid-nineteenth century the development of food industries followed a marked regional pattern. After an initial growth in north-west Europe, the spread towards south-east Europe was slowed by social, cultural and political constraints. This was notable in the post-Second World War era. The picture of change in this volume is presented by case studies of countries ranging from the United Kingdom in the west to Romania in the east. All illustrate the role of food industries in creating new products that expanded the traditional cereal-based diet of pre-industrial Europe. Industrially preserved and processed foods provided new flavours and appetizing novelties which led to brand names recognized by consumers everywhere. Product marketing and advertising became fundamental to modern food retailing so that Europe’s largest food producers, Danone, Nestlé and Unilever, are numbered amongst the world’s biggest companies.

Consuming Angels

Consuming Angels
Author: Lori Anne Loeb
Publisher: New York : Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 237
Release: 1994
Genre: Advertising
ISBN: 0195085965

Stylishly written and featuring a wealth of illustrations, Consuming Angels demonstrates how advertisements picked up hedonistic patterns in Victorian culture, glorified the culture's consumerism, and mythologized a middle-class life which offered prosperity for all.

The Oxford Companion to Food

The Oxford Companion to Food
Author: Alan Davidson
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 1944
Release: 2006-09-21
Genre: Cooking
ISBN: 0191018252

The Oxford Companion to Food by Alan Davidson, first published in 1999, became, almost overnight, an immense success, winning prizes and accolades around the world. Its combination of serious food history, culinary expertise, and entertaining serendipity, with each page offering an infinity of perspectives, was recognized as unique. The study of food and food history is a new discipline, but one that has developed exponentially in the last twenty years. There are now university departments, international societies, learned journals, and a wide-ranging literature exploring the meaning of food in the daily lives of people around the world, and seeking to introduce food and the process of nourishment into our understanding of almost every compartment of human life, whether politics, high culture, street life, agriculture, or life and death issues such as conflict and war. The great quality of this Companion is the way it includes both an exhaustive catalogue of the foods that nourish humankind - whether they be fruit from tropical forests, mosses scraped from adamantine granite in Siberian wastes, or body parts such as eyeballs and testicles - and a richly allusive commentary on the culture of food, whether expressed in literature and cookery books, or as dishes peculiar to a country or community. The new edition has not sought to dim the brilliance of Davidson's prose. Rather, it has updated to keep ahead of a fast-moving area, and has taken the opportunity to alert readers to new avenues in food studies.