One needn't venture very far into Adam Gopnik's new book before beginning to wonder if there's anything more to be said about food with all the publications, TV shows and movies devoted to the topic.
With foodie culture encompassing everything from locavores, who eat only locally grown foods, and the slow food movement to Ferran Adria's "techno-emotional" cooking and molecular gastronomy, it seems there has never been a time when society has been more obsessed by food.
But Gopnik points out that it only seems that way.
Man's obsession with food is as old as civilisation itself, or as he succinctly puts it: "An animal that eats and thinks must think big about what it is eating not to be taken for an animal."
So Gopnik's book, The Table Comes First,, finds its niche as a sort of intellectual history of eating, beginning at the table with its rituals and tracing them all the way back to Paris of the 1750s where the restaurant was born and where he explains, "the idea of eclectic eating in big cities began".