Culture My unexpected Pride icon: The Green Roasting Tin, a cookbook no lesbian vegetarian can be without - Queerness now comes with arbitrary cuisine stereotypes

My unexpected Pride icon: The Green Roasting Tin, a cookbook no lesbian vegetarian can be without​


Sure, Rukmini Iyer’s recipes are not specifically aimed at queer people, but the first time I cooked one, it was with my girlfriend – and she is now my wife

Lucy Knight
Thu 12 Jun 2025 08.00 EDT

Walk into a queer woman’s kitchen and the chances are that the lime-green spine of Rukmini Iyer’s The Green Roasting Tin will be poking out from a surface or a shelf – if it is not already on the counter and splattered with food. You are likely to find it in the homes of allies, too – this is the holy grail of what-to-feed-my-queer–vegetarian-offspring cookbooks.


Not only does The Green Roasting Tin play into stereotypes about gay and bisexual women – all vegetarian recipes, half vegan and supremely practical (the USP of The Roasting Tin series is that all the recipes are oven-cooked in one dish) – but it is also full of indulgence. The tarts, gratins, salads and bakes are dotted with pomegranate seeds or fresh herbs and drizzled with truffle oil or honey. One recipe even has an entire camembert plonked in a tray of potatoes. And that’s what makes it the perfect unofficial lesbian text: its unapologetic goal is pleasure.

“This book is for anyone who wants to eat easy veg-based meals that fit around their busy lives,” reads The Green Roasting Tin’s blurb. The joy of this book is that its simplest offerings, such as the all-in-one roasted tomato and bay orzo bake or the crispy kale and bulgur wheat salad, take half an hour, most of which is baking time, when you can be doing something else. And the booked and busy lesbians have got to eat!

The recipes from this book that I have made the most frequently are the two that feature crispy roasted gnocchi (a revelation!), especially the completely vegan combination of gnocchi, mushrooms, butternut squash and a herby, garlicky, nutty dressing. It was the first recipe I cooked from the book, which is also perhaps why I associate this book so strongly with queerness: I made it with my girlfriend, now wife, when I had just moved into a flatshare, for lunch with my housemates and their girlfriends. Some of us were meeting that day for the first time, but by the end of the afternoon we were all slouched around contentedly, picking off the last bits of gnocchi from the trays.

Big trays of food almost invite you to spend lots of time enjoying them, going back for a second helping or fishing out the last charred mushroom or cube of halloumi. I suppose you could say that this kind of food is a “queering” of the meat-and-two-veg sit-down dinners associated with the traditional heterosexual British family unit. Which is maybe a bit of a stretch – and probably not what Iyer set out to do. But she did put together 75 really easy vegetarian recipes that are all completely delicious. And that, among other things, is exactly what a lot of lesbians want.

Link (Archive)
 
Imagine only eating vegetables but never searing or sautéing them
The cookbook has "roasting" in the title, so that's like complaining that Microwave Cooking for One only has microwave recipes.

The lesbian/"queering" part is the weird part of this article. "As a lesbian, DAE enjoy eating food?"
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So does the cookbook have passages about which dishes were inspired by them beating the shit out of each other
The author of this article is straight-up trippin', dawg.

The author of the cookbook is Rukmini Iyer (archive), a lady married to a man, who has written a bunch of one-pan roasting recipe books aimed at busy familes. The lesbian article author just likes the heterosexual cookbook author's vegetarian recipe book.
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I don't know if this is an attempt at viral marketing or if the lesbian was running into a deadline and pacing around her kitchen, looking for anything to write about.
 
I don't know if this is an attempt at viral marketing or if the lesbian was running into a deadline and pacing around her kitchen, looking for anything to write about.
Have cookbook authors started pretending to be gay for publicity, like every female pop singer does when her new album sucks? Traditionally, female authors pretend to be abuse survivors. (They may have been raped or whatever, but becoming a "survivor" is pretending). I suppose for a cookbook you wouldn't want to say that. Keep it about eating.
 
Have cookbook authors started pretending to be gay for publicity, like every female pop singer does when her new album sucks? Traditionally, female authors pretend to be abuse survivors.
Naw, cookbook authors either play up their everyman status (busy mom with kids!), their culinary skills (chef) or their ethnic cred (Indian author of Indian cookbook). People want a cookbook that shows them how to be successful (at cooking) so a hard-luck beginning had better be followed by a "and then my restaurant took off but I never forgot my roots."

Someone who tried the abuse angle is lolcow Melissa "Jack" Monroe, who started out fifteen years ago pretending to be a poverty-stricken abuse survivor and using it to sell her budget cookbook, but immediately pivoted to being gay, alcoholic, vegan, trans and disabled (sequentially) to keep that attention, and to explain how she can be successful and famous but still understand the poor. One of her highlights was writing a recipe where you rinse the tomato sauce off of Spaghetti-Os if you can't afford to cook plain pasta.
 
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