.....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"...
  
 
17. WHAT EINSTEIN TOLD HIS COOK; kitchen science explained (W.W.  
Norton, 2008, 368 pages, ISBN 978-0-393-32942-1, $15.95 US paperback) 
is  a reissue of a 2002 book by Robert L. Wolke, a consulting editor for 
"Cook's  Illustrated". He also wrote "Food 101" for the Washington Post. 
In real  life, he is professor emeritus of chemistry at the University 
of Pittsburgh.  His wife Marlene Parrish contributes about three dozen 
recipes. The book is  in Q and A style, based on queries sent in from 
his readers in the  Washington Post. As a food reference book, it has to 
go up against the  Harold McGee juggernaut, but the format is certainly 
engaging. Typical  sections: why is red meat red? How do they 
decaffeinate coffee? In 2005  there was a sequel (What Einstein Told His 
cook 2). Quality/Price rating:  89. 
  
 
18. THE RIVER COTTAGE FAMILY COOKBOOK (Ten Speed Press, 2005, 2008, 416  
pages, ISBN 978-1-58008-925-8, $32.50US hard covers) is by Hugh  
Fearnley-Whittingstall and Fizz Carr of the River Cottage cookbook  
series fame. Since the later books seemed to have sold well, they have  
resurrected and updated this one from 2005. This is an educational  
primer aimed at the whole family, being written by a father of three 
and  a mother of five. There are more than 100 recipes here that can be 
made by  children. There are kitchen projects, such as churning butter, 
curing bacon,  doing a kitchen garden. This is a true "family cookbook", 
with a distinct  British orientation despite the Americanization of 
ingredients and weights  and measures. Try fragrant rice and bacon 
sandwich. Quality/Price rating:  86.
  
 
19. THE MARTHA'S VINEYARD COOKBOOK. 4th ed. (Three Forks, 2008; distr.  
Canada Manda Group, 306 pages, ISBN 978-0-7627-4724-5, $19.95US paper  
covers) is by the late Louise Tate King and Jean Stewart Wexler; Wexler  
is a local journalist. It was originally published in 1971, and revised  
in 1993 and 2000. This is also its first paperback edition. There are  
250 recipes here, reflecting the area's heritage (Wampanoag aborigines,  
UK whalers, Portuguese fishers, and newer Brazilian and African-
American  residents. Indeed, there are 20 or so brand-new recipes 
reflecting the  recent heritage. There are a variety of preps here, 
covering all courses.  Try fried cheese pancakes, orange kiss-me cake, 
English lemon cake, and  cranberry pudding. Quality/Price rating: 87. 
  
 
20. WINE COUNTRY COOKING (Ten Speed Press, 2008, 232 pages, ISBN  978-1-
58008-938-8, $22.50 US paper covers) is by Joanne Weir, who has  written 
17 other cookbooks. Despite her acclaim in multi-media and  award-
gathering, she still needs log rolling by Andrea Robinson, Gina Gallo,  
and Lidia Bastianich. These are basically Mediterranean-influenced  
recipes from California wine country; it was first published in 1999 as  
"Weir Cooking" by Time-Life. But it has been revised and updated. She  
has 150 preps with wine recommendations and pairings, emphasizing the  
casual lifestyle (which only happens if YOU are the recipient and not  
the cook). All courses are covered. The book is now seasonal, and there  
are different wines given for the pairings. Conversion charts are  
included for weights and measures. Typical dishes include golden  
gazpacho, warm squid salad, wild mushroom and blue cheese crostini,  
chicken breasts, salmon fillets, chocolate tarts. Quality/Price rating:  
86. 
  
 
21. QUICK & HEALTHY RECIPES AND IDEAS. 3rd ed. (Small Steps Press,  2008; 
distr. McGraw-Hill, 334 pages, ISBN 9780981600109, $18.95 US spiral  
bound) is by Brenda J. Ponichtera, an RD specializing in weight loss,  
diabetes and heart disease. It was originally published in 1991, and  
seems to have sold over a half million copies since that date. This  
latest edition reflects changes since 2005. There are 200 or so easy  
recipes, 20 weeks of dinner menus with grocery lists, listings of  
recipes and what to add to complete a meal, quick meals without a  
recipe, ideas and tips, nutritional analyses for each recipe. Many  
recipes call for prepared food products from a can but that's okay so  
long as you don't overdo it. Speed is of the essence. Quality/Price  
ratio: 84. 
  
 
22. GRAPE MAN OF TEXAS; Thomas Volney Munson & the origins of  American 
viticulture. New revised edition. (Wine Appreciation Guild, 2004,  2008, 
335 pages, ISBN 978-1-934259-04-7, $39.95 hard covers) is by Sherrie  S. 
McLeRoy and Roy E. Renfro, Jr. It garnered an award as "Best Wine  
History Book in the World for 2004"; this revision updates the story. 
As  Pierre Galet of Montpellier said, "The great merit of Munson is that 
he was  a great hybridizer, a scholarly, systematic botanist, extremely  
prolific."  The authors' work was complicated by the fact that much of  
Munson's personal archives (including his field notes) were destroyed  
after his death. Nevertheless, they were able to piece together the  
story of his life and achievements. He was dominant during the 1875-
1925  period. This revision updates and clarifies his life and 
achievements. It  also signals a new publisher, not the original Eakin 
Press. It is a straight  forward biography which does lend some insight 
into how he became an  important horticulturalist. It is also nicely 
illustrated with historical  photos and reproductions, all in black and 
white (although the borders can  get a bit twee at times). The appendix 
lists his published works (articles  and books) and papers presented. 
There is also a huge section on grape  varieties created by Munson, and 
whether they were used or discarded: there  must be about 450 of these 
varieties. And then there is yet a separate  section on the new grape 
varieties created from Munson hybrids. There are  also extensive end 
notes, a bibliography of sources (including websites),  and a 
comprehensive index. This book should be of interest to Ontario vine  
researchers. Quality/Price rating: 85.
  
 
23. NAPA WINE; a history from mission days to present. 2d ed. (Wine  
Appreciation Guild, 2008, 490 pages, ISBN 978-1-891267-07-9, $45US hard  
covers) is by Charles L. Sullivan, who has written seven books on wine  
and viticulture history. He has taught California history at DeAnza  
College for more than 15 years. It was originally published in 1994. It  
has been updated, with the addition of a new chapter to cover the 1994 
  2007 era. Similarly, the appendices have been recast to allow for 
updated  statistics. Thus, there are the historical tables plus the 
modern ones for  comparison (Napa Valley wineries in 2007, grape acreage 
from 1856-2006, wine  grape production 1856-2006). In general, this is a 
solid factual history of  the wineries in Napa, from 1769 with the 
Missions up to the modern day of  cult wines. Admittedly, there is short 
coverage of the beginning, 1769-1836  through only a dozen pages. And 
sadly, Robert Mondavi has passed on.  Structurally, the biggest changes 
in Napa came after 1990. After saying that  there was no more room for 
grapevines in Napa in the early 1990s, the  industry went on to not only 
somehow increase from 33,000 acres to over  45,000 acres but also to 
tear out and replant more than half of the  established vineyards 
because of phylloxera. In 1990, Napa was white wine  country, about 
5,000 tons ahead of red. Chardonnay was 15,000 tons ahead of  Cabernet 
Sauvignon. Now, Napa is red wine country, with Merlot the leader,  
followed by the other Bordeaux varieties. Red grapes in Napa have twice  
the coverage of white grapes. In just about every aspect of vinous  
improvement in California, Napa has led the way, with Mondavi most 
often  at the forefront. Sullivan engagingly tells the story.  The book 
has  plenty of historical photos and reproductions, mostly in sepia 
tones.   This is an important work, well-recommended. Quality/Price 
rating: 87.
  
 
24. SANTA FE KITCHENS; delicious recipes from the southwest (Ancient  
City Press, 2005; distr. Raincoast, 247 pages, ISBN 978-1-4236-0018-3,  
$40US) is from the Museum of New Mexico Foundation. It's a fund raiser,  
along the lines of community cookbooks. But it is simply the most  
gorgeous one I have seen, resplendent with reproductions of paintings  
held in the local Museum of Fine Arts, crafts in the Palace of the  
Governors, and other items from the4Museum of Internatio9nal Folk Art  
and the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture. The Foundation is a  non-
profit organization dedicated to these four museums, as a sort of  
"Friends of
" group. There are also photos of members' dining rooms and  
kitchens (without people, thank God). Recipes are contributed by  
restaurants, chefs and the locals  even the Governor sent in some.  
While there are a lot of New Mexican type recipes using chiles and 
corn,  pork sausages, tortillas, etc., there are still many non-local 
food preps  such as bruschetta, most of the shrimp, and many desserts. 
And this is a  common failing of many such books. Try instead southwest 
pasta, Texas cream  pie, green chile con queso, or roasted squash soup. 
Quality/Price rating:  85. 
  
 
25. SAVEUR COOKS AUTHENTIC ITALIAN; savoring the recipes and traditions  
of the world's favorite cuisine (Chronicle Books, 2001, 2008; distr.  
Raincoast, 320 pages, ISBN 978-0-8118-6574-6, $25.95US soft covers) is  
by the team at Saveur magazine. This is a reprint of the original book  
of 120 recipes, out in 2001 as a hardback. The arrangement is by 
course,  antipasti proceeding to desserts. In typical Saveur style, 
there is deep  background on many Italian food products such as 
Parmigiano Reggiano, wine,  vinegar, pasta, tomatoes, olive oil, and 
prosciuto  even road food. Typical  Italian preps include pomodori a 
riso, crostini, pasta verde, cuttlefish  stewed in its ink, Sicilian 
veal rolls. Lots of pictures illustrating  techniques and food products; 
indeed, over 400 of them. There is also a  table of equivalents for the 
weights and measures. Quality/Price rating: 88.  
  
 
26. DINNER A DAY; 365 delicious meals you can make in minutes (Adams  
Media, 2008; distr. Canadian Manda Group, 394 pages, ISBN  978-1-59869-
615-8, $16.95US spiral bound) is by Lynette Rohrer Shirk. It  contains 
some material and recipes by Shirk and others previously available  in 
Adams Media's "Everything" aeries. The arrangement is by course, from  
soup to holiday classics. These are main courses, which can be fleshed  
out by a simple salad and bought dessert. Deli-style food, sandwiches  
(wraps, burgers), seafood, poultry, meat, vegetarian, pizzas and pasta  
are included, and finished off by casserole one-dish meals. Preps  
include pot pie, cottage pie, tortilla lasagna, tamale pie, fish in red  
sauce, summer vegetable spaghetti  one for each day of the year.  
Holiday classics embrace venison medallions and Yorkshire pudding.  
Quality/Price rating: 88.
  
 
27. THE COMPLETE MEDITERRANEAN COOKBOOK (Tuttle Publishing, 2008, 304  
pages, ISBN 978-0-8048-4003-3, $29.95US soft covers) is by Tess Mallos,  
author of several cookbooks including "The Complete Middle East  
Cookbook". There is no indication that this book is a reprint, but I 
did  find a "previously published ISBN". A search of the book's 
bibliography  showed no mention of any book published after 1995, so I'm 
guessing that  this current book is at least 10 years old. Not that 
there are many changes  in Mediterranean cooking  but there are many 
book in the field. There is  nothing much here beyond the classics, so 
you will find paella, couscous,  pastas, tzatziki, baba ghannouj, 
tapenade, cipollata, albondigas,  pissaladiere, mezze, and the like. 
There are even spin-offs, such as  Northern France's "coquilles St. 
Jacques" but given here as "a la  provencale". The sardalya sarmasi 
(sardines in grape leaves) from Turkey are  both easy and appealing; 
there is a charming photo of the little things on  p.107. Arrangement is 
by course, service is for four, and  volume/weight/metric measurements 
are given in each recipe, obviating the  need for a conversion table. 
But a teeny tiny index typeface. Quality/Price  rating: 85.
  
 
28. HEALTHY AND SIMPLE ASIAN RECIPES, for delicious everyday meals  
(Periplus Editions, 2008; distr. Ten Speed Press, 96 pages, ISBN  978-0-
7946-0510-0, $12.95YS spiral bound) is a collection of decent recipes  
from the publisher of well-known SEA cookbooks. Although the recipes 
are  not sourced, there are 10 names of cooks and chefs listed on the 
same page  as the metric conversion charts. Its previous title was "LTC 
Asian Cooking  for Health". There are 50 preps here, covering all 
courses save desserts and  beverages. Try cucumber daikon salad with 
sweet mirin dressing, fish soup  with fennel, Chinese red date soup, and 
rice with clams and sake.  Quality/Price rating: 84.
  
 
29. IN PURSUIT OF THE COMMON GOOD; 25 years of improving the world, one  
bottle of salad dressing at a time (Broadway Books, 2003, 2008, 250  
pages, ISBN 978-0-7679-2997-4, $14.95 US soft covers) is by Paul Newman  
and A.E. Hotchner, creators of the Newman's Own lines. It was 
originally  published in 2003, and here is reissued as a trade 
paperback. The only real  change has been in the title (it was formerly 
known as "Shameless  Exploitation in Pursuit of the Common Good"), and 
it was written to  celebrate their 20th anniversary. Now it is 25 years; 
hence the change in  subtitle. This is the story of their pursuit of 
offering processed foods  filled with only natural ingredients. Of 
course, they have succeeded, and  over $150 million in profits in the 
first 20 years have been disbursed to  charities. It is still a good 
read, and there are even some recipes.  Quality/Price rating: 87.
  
 
30. BISTRO; French country recipes for home cooks (Ryland, Peters &  
Small, 2003, 2008; distr. T. Allen, 144 pages, ISBN 978-1-84597-694-1,  
$19.95 US paper covers) is by Laura Washburn, who currently translates  
French cookbooks into English. It was originally published in hard  
covers in 2003. New to this reissue is the metric conversion chart. 
Here  are 63 classic recipes for French onion soup, tians from Provence, 
soupe au  pistou, goat cheese tart, Belgian endive salad, pork in cider, 
cassoulet,  and the like. Good sharp photography, as always from Ryland. 
The mail order  list of suppliers is all US. Quality/Price rating: 86. 
  
 
31. CLASSICAL SOUTHERN COOKING. First revised edition (Gibbs Smith,  
2008, 416 pages, ISBN 978-1-4236-0225-5, $30 US soft covers) is by 
Damon  Lee Fowler, who has written six books on Southern cooking 
("Savannah  Cookbook", "New Southern Baking", "Fried Chicken", etc.). 
This revision  returns to print a minor classic in itself, There are 
more than 200 recipes  here, and each is carefully explained. This is 
upscale food, for the most  part, with catfish stew, sweet turnip 
sallet, game turkeys, peach cobbler,  and pork recipes. There's a 
chapter called "The Southern Way with  Vegetables", and a separate 
chapter for grits, rice and noodles. Lard is the  fat of choice, of 
course, but good lard has to be made at home as he  suggests. There is 
no recipe for chess pie. But there are metric conversion  tables. I do 
worry about the "perfect" binding, wondering how long it will  last. 
Quality/Price rating: 88. 
  
 
32. FRESH FROM THE FARMERS' MARKET; year-round recipes from the pick of  
the crop (Chronicle Books, 2008, 207 pages, ISBN 978-0-8118-6590-6,  
$19.95 US paper covers) is by Janet Fletcher, a multiple award-winning  
food writer and book author who once put in time at Chez Panisse. It 
was  originally issued in 1997, and Fletcher has updated portions of it 
while  still retaining the original photography. There are 75 preps 
here, for all  courses, using in-season produce of course. The 
arrangement begins in the  spring and carries through to winter. While 
the resources list has been  updated to include websites, the 
bibliography has not been updated, and  comes to a halt in 1996. There 
are also two pages of metric equivalent  tables. She opens with a whole 
section on shopping at markets, and this is  very informative for the 
uninitiated. But I did not like the all-caps  listings for the 
ingredients, especially since the typeface was very light.  I found it 
hard to read and identify the products. For the preps, try  Spanish 
tortilla with spring veggies, pesto pizza, turnip and turnip greens  
soup, spaghettini with red and gold cherry tomatoes, potato soup with  
savoy cabbage, warm frisee and fava bean salad. Quality/Price rating:  
84.
  
 
33. HOME COOKING WITH CHARLIE TROTTER (Ten Speed Press, 2000, 2008, 218  
pages, ISBN 978-1-58008-934-0, $25 US paper covers) is a paperback  
reissue of the 2000 hard bound book. The book has been newly designed  
and photographed. It was originally titled, "Charlie Trotter Cooks at  
Home", so if you have that book, then you'll not need this one. There 
is  a 2008 copyright date assigned to Trotter, so presumably there are 
some  changes, but not necessarily to the recipes. He covers the basics, 
and then  roams through starters, entrees, and desserts, in much the 
same way his  resto would. There are some menus and a pretty good index. 
The book is value  priced. Try chilled asparagus and basil soup with 
goat cheese, cantaloupe  and mango and Asian pear salad, olive oil 
poached cod, red-wine braised  short ribs, chilled peach soup. 
Quality/Price rating: 88. 
  
 
34. SAUCES; classical and contemporary sauce making. 3rd edition. (John  
Wiley and Sons, 2008, 612 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-19496-6 $49.95 US hard  
covers) is by James Peterson. It was the James Beard Cookbook of the  
Year after it was first published in 1991. It is a comprehensive survey  
of the field, and has sold over 200,000 copies in its first two  
editions. Peterson, the author of 13 cookbooks (most of which have gone  
on to win awards), has overhauled the book to bring it into the 21st  
century. He's simplified a few things, lightened the sauces, replaced  
repetitive instructions with easy charts, standardized terms for the  
consistency of sauces, dispensed with some of the old French names, and  
added a new 16-pager insert of colour photos. There are about 440  
recipes, and they also cover salad sauces, vinaigrettes, salsas and  
relishes, and jellies. Both avoirdupois and metric measurements for the  
ingredients are embedded in all recipes. Quality/Price rating: 87.