clockwise: Put A Egg On It #4, ed Jenn de la Vega, Brooklyn, NY, 2011 \\ Mouthfeel Issue 4, ed Mac Malikowski, New York, NY 2014 \\ Soy Not Oi, Hippycore Krew, 1990, \\ Gotta Cook, Mother Shanghai, Shanghai, China, 2020
I could write the next dozen entries on food zines and still have things to include, so I’m picking four that are particularly influential on the project and give a survey of what I could see this being.
1. Put A Egg On It - Immediately recognizable due to its trademark green paper, Put A Egg On It is a Brooklyn based zine started in 2008. It’s really the first of its kind for independent food magazines, sort of the Yo La Tengo of the foodie set. I don’t know for a fact that Lucky Peach took inspiration from it, but it’s hard to imagine they didn’t given the two’s similar irreverence. Inspired by classic photocopy music zines of the 90’s, Put A Egg on It recreates that feeling of finding something cool and special that was made for fellow fans.
2. Mouthfeel – One part Butt Magazine, one part Flipside and one part Kinfolk without the religious ties, Mouthfeel looked at the food world through a Gay lens, by focusing on Queer chefs, food personalities and other notable figures. Inspired by the punk and hardcore culture that editor Mac Malikowski grew up around (and inspired by the lack of Queer representation in that culture), Mouthfeel proudly sports a cut and paste punk aesthetic, as channeled through innovative art direction by New York & London studio Mother Design. Sadly I don’t know what the future or even present of Mouthfeel is, their websites gone and their social media is dormant, but that’s also something I love about the zine format- there is something ephemeral about these periodicals- they can so easily disappear leaving only back-issues in their wake- of course, good luck finding a back issue of Mouthfeel (seriously good luck and please let me know if you do, I could only find the coffee one!!)
3. Soy Not Oi- You never forget your first. A 1990 vegan cookbook by Joel Olson and the “Hippycore Crew,” and distributed independent press stalwarts AK press, this was my introduction to the idea of a food zine, and one of my first zines altogether. Aside from having an excellent name, Soy Not Oi captured the silly spirit of the sort of punk house you could imagine this food being made in, right down to my favorite part: a suggested record to put on while you make each dish.
4. Gotta Cook- It wasn’t until I was typing this entry that I realized that this was my second entry for work by Mother Design– this time their Mother Shanghai branch. Gotta Cook is Mother’s entry into the popular quarantine-zine genre of quickly produced digital zines made by restless design teams in the first months of Covid-19 shutdowns. A cookbook for whatever is in your pantry, the finished result is at once beautiful, extremely personal and highly relatable to anyone who was trying to make something out of the chaos suddenly found themselves in.