From gender to nation, bananas to dog bowls, tea sandwiches to packaged foods, and much, much more, Mihalache and Zanoni provide a nuanced look at our material lives through the lenses of food, environments, and representations. The volume celebrates the interdisciplinarity of two rich fields of study—material culture and food—and it champions how we look at our everyday lives through the plates, bowls, and cups we take for granted. The Bloomsbury Handbook of Food and Material Culture puts into conversation university classrooms, with private and professional kitchens and labs, scholars with visionaries to uncover how and why “food’s matter matters.” We are treated to a new set of thoughts and voices that take us into the complex world of food and human lives, challenging us to see and understand its complex intersections even as we relish and savor our food tastes, about which we seldom give a second thought.