Omelette
On sale
10th June 2021
Price: £9.99
Genre
Sunday Telegraph’s FIVE BEST BOOKS FOR FOODIES this Christmas – ‘a must read… packed full of nostalgic food memories, weaving in family, friendship and love.’
“Are you hungry darling, shall I make you an omelette?”
My mother’s omelettes are slightly overdone but always generous in cheese and well-seasoned. My omelettes are just the same, though more often slightly underdone and less carefully considered. And like my stories, they come in many forms. You might get one late at night, after a little too much wine and alongside a little too much information. I might spend a long time on one that’s just a touch extravagant. And many are for the people I care about most, thrown together and with more cheese than is strictly necessary.
Collected here are things I’ve done, things I’ve seen, things I’ve thought, and most importantly, things I’ve tasted. They’re slices of parts of my life. Call them omelettes, if you like. I hope you enjoy them.
‘Jessie’s life seems to have seamlessly brought her forth on a magic carpet of food, peppered by lots and lots of laughs. Her stories are a joy to read, although probably not as much fun as they are to live. Deliciously entertaining’. – Yotam Ottolenghi
‘Gobbled this up in 90 minutes. A dreamy food memoir which is stuffed full of warmth and feeling and fun. If you love Table Manners you’ll adore this book by Jessie Ware. Now I’m gagging for some hot buttered toast.’ – Bella Mackie
‘Love it, laughed cried in parts…. I so enjoyed reading about Jessie’s life through food …. Childbirth and Bolognese forever imprinted on my mind.’ – Angela Hartnett
‘Joie de vivre is the bass note throughout the pages of Omelette’ – Harper’s Bazaar
‘A delicious fusion of memoir and ode to food.’ – Grazia
‘A charming and funny memoir … you want to eat everything she describes’ – Daily Mail
‘A must read’ – Stella Magazine
‘A great one for foodies who live for nostalgia’ – GQ
‘A charming and funny memoir’ – Irish Daily Mail
‘A love letter to friends, first loves, faith and family, but most importantly – to food’ – Reaction
“Are you hungry darling, shall I make you an omelette?”
My mother’s omelettes are slightly overdone but always generous in cheese and well-seasoned. My omelettes are just the same, though more often slightly underdone and less carefully considered. And like my stories, they come in many forms. You might get one late at night, after a little too much wine and alongside a little too much information. I might spend a long time on one that’s just a touch extravagant. And many are for the people I care about most, thrown together and with more cheese than is strictly necessary.
Collected here are things I’ve done, things I’ve seen, things I’ve thought, and most importantly, things I’ve tasted. They’re slices of parts of my life. Call them omelettes, if you like. I hope you enjoy them.
‘Jessie’s life seems to have seamlessly brought her forth on a magic carpet of food, peppered by lots and lots of laughs. Her stories are a joy to read, although probably not as much fun as they are to live. Deliciously entertaining’. – Yotam Ottolenghi
‘Gobbled this up in 90 minutes. A dreamy food memoir which is stuffed full of warmth and feeling and fun. If you love Table Manners you’ll adore this book by Jessie Ware. Now I’m gagging for some hot buttered toast.’ – Bella Mackie
‘Love it, laughed cried in parts…. I so enjoyed reading about Jessie’s life through food …. Childbirth and Bolognese forever imprinted on my mind.’ – Angela Hartnett
‘Joie de vivre is the bass note throughout the pages of Omelette’ – Harper’s Bazaar
‘A delicious fusion of memoir and ode to food.’ – Grazia
‘A charming and funny memoir … you want to eat everything she describes’ – Daily Mail
‘A must read’ – Stella Magazine
‘A great one for foodies who live for nostalgia’ – GQ
‘A charming and funny memoir’ – Irish Daily Mail
‘A love letter to friends, first loves, faith and family, but most importantly – to food’ – Reaction
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Reviews
Jessie's life seems to have seamlessly brought her forth on a magic carpet of food, peppered by lots and lots of laughs. Her stories are a joy to read, although probably not as much fun as they are to live. Deliciously entertaining.
Joie de vivre is the bass note throughout the pages of Omelette
A delicious fusion of memoir and ode to food
A charming and funny memoir ... you want to eat everything she describes
A great one for foodies who live for nostalgia
A love letter to friends, first loves, faith and family, but most importantly - to food
A charming and funny memoir