Tuesday, 30 August 2011

Cookbook Author Jennifer Brennan Killed in House Fire



By R. Stickney  Published August 29, 2011


A Normal Heights woman who earned international recognition for writing cookbooks was killed in a house fire Sunday.


Jennifer Brennan-Sparks, 74, died when fire broke out in the second story of a duplex on 36th Street just before 2 a.m. officials said.


"She was a published author, travelled all over world. She had a colorful background," said Jack Sparks, the victim's brother-in-law.


Brennan-Sparks, a widow, lived alone in the back of the duplex. The people living in the front of the duplex escaped without injury.


Multiple people called 911 reporting the blaze located at the rear of the property, officials said.


San Diego police reported that an officer was also injured during the fire.  The extent of the officer’s injuries was not immediately known and an autopsy has yet to be scheduled for the female victim.


The main fire was knocked down in seven minutes and the Red Cross was called in to assist two displaced families.


Brennan Sparks gained international fame from her cookbooks "The Original Thai Cookbook" and "Cuisines of Asia." 


Her book "Curries and Bugles" won the 1990 Best Book in Literary Food Writing by the International Association of Culinary Professionals.


First published at NBC San Diego, August 29, 2011



About Jennifer Brennan - from Amazon.com


Jennifer Brennan was born into a family of British colonials. Her ancestors sailed the seas with the square-rigged clipper ships of the British East India Company. Her grandfather was an engineer on one of the steam-sailer, merchant ships in Peking (Beijing) during the Boxer Rebellion. This may have been a harbinger of her own cosmopolitan life of travel and adventure.


Her mother's family, for two generations past, were part of the British Raj in India. Both her mother and grandmother were born in Calcutta.


Her father, Major General Gordon Pritchard, went to India first as a young subaltern, spending much of his early military career on the North-West Frontier Province, bordering Afghanistan, near the famed Khyber Pass. He was later Engineer-in-Charge of the building of the First Burma Road during World War II.


Jennifer was born in England but set sail for India at the tender age of six months. The land of Kipling became her home for the first nine years of life. Initially, she lived in Pakistan (then part of India) and Kashmir. She had vivid memories of meeting the Maharajahs who were friends of her grandparents and being taken, at the age of four years, to visit the fabulous palace of Maharajah of Orcha, Rajputana. Another indelible memory was a five-day train journey southward, down the entire length of the subcontinent in 1942 during tribal insurgencies. (The entourage for this trek consisted of her mother, her English nanny, a six-year-old Jennifer, their personal bearer, two Great Danes and one cocker spaniel, accompanied by 27 pieces of assorted luggage.) The Gond tribesmen derailed the train in front of the Pritchards and they were stranded for ten hours, surrounded by wrecked railway coaches and dead bodies (both human and animal), while engineers struggled to replace the tracks.


Returning to England in 1944, she was on the first convoy to travel through the Mediterranean where a German U-boat chased them. In England for the remainder of World War II, she clearly remembered the V-1 "buzz bomb" raids and the first V-2 rocket attacks on London.


After years spent in a proper English boarding school, she flew to Cyprus in 1950 where her father was Chief Engineer. Jennifer was there for the first stirrings of Žnosis (a movement favouring Greek annexation) and EOKA (their militant arm) terrorism.


Moving from Cyprus to the Suez Canal Zone in Egypt, she was the last dependent to fly-actually smuggled-into the troubled zone. She spent a year and a half behind barbed-wire with her family on a British military base during the period of unrest when General Naguib forced King Farouk I to abdicate (Nasser replaced Naguib in 1954 after Jennifer left Egypt) and when the famous Shepherd's Hotel was razed. The British families in the Canal Zone suffered spasmodic attacks from the Egyptians. On one occasion, the car in which Jennifer was traveling across the desert was forced off the road by Egyptian terrorists. She and her companions were saved from being shot by the fortuitous arrival of a British army truck filled with soldiers.


After her father's untimely death in 1957, her mother, Lucette, joined Jennifer's aunt and uncle (Sir Alexander MacFarquhar-later to become Director of Personnel for the United Nations and Deputy to former Secretary General U Thant) who was, at the time, Regional Director of the United Nations Technical Assistance Board in Bangkok. Her mother lived for some 20 years in Thailand after Sir Alexander received another posting.


In 1962, after some uneventful married, domesticated years in England, during which her elder son, Jonathan, was born, Jennifer and her son joined her mother in Thailand.


In Bangkok, Jennifer designed the first export line of Thai furniture and fabrics for Design Thai, one of Rockefeller's IBEC ventures; she later wrote a women's page and food column for the Bangkok World.


After two years, Jennifer moved to Hong Kong where her younger son was born. She organized the Fourth Asian Advertising Congress and, then, worked for Marklin Advertising, Limited. She also undertook the publicity for visiting entertainers-in 1964 both the Dave Brubeck Quartet and the Beatles gave concerts. Jennifer designed their programs and helped organize the Beatles' visit as part of their World Tour. She spent four days hosting George, Paul, John and stand-in drummer Jimmy Nichols (Ringo was in England with tonsillitis) in the President Hotel.


Returning to Thailand just over a year later, Jennifer became Art Director for Marklin in Bangkok and anchored two, daily radio programs.


In 1968, she went to Vietnam during the height of the conflict, taking her two sons along. She became countrywide representative for Revlon International military sales-a job that took her to eight, in-country destinations each month. She was able to get a wide view of the war, including coming under fire several times. At the end of the next year, she left Vietnam. She and her family decided to book passage on a freighter bound for the United States, anticipating a relaxing and peaceful voyage. They encountered two major storms, an engine breakdown, a near collision with a Russian freighter and an incipient mutiny by the crew!


Jennifer resided in Southern California until 1974, working for the United Nations Association (the not-for-profit, fund-raising organ of the United Nations), undergoing only one traumatic experience: in 1972, just before Christmas, her house in Venice was destroyed by fire.


Jennifer returned to Thailand in 1974 and stayed for two more years; certainly a period of turmoil in Southeast Asia. She lived next door to former Prime Minister M. R. Kukrit Pramoj (who, incidentally, had a cameo role in The Ugly American starring Marlon Brando), and still remembers the day his house was attacked and sacked by an angry mob. She became a radio newscaster in Bangkok and reported the tragic and violent days during the fall of Saigon and the overthrow of Cambodia.


In 1976 she resettled in the U.S. She taught Indian and Southeast Asian cooking for six years at her school, The Asian Experience, in Los Angeles, wrote a weekly column on Oriental cuisines for the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner and contributed to several national magazines: Gourmet, Sunset, Metropolitan Home, Diversion, Cuisine, Food & Wine. She displayed her culinary skills on both local, "AM Los Angeles," and national television, "Hour Magazine," as well as numerous personal, cooking demonstrations for major commercial institutions: Robinson's, Bullocks, the United California Bank, the World Centre, etc.


In 1982 Jennifer moved to Guam in the Mariana Islands where she lived for three years. She divided her time between writing food and travel articles, and researching a future book about the Pacific. Subsequently, she moved to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia where she founded a writer's workshop in Jeddah and completed a novel.


While residing in Japan, her last book, Curries and Bugles: A Cookbook and a Memoir of the British Raj, was released in 1990, simultaneously produced and published by Harper Collins Publishers in the U.S. and VIKING/PENGUIN Books Limited in the U.K. Curries and Bugles won the "Best Book, Literary Food Writing" award from the International Association of Culinary Professionals.


Jennifer was the author and illustrator of the following: The Original Thai Cookbook, Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, publishers in the U.S. (Thai Cooking, Jill Norman & Hobhouse in the U.K.); paperback publication in the U.S. by GD/Perigee (the U.K. paperback by Futura Publications). The Cuisines of Asia was published by St. Martin's/Marek in the U.S. and, at the same time, by Macdonald and Company in England. One-Dish Meals of Asia, Times Books, was released in April of 1985 in the U.S. and the U. K. publication, by Robert Hale, Limited, debuted in July of 1986. In 1989, an Italian edition of The Original Thai Cookbook, entitled La Cucina Thailandese, was translated and published by Calderini Editori of Bologna, Italy; The Cuisines of Asia was retitled Encyclopaedia of Chinese and Oriental Cookery and issued by Black Cat Reprint/Macdonald (Publishers) Limited in London. In the U.S., both The Cuisines of Asia and One-Dish Meals of Asia were released in soft cover by St. Martin's Press and HarperCollinsPublishers, respectively. And VIKING/PENGUIN issued a paperback version of Curries and Bugles in the U.K. in 1992.


Jennifer was a primary contributor to The Oxford Companion to Food (Oxford University Press, 1999) by Alan Davidson in the areas of Southeast Asian, East Asian and Pacific foods.


Perils Editions-an imprint of Tuttle Publishing- re-released Curries & Bugles along with Jennifer's last project, Tradewinds & Coconuts: A Reminiscence & Recipes from the Pacific Islands. Tradewinds & Coconuts was judged a finalist in the "Best Book" category "Literary Food Writing" for the year 2000 by the International Association of Culinary Professionals. Jennifer was the recipient of the San Diego Book Awards 2000 from the San Diego Book Awards Association for both the best in the "How To" category and the Theodor S. Geisel Award for the best book (fiction, nonfiction, poetry, etc.) published in the year 2000 by a San Diego author for Tradewinds and Coconuts.


Jennifer passed away in California in August of 2011.


Text from Amazon Curries and Bugles buyers page


(Update April 29 2024 by Tony Magee: Jennifer Brennan was the niece of British singer Gery Scott, of whom there are many articles on this forum. Jennifer visited Canberra in 1990 and painted the scene depicted in Manuka (below) whilst she, Gery, myself and others gathered for morning coffee. Jennifer's mother Lucette (Gery's elder sister) had visited a couple of years earlier. Jennifer's youngest son, Adam, visited in 1991 and we all went off to see Shirley Bassey at Canberra's Royal Theatre. Tragically, Adam died just a few years later aged in his early 30's, from liver failure due to alcohol abuse. Her eldest son Jonathan (born 1962), a couple of years older than Adam, had died a few years previously in a tragic motorbike accident in the US.)


"Manuka" (1990) by Jennifer Brennan




Monday, 29 August 2011

Jennifer Brennan dies in house fire



This Cookbook Life


Jennifer Brennan, renowned cookbook author/illustrator, died this morning in a house fire, in the Normal Heights neighbourhood of San Diego, Calif. She was 76.


In 1935, Brennan was born into a family of the British Raj in India. Her mother and her maternal grandmother were born in Calcutta. Her father was posted on the Northwest frontier at the time of  her birth.  She was raised in the Punjab and Mysore.


As an adult, Brennan lived all over the world.


Creative in earning a living, she played “host to the Beatles during their trip to Hong Kong.”


She also taught Indian and Southeast Asian cuisine at her Los Angeles cooking school, The Asian Experience. Her weekly column on Asian food and cooking appeared in Los Angeles Herald Examiner for about five years. She also contributed to various food magazines and  co-owned Curries and Bugles, a British Raj restaurant, in San Diego.


Her cookbooks:


The Original Thai Cookbook. 1981.

The Cuisines of Asia. 1984.

One-Dish Meals of Asia. 1985.

Curries and Bugles: A Memoir & Cookbook of the British Raj. 1990.

Tradewinds And Coconuts: A Reminiscence And Recipes From The Pacific                         Islands. 2000.


The IACP chose Brennan’s extraordinary cookbook-memoir, Curries and Bugles, as ‘Best Book in Literary Food Writing’ for 1990.’ In the book, Brennan superimposed her Indian childhood against the historical backdrop of the British Raj with photographs, drawings, recipes and memories; interjecting quotes from the literary British Raj, and excerpts/recipes from culinary texts of the period.


First published at This Cookbook Life, August 28 2011.










Update April 29 2024 by Tony Magee: Jennifer Brennan was the niece of British singer Gery Scott, of whom there are many articles on this forum. Jennifer visited Canberra in 1990 and painted the scene depicted in Manuka (below) whilst she, Gery, myself and others gathered for morning coffee. Jennifer's mother Lucette (Gery's elder sister) had visited a couple of years earlier. Jennifer's youngest son, Adam, visited in 1991 and we all went off to see Shirley Bassey at Canberra's Royal Theatre. Tragically, Adam died just a few years later aged in his early 30's, from liver failure due to alcohol abuse. Her eldest son Jonathan (born 1962), a couple of years older than Adam, had died a few years previously in a tragic motorbike accident in the US.


"Manuka" (1990) by Jennifer Brennan




Monday, 22 August 2011

Obituary: William Hoffmann, music journalist

Vale Bill Hoffmann

by Helen Musa
August 22, 2011

Photo by Richard Briggs
One of the founding members of the Canberra Critics’ Circle, W.L. Hoffmann, OAM, died peacefully in his sleep at Ginninderra Gardens on Sunday August 21.

I had visited Bill the day before, but he was in a deep sleep from which he did not wake. He was 91.

Bill was, for a long time, Australia’s most senior music critic, travelling all over the country for The Canberra Times and filing reviews for nearly half a century. In his early days in Canberra, to which he came from Adelaide, he was the ACT Supervisor of Instrumental Music and director of the Canberra City Band, which he re-formed in 1947, after it had disbanded because of unemployment and lack of players in 1937. He was to run it for 30 years until 1976. 

Bill was the Canberra School of Music’s original executive officer and recorded its formative years in his 1990 book The Canberra School of Music: the first 25 years, 1965-1990. 

But it was for his Canberra Times critiques that he was best-known. Rain, hail or shine, Bill would always be there to review. He covered the first performances of the Canberra Symphony Orchestra and the production of the (then) Australian Opera when it visited Canberra. He was, in the words of Canberra journalist Robert Macklin, “a man of almost magisterial forbearance” in his capacity to tolerate and review a wide variety of music, classical and popular. He also wrote about musical comedy for many years, a form that he and his wife Marge particularly enjoyed.

Until technological advances meant that Canberra Times reviewers began to file copy from home, Bill filed his reviews at the paper’s offices on several days a week and was a well-known figure in the editorial department. Sub-editors respected his ability to write “clean copy” which they rarely needed to edit. 

Bill would never have given up reviewing but for his faulty knees. Lucid until the end, he told fellow Critics’ Circle member Bill Stephens and me when we visited him several months ago: “I didn’t have an operation because I never thought I’d go on so long.”

Originally published in Canberra Critics Circle blog, August 22, 2011