WOM4N: Anna Jones

Anna Jones, cook, stylist, writer and author of A Modern Way to Eat, A Modern Way to Cook and The Modern Cook’s Year, has written about food and feminism, and how the industry has changed since she started in the kitchen fourteen years ago.

AJ: When I look back on my years in the kitchen, I can see things have changed. I started cooking mostly in the company of men, mostly brilliant ones with a couple of real jerks thrown in. Cooking in the kitchen required me to bring some ‘lad’ to work; to smile at the over-the-line jokes, to listen to the banter.

Kitchens back then seemed to have a very male energy and I definitely had to dig deep into my alpha side at times to compete. I was lucky though to work with men who got that cooking well was about the balance between feminine and masculine, that the real power of how we eat lies in nurture. A special shout out to Jamie Oliver, Gennaro Contaldo and Steve Pooley for that.

The landscape in food has changed now fourteen years on. Kitchens (Hallelujah) now have more women in them, some are predominantly staffed by women, and to now work in a kitchen you no longer need to play the alpha games, unless you want to. I work with almost entirely women most days and I wouldn’t want it any other way. But I don’t for a second think that my bubble of London food is the reality.

There is still so much work to be done. The top Michelin kitchens are still mostly headed up by men, and some kitchens still run on adrenaline and machismo. I find this so upside down. How did food, feeding, nurturing, one of the most feminine pursuits (and by this I don’t mean it needs to be done by women, some of the greatest feminine nurturing cooks I know have been men) turn in its highest form into something with such masculine energy?

We need to bang the drum and shout from the rooftops until every woman in every city in this county, country, world has access to exactly the same things as her male counterparts.

Read empowering pieces from Kyo Maclear, Angela Saini, Elizabeth Church, Laline Paull and Rachel Edwards.

Subscribe to the 4th Estate podcast.

[silverpop]

 

Other Articles

Eleanor Wasserberg introduces The Light at the End of the Day

If I invite you over for dinner with my family, be warned, it tends to go like this: we have wine, and then we start talking about the Holocaust. Read More

Sarah Aspinall introduces Diamonds at the Lost and Found

For readers of Hideous Kinky, Dadland and Bad Blood; the astonishing, beguiling story of Sarah Aspinall’s harum scarum childhood, and a love letter to a woman who defied convention to live a life less ordinary. Read More

Valentine by Elizabeth Wetmore

An introduction I have been asked to write a few words about the origins of my debut novel, Valentine. This should be a simple enough task, and one that every writer who is fortunate enough to sell her book should be prepared to complete in a timely fashion. Read More