Alexandra Antonioni

Eat Me: Love, Sex and the Art of Eating


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      For my family, who have supported me through every Beginning, Middle and End and without whom my life would be a very empty place indeed.

      And for the next generation: James, Max, Cristian and Sacha.

      CONTENTS

       COVER

       TITLE PAGE

       Room Service

       The Mini-Break

       Indoor Picnics

       Meet Me After Work and Bring a Toothbrush

       Rude Food

       Those Three Little Words

       Your First Quarrel

       The End of the Beginning

       THE MIDDLE

       7TH Heaven

       You Are Cordially Invited To …

       Pet Names

       Forever Friends

       Domestic Bliss?

       Soul Mates

       Eating al Fresco

       I Don’t Like Mondays

       Welcome to Lola’s

       La Famiglia

       Home Alone

       In Sickness and in Health

       Reality Check

       THE END

       Thunder & Lightning

       The End is Nigh

       Once More With Feeling …

       The Last Dance …

       Food Glorious Food

       The Six Stages of the End

       Ouch … It Hurts …

       All You Need is Love …

       POSTSCRIPT

       ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       ABOUT THE AUTHOR

       COPYRIGHT

       ABOUT THE PUBLISHER

       By Marco Pierre White

      Quite simply the joy of Eat Me is that it extols the virtues of Love, Sex and Food, three things everyone has experience of, and that people just love talking about.

      Food has, throughout the ages, been synonymous with hedonistic pleasure, with finding love, falling in love and sometimes losing love. Eat Me demonstrates with an informed, seductive and cheeky approach how to marry food with the various stages of romantic relationships. Nothing is left to chance, from first date dinners, postcoital snacks, meeting the future in-laws and making up after your first big row, right through to fabulous recipes for comfort food should it all go horribly wrong. I’ve been there and I’m quite sure you have too.

      Nothing inspires romance quite like food. The cunningly pre-meditated but seemingly effortless way that Alex recommends the seduction and subsequent nurturing of a lover through cooking