Food & Cooking

Rachel Roddy’s homage to Michèle Roberts’ recipe for chicken saute with tomatoes and mushrooms

This Napoleonic classic is all too often overcomplicated, but this ode to the French-British author’s version is both simple and stunning A few weeks ago, as part of the British...

AAdmin
July 9, 2026
3 min read
Rachel Roddy’s homage to Michèle Roberts’ recipe for chicken saute with tomatoes and mushrooms

Rachel Roddy’s homage to Michèle Roberts’ chicken saute with tomatoes and mushrooms. Photograph: Rachel Roddy/The Guardian View image in fullscreen Rachel Roddy’s homage to Michèle Roberts’ chicken saute with tomatoes and mushrooms. Photograph: Rachel Roddy/The Guardian A kitchen in Rome Food Rachel Roddy’s homage to Michèle Roberts’ recipe for chicken saute with tomatoes and mushrooms This Napoleonic classic is all too often overcomplicated, but this ode to the French-British author’s version is both simple and stunning

Rachel Roddy Thu 9 Jul 2026 07.00 CEST Share Prefer the Guardian on Google A few weeks ago, as part of the British Library’s food season , the novelist Michèle Roberts , biographer Francesca Wade , writer Eli Davies and food writer Rebecca May Johnson were brought together for a discussion on women’s culinary lives, and on the kitchen as a space of creativity, resistance and intellectual life. I couldn’t be there, but by all accounts it was a brilliant discussion, which I hope was recorded.

I have, though, read all four authors’ recent books. Davies’ perceptive and funny The Spinster Cookbook , which explores what it means to shop, cook (or not) for one in a society designed for couples and families; Wade’s tremendous and deeply researched exploration of the making and remaking of Gertrude Stein in Gertrude Stein: An Afterlife (was Stein a genius or the high priestess of the cult of unintelligibility? We are left to decide); May Johnson’s welcoming, challenging and tomato sauce-filled Small Fires ; and Roberts’ slim, second cookbook, French Cooking for Two .

Food, cooking and feminism are constant themes for Roberts, the French-British author of numerous critically acclaimed novels, including the Booker prize-shortlisted Daughters of the House. Much to the delight of her readers, her first cookbook, French Cooking for One , was published in 2024, and this follow-up was published last year. It is a slim volume containing 170 short and uncomplicated recipes adapted from historical (in particular La Bonne Cuisine de Madame E. Saint-Ange of 1929) and personal recipes (her aunt, Brigette, ran a domestic science college in Isigny-sur-Mer, and kept kitchen notebooks, which inspired many of the recipes). Arranged by season, the recipes offer a no-nonsense introduction to French cooking and the art of eating well: herb soup, green beans with peppers and almonds, braised mussels, chicken with tarragon and capers, lamb Normandy-style, baked eggs with cheese, redcurrants with soft cheese, leek and tomato soup, coffee ice-cream … The message throughout is: cooking shouldn’t be complicated, but fun and self-nourishing.

Roberts’ writing is fun and nourishing, too, and while the recipe instructions are as swift and unfussy as the recipes themselves, there is enough of her witty observation to satisfy. French Cooking for Two is also about friendship. Indeed, its opening line is: “Friendship is my oxygen.” Roberts continues: “Friends delight, surprise and sustain me. Spending time with them fills me with warmth and happiness.” On another occasion, she noted that “sex and poetry and anchovies and friendship and pasta = delight”. And her recipe for chicken saute with tomatoes and mushrooms also equals delight.

The dish was confected for Napoleon, apparently, “after a victorious battle, when supplies had been left behind, but not the chef, who put together an impromptu dinner for the boss with what he requisitioned from a local farmer.…