Penguin cookbook calls for 'freshly ground black people'
Publisher destroys 7,000 copies of The Pasta Bible after 'silly mistake' causes outrage
A recipe for tagliatelle with sardines and prosciutto has proved a  little too spicy for Penguin Australia, after a misprint suggesting that  the dish required "salt and freshly ground black people" has left the  publisher reaching for the pulping machine, rather than the pepper  grinder.
It's a one-word slip that only came to light after a  member of the public got in touch, and which has sent all 7,000 copies  of The Pasta Bible at Penguin's warehouse to be destroyed, an exercise  which head of publishing, Robert Sessions, told the Sydney Morning  Herald would cost $ 20,000.
There are, as yet, no plans to recall  copies that have made it into stores, which according to Sessions would  be "extremely hard". He was "mortified that this has become an issue of  any kind", adding that "why anyone would be offended, we don't know".
Sessions  defended proofreaders for letting through a misprint that he suggested  came from a spell-check program, explaining that since almost every  recipe in the book calls for black pepper at a on each page it was an  error he considered "quite forgivable". He went on to attack those who  might complain about what he called a "silly mistake" as "small minded".
Meanwhile,  the clean-up operation continues, with the publisher releasing a rather  more emollient statement on its website offering sincere apologies "for  any offence this error may have caused readers", and suggesting that  proofreaders "would have been concentrating on checking quantities, a  common source of error in cookbooks". Penguin also offered to "willingly  replace a copy of The Pasta Bible owned by anyone who feels  uncomfortable about having a copy of the book in their possession".
Speaking  to the Guardian this afternoon, Sessions was unwilling to add to his  earlier remarks, explaining that he had "nothing further to say", and  referring to the Penguin website.
1 comment:
Did I tell you once that a certain hydraulics professor had a line in his course notes that read something akin to "use fags to mark the flood lines of the bank " or was it "line the banks with fags"....
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