- Warren Buffet
- Abraham Lincoln
- Charlie Chaplin
- Mary Anne Radmacher
- Alice Walker
- Albert Einstein
- Steve Martin
- Mark Twain
- Michel Montaigne
- Voltaire
Find most favourite and famour Authors from A.A Milne to Zoe Kravitz.
I believe passionately that the notion of having to work at a marriage is baloney. Making sacrifices and being a martyr makes one hell of a bad marriage.
Prue Leith
The most followed chef is Delia Smith. She is my age and doesn't try to be entertaining, she encourages people to learn the basics.
I've never been much of a cake-maker.
Modern cookbooks are marketing tools for chefs. They're in the bestseller lists but no one cooks from them.
I went to the Sorbonne in Paris for two years and read all the classics by authors like Victor Hugo and Guy de Maupassant. I was supposed to read them in French but I cheated and used the English versions instead.
Children aren't being taught to cook or encouraged to try things or told why food is important.
I didn't actually know what a treasure 'The Great British Bake Off' was, so I just thought, 'oh it'll be fun to do that, I'd like to do that.' Then when I went and had to have an audition and meet Paul Hollywood, I suddenly thought, 'this is really important.'
People say I'm a celebrity chef, and I am on telly a lot but that's because I judge contests. Perhaps I'm more of a celebrity eater than a cook.
It's so nice to slip into the lap of luxury.
Food shouldn't do you any harm, obviously you don't want a bad diet, but it should be one of life's great pleasures.
In my 40s: I had two children young enough to think their parents wonderful, my business was booming, I was happily married and living in the Cotswolds with a veg garden and ponies in the paddock. Who could not be happy?
I've been an entrepreneur, a writer, a food correspondent. I might have been an architect - but I'm bad at maths.
It's tough to eat well if you don't know how to cook.
Now the look of the book dictates the sale. In my day you could still buy a good cookbook in paperback with no pictures at all. I doubt if that would sell today. But those books were much used: they lived in the kitchen and got splattered with custard and gravy.
My first taste memory is of our nanny in South Africa making white bread sandwiches with salad cream, which was potato mashed with a cheap mayonnaise thing with bits in it of - I suppose - pickled cucumber. I absolutely loved them.
I go to Michelin-starred restaurants as part of my job, but that's not how I want to eat all the time.
I couldn't live without my faithful companion, Megs the dog.
I prefer pub food to posh food.
You can serve good food on a budget provided you don't waste it.
I get more questions about my necklaces and specs than I do about food.
I used to always employ South Africans and Aussies and Kiwis - I can't admit this, well I can now, but I couldn't admit it at the time - but I didn't want wet English lads who didn't want to work in the catering trade anyway.
I went to drama school but soon realised I was terrible at acting, so I ditched drama school for art school.
I'd love to look incredibly glamorous, but I am a wholesome, comforting nanny type: I think I look like an advertisement for wholemeal flour or something.
I am not saying celebrity chefs don't encourage children to cook. However, their programmes are so entertaining, you end up stuffing your face with Pot Noodles instead of learning from them.
I'm a good cook, I am not a great cook. I'm an absolute fraud.
Aged six, I sailed from South Africa to England by steam ship with my family. It was a three-week journey. I remember crying on my birthday when I didn't get the enormous teddy bear that was for sale in the ship's shop but, aside from that, I had a wonderful time.
Very few parents give out healthy lunchboxes due to pressure from their children.
People often ask what my favourite food is, but the answer depends on what I last ate. I love sausages and mash. But if I'd already eaten them for lunch, then you asked me at tea-time, I'd probably answer 'crab salad.'
I'd been brought up in a society which didn't talk about sex, food, money, religion or politics. Those things were all deemed slightly rude.
I've always had an image of Mother's Pride flour, very respectable and middle-class.
For me the best food in the world is New British. It's quite classical cooking with really simple but good-quality ingredients. I also like top-end restaurants and pub grub done well.
I think the most important thing in the whole world is love and relationships, and if you don't have them it's quite bad.
My grandchildren love cooking, and it doesn't have to be sweet things.
I won't eat something which is high in calories and not particularly wonderful, because that's just not worth it, you feel guilty after.
If I'm going to do something, I'll do it properly or not at all.
I would have my last meal at my home in Oxfordshire.
I came through the Sixties so I was perfectly aware of drug-taking but I came from South Africa and we were brought up in quite an old-fashioned way. If I went to a rave or a party, I'd be behind the barbecue flipping the burgers. I wasn't out there partying.
I have strong hair, so if I've had a good haircut, I can wash my hair in the bath and not worry about it.
I do think it is the responsibility of parents to feed their children properly.
Nobody should eat too much cake.
Hua Hin is Thailand's royal beach resort and home to the king's summer palace. The local food is fantastic, the weather is beautiful, everything's cheap and the Thai people are so friendly and warm.
I love writing fiction and can do it anywhere - I once even missed a flight because I was so engrossed.
If I am tanned, I feel a million times better.
I was an intellectual groupie. Still am.
I believe in good, honest food. That's always been my ethos.
I'm not saying I'm proud of the fact I had a long affair with a married man, but it did help my business. By the time I married and had children I had the business under my belt.
I'm quite lazy. I don't want to learn a new subject like shipbuilding.
I've baked more cakes since I've been on 'Bake Off' than I have in my life.
I try to spend most weekends in the Cotswolds, having fun.
I vividly remember throwing a bowl of porridge at my husband Rayne once when he defended the children instead of me - the patch on the ceiling stayed for years.