Vladimir Odoevsky on Cuisine and the Meaning of Food: When Gastronomy Becomes Philosophy There are figures in the history of Russian culture who refuse to fit into the narrow confines of a single profession. Vladimir Feodorovich Odoevsky, prince, writer, philosopher, musicologist, inventor, and educator, was exactly such a person. But among all his many talents, there is one that for a long time remained in the shadow of his literary and philosophical fame — his passion for cooking. For Odoevsky, cuisine was not just a place for preparing food, but a laboratory of meanings, a space where art, ethics, and philosophy meet. His gastronomic views, set out in the famous \"Lectures of Mr. Puff,\" turned out not to be a mere joke of the 19th century, but a genuine manifesto that still sounds surprisingly modern. Dr. Puff: the culinary alter ego of a philosopher In the mid-1840s, a remarkable character appeared on the pages of the Petersburg \"Literary Gazette\" — Professor Puff, \"doctor of the encyclopedia and other sciences of kitchen art.\" Behind this humorous mask was Odoevsky himself, who decided to share his gastronomic discoveries with the public. However, his contemporaries quickly guessed his identity: the prince was known as an excellent cook and gourmand, and his obsession was not a secret. The name Puff itself, from the English verb to puff (to puff up, advertise), already contained a dose of irony. Dr. Puff was deliberately self-assured, verbose, and unappealing, but behind this comedic mask was a deep philosophical intention. \"Puff's Lectures\" are not just a cookery book, albeit written in a playful manner. It is true literature that brings joy to reading and carries a powerful ethical charge. In his \"lectures,\" Odoevsky-Puff formulates the foundations of his gastronomic philosophy, which runs through all his work. Gastronomy as science and art Odoevsky categorically refutes the common opinion that gastronomy is just a synonym for gluttony. In the ...
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