...all reflect a boom in the cookbook publishing business. A paperback 
reprint will lower the cost to the purchaser, and also give a publisher 
a chance to correct egregious errors or add a postscript. Some will 
reissue a book in paper covers with a new layout or photos. Others will 
rearrange existing material to present it as more informative text 
while keeping the focus tight. Here are some recent "re-editions"...
12. RED, WHITE AND DRUNK ALL OVER; a wine-soaked journey from grape to 
glass (Anchor Canada, 2007, 304 pages, ISBN 978-0-385-66155-3, $22 
paper covers) is by my colleague and fellow Wine Writer's Circle of 
Canada member, Natalie MacLean. It was originally published last year 
in 2006, and had then been described as "engaging", "practical", and 
"pleases the palates". It covers the zany obsessiveness of wine 
aficionados in North America. Topics include being an undercover 
sommelier for a night, visiting vineyards in France and California, 
retail stores, wine critics, and wine collecting. She has added a new 
chapter "Wine Meets Its Toughest Matches", about pairing wine with 
foods such as artichokes, curries, chocolate desserts, and salads. 
Check out www.nataliemaclean.com/matcher. There is no index, which is a 
shame: this is a distressing trend in most books of eclectic essays and 
memoirs. It would only take a few hours and two book pages to produce 
an index, but it would add immeasurably to the worth of the book 
(easier to re-find data). This is a good read, although I've never 
liked the title (I have a personal bias against anything cutesy with 
alcohol-related social behaviour). Quality/Price Rating: 85.
13. CALIFORNIA WINE COUNTRY. Fifth edition (Compass American Guides, 
2007; distr. by Random House Canada, 379 pages, ISBN 978-1-4000-1783-6, 
$27.95 paper covers) is from Fodor's Travel, a well-respected publisher 
of travel guides. It has been written by John Doerper, Constance Jones, 
and Sharron Wood. It has been regularly revised over the years; indeed, 
it even has its own ISSN (which is used for serially-issued 
publications and magazines). It's well-photographed, indexed, and 
mapped...and even well-written. It is a top-to-bottom guide to all 
things vinous in most of the state (nothing on Mendocino, little on 
Amador). Intro material includes wine history and wine culture, 
followed by winemaking "techie" stuff, including wine-tasting tips. The 
big regions are Napa and Sonoma, followed by the Central Coast. Winery 
listings appear in geographical order, following the most common 
driving routes. Each region has a series of suggested itineraries, 
along with the usual accommodations and dining places. Top choices are 
indicated. Many colour photos make this book heavy in weight. 
Quality/Price Rating: 87.
14. SOUP KITCHEN (Collins, 2005, 224 pages, ISBN 978-0-00-775637-7, 
$19.95 paper covers) has been edited by Annabel Buckingham and 
Thomasina Miers. It was originally published in the UK in 2005, and is 
now available here in Canada. This is a collection of soup recipes from 
top British chefs such as Nigella Lawson, Jamie Oliver (chickpea, leek 
and parmesan soup), Claudia Roden, Gordon "Bad Boy" Ramsay, Delia Smith 
(cauliflower soup with roquefort), Michel Roux Jr, and Prue Leith 
(tomato and basil soup). About 100 recipes from 100 contributors; 
British orientation in style and ingredients. Metric measurements are 
used. 70% of the royalties go to a variety of homeless charities. 
Quality/Price Ratio: 85. 
But see also ---
15. SOUP'S ON! Soul-satisfying recipes from your favorite cookbook 
authors and chefs (Chronicle Books, 156 pages, ISBN 978-0-8118-5262-3, 
$25.95 paper covers) is a collection of recipes that were donated to 
the book from chefs and cooking teachers. Half of the recipes were 
previously published by Chronicle. A portion of the royalties goes to 
NextCourse, a nonprofit organization that educates women in the San 
Francisco County Jail on nutrition and cooking on a budget. Among the 
donations are Charlie Trotter's lentil and bacon soup, Martin Yan's 
crab and asparagus soup, and Michael Chiarello's pork and orange stew. 
There is also Deborah Madison, Peggy Knickerbocker, and Cat "Iron Chef" 
Cora. This is sort of a US equivalent to the UK book above, except it 
costs more money and has fewer recipes. Still, it is for a good cause. 
Quality/Price Rating: 85. 
16. LOW-SALT COOKBOOK; a complete guide to reducing sodium and fat in 
your diet, 3rd ed. (Clarkson Potter, 2007, 329 pages, ISBN 978-1-4000-
9762-3, $21 paper covers) is from the American Heart Association. It 
was originally published in 1990 by Times Books, and was last revised 
in 2001. The publisher promises that this current edition has been 
completely updated and revised with 50 new recipes, over 200 in total. 
The revision also includes the latest dietary info and tips on 
substituting ingredients, plus how to avoid hidden sodium in prepared 
foods and in dining out. Many of the preps are associated with DASH 
(Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension). There are various appendices 
on herbs and spices, ingredient substitutions, and ingredient 
equivalents. Each recipe has the usual healthy listing of total fats, 
cholesterol, sodium, carbs, protein, calcium, potassium, calories, and 
dietary exchanges. Quality/Price Rating: 88.
17. LOTUS ASIAN FLAVORS (Periplus Editions, 2007; distr. Ten Speed, 241 
pages, ISBN 978-0-7946-0492-9, $49.95 hard covers) is by Teage Ezard, 
an Australian chef who also has restos in Hong Kong. He promotes his 
preps as "Australian free-style". This book was originally published by 
Hardie Grant Books in 2006 in Australia. He claims inspiration from 
Chinese dim sum, and both Malaysian and Thai hawker markets and 
vendors. His dishes here in this book are designed to be served on 
platters or in bowls, eaten with chopsticks, forks or fingers, simple 
and casual. Typical dishes include: drunken chicken, fried eggs with 
crab, spicy tom yum soup with shrimp, coconut laksa with Chinese 
doughnuts. There's an ingredient listing and a list of all the recipes 
arranged by major ingredient (beef, curry, dim sum, soup, poultry, 
etc.). Quality/Price Rating: 85. 
18. BEARD ON FOOD; the best recipes and kitchen wisdom from the dean of 
American cooking (Bloomsbury, 2007; distr. Raincoast, 337 pages, ISBN 
978-1-59691-446-9, $32.95 hard covers) is a collection of short essays 
by James Beard. It was originally published in 1974, and over the years 
it has picked up an introductory note from Julia Child (in 1999), 
illustrations in 1983, more notes by Mark Bittman in 2007, and both a 
health and a supply update from Mitchell Davis in 2007. This book was 
re-published to coincide with the Beard Foundation's Taste America 
Festival in September.  Beard had selected items from his weekly 
syndicated newspaper column, 1970-1974. They reflect his beliefs, 
pleasures, memories, and prejudices. Recipes are in narrative style 
(which I prefer) and in lighter (barely photocopy strength) typeface 
which I dislike. There is both a subject guide to the recipes and a 
traditional ingredient index (but there is no entry for "hamburger": 
you have to check "beef" for that product). There are no tables of 
metric equivalents. Quality/Price Rating: no need to buy if you already 
have any of the earlier versions, but otherwise 85. 
19. SOUTHEAST ASIAN FOOD; classic and modern dishes from Indonesia, 
Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. Rev. ed. 
(Periplus Editions, 2007; distr. Ten Speed, 572 pages, ISBN 978-0-7946-
0488-2, $37.50 paper covers) is by Rosemary Brissenden from Australia. 
It was originally published in 1969 with many revisions over the years; 
the last was in 2003 by Hardie Grant Books. This current work has been 
Americanized. Recipes have been arranged by country, and within, by 
style of cooking. There is a table of measurements for small metric 
conversions, but otherwise the recipes have both metric and US volumes 
and weights. Malaysia and Singapore have the largest allocation (154 
pages), with Laos as the smallest (22 pages). Typical basic preps (all 
sourced as to origin) include fish curry with coconut milk from South 
India, stuffed cucumber consomme from Bangkok, chicken in soy sauce 
from Java, beef or lamb sate from Indonesia, and green bamboo stew from 
Laos. Six desserts are listed separately. About 500 recipes are here, 
and there is a concluding bibliography for further reading. Elizabeth 
David once said that this was "A book that every serious cook should 
possess". Quality/Price Rating: 90.
20. THE JAPANESE KITCHEN; a book of essential ingredients with over 200 
authentic recipes (Kyle Cathie Book, 2007; distr. Raincoast, 240 pages, 
ISBN 978-190492-066-3, $24.95 paper covers) is by Kimiko Barber, who 
has authored many other Japanese cooking books. It was originally 
published in 2004. It was a winner of an International Association of 
Culinary Professionals' (IACP) Award for Design. She categorizes 100 
ingredients (soba noodles, umeboshi pickled plums) and produces 200 
recipes. The book is about the kitchen, with its tastes, uses, and 
health benefits. Most of the preps here are classics, such as deep 
fried rice cake, udon noodle soup, lotus root in sweet vinegar, green 
bean salad, sushi, sukiyaki, chicken teriyaki, et al. But there are 
rarities too, such as gobo (burdock) stir-fry or kenchin jiru. There is 
a history of the foods used. All of the recipes have volume and weights 
as found in English countries, but with no metric tables of 
equivalents. And the design IS fabulous...Quality/Price Rating: 86.
21. CULINARY MATH. 3rd ed. (John Wiley and Sons, 2007, 262 pages, ISBN 
978-0-470-06821-2, paper covers) is by Linda Blocker (a former math 
teacher) and Julia Hill (a public accountant). They both have taught at 
the Culinary Institute of America. This is the third edition of the 
workbook. The authors have updated and improved the practice problems, 
clarified content, and added new photography. They have also produced a 
website (www.wiley.com/go/culinarymath) where you can practice food 
costing on an Excel food cost form. There's a wealth of material here 
for the office computer usage. Each chapter covers a specific aspect of 
math, with descriptions, situations, methods, and practice problems. 
There is space for calculations. Important topics include conversions, 
yields, recipe costing, beverage costing, recipe size conversion, 
various formulae and charts, and so forth. Not for the 
innumerate...Quality/Price Rating: 95 (industrial standard).
 
 

No comments:
Post a Comment