The Devil's Picnic by Taras Grescoe
An account of the writer's travels to sample legally forbidden foods around the world. Each chapter focuses on a particular food item (coca, moonshine, raw milk cheeses, poppy seed crackers and chewing gum, absinthe, hot, chocolate, bull's balls, Cuban cigars and pentobarbital sodium) with emphasis on currently prohibited foods except for the chapter on chocolate, coffee and tea. Accounts of the author's attempts to procure and sample the forbidden foods are mixed with descriptions of the history and current status of prohibition. The author argues convincingly that criminalization of foods is more often an attempt to control the working class or dissent, than because of the health or moral reasons often cited. For the most part I found the book enjoyable and interesting, with the sole exception being the chapter on poppy seed crackers and chewing gum, where Grescoe spends too much time chronicling his ostentatious gum chewing on the Singapore subways rather than delving into the history of prohibition and control in Singapore.
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