Food Is Life: A writing/Craft seminar with Candice Chung
Schedule
Sun, 08 Feb, 2026 at 04:00 pm
UTC+00:00Location
43-45 West Nicolson Street, EH8 9DB Edinburgh, United Kingdom | Edinburgh, SC
Writing about how and what we eat is so much more than the act of describing a meal. It is one of the most powerful ways to capture the texture of daily life, and often the secret to tapping into our relationship with desire, identity, politics and place — the ultimate ‘show don’t tell’. Together we will explore how to use food as a world-building device, reveal personality (think of all the things we learn about someone on a dinner date), dramatise power dynamics between characters and as a portal into our private memories and yearnings.
Part One: What Can Food Do?
How do writers of different genres use food to make their stories come to life? We will explore the surprising functions of food scenes in speculative fiction, short stories, memoir and essays. How can food escalate tension, bring levity and invite empathy? Plus, tips on mastering precise descriptions and the art of what’s left unsaid.
Includes an in-class writing prompt.
Part Two: The Power of Longing
In this session we will learn about an animating question that brings organic momentum to any cooking and eating scene. We’ll examine the role of desire — those that we’re aware of and those that we’re not — in our eating lives.
Closing Q+As.
What to bring: Something to write with: a laptop or note book.
Who it’s for:
This seminar is suitable for anyone who is interested in exploring the role of food in personal and lyric essays, fiction and memoir through an inclusive, feminist lens. We will look at examples from the writings of Octavia Butler, Haruki Murakami, Deborah Levy, Norah Ephron, Helen Garner and Amy Key among others.
About the instructor:
Candice Chung is a writer, editor and a former restaurant reviewer for The Sun-Herald. Her work has appeared in The Guardian, The Sydney Morning Herald, Good Food, The Australian Gourmet Traveller, Gutter and more. Her first book, Chinese Parents Don’t Say I Love You: A Memoir of Food, Family and Finding Love is a Financial Times Best Summer Book of 2025.
Where is it happening?
43-45 West Nicolson Street, EH8 9DB Edinburgh, United Kingdom, 43-45 West Nicolson Street, Edinburgh, EH8 9, United KingdomEvent Location & Nearby Stays:



















