This article draws on data from a research project that combined participant observation with
in-depth interviews to explore family relationships and experiences of everyday life during
life-threatening illness. In it I suggest that death has often been theorised in ways that make
its ‘mundane’ practices less discernible. As a means to foreground the everyday, and to
demonstrate its importance to the study of dying, this article explores the (re)negotiation of
food and eating in families facing the end of life. Three themes that emerged from the
study’s broader focus on family life are discussed: ‘food talk’ and making sense of illness;
food, family and identity; and food ‘fights’. Together the findings illustrate the material, social
and symbolic ways in which food acts relationally in the context of dying, extending
conceptual work on materiality in death studies in novel directions. The paper also
contributes new empirical insights to a limited sociological literature on food, families and
terminal illness, building on work that theorises the entanglements of materiality, food,
bodies and care. The article concludes by highlighting the analytical value of everyday
materialities such as food practices for future research on dying as a relational experience