...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"...
  
 11. GUIDE TO HEALTHY RESTAURANT EATING. 4th edition (American Diabetes  
Association, 2009; distr. McGraw Hill, 830 pages, ISBN  978-1-58-040315-
3, $17.95US paper covers) has been put together by Hope S.  Warshaw, RD, 
MMSc, CDE  a nationally recognized expert on healthy eating  and 
diabetes. This is a hard to beat book if you eat out a lot and are  
diabetic or just want to cut back on superfluous calories, sugars and  
fats. The coverage is for American chain restaurants, and (for the most  
part) these same chains also exist in Canada. Six meals a week are 
eaten  out in restaurants, mostly at chains where you just walk in and 
go up to the  front. 61 chains are covered (although Tim Horton's is 
listed as only  available online at the website below), and almost 7,000 
items are analyzed.  The arrangement is by loose type of diner: 
breakfasts, snacks, chicken,  seafood, burgers, family fare, soups and 
sandwiches, pizza, tacos, Asiatic,  and frozen desserts. Nutritional 
analyses for each item include calories,  fat content, saturated fats, 
cholesterol, sodium, carbohydrates, fibre and  protein. Choices and 
Exchanges are also listed. So you can go through all  the burger and
pizza joints to find the "best" possible foods. She has sample  meals 
that show readers how to make healthy meals from the menu of each  
resto, and related to this she also indicates "Healthiest Bet" choices  
from every establishment. I wish she had also done highly refined corn  
fructose (HRCF) as well. This is a survival kit; it has been published  
since 1999. More can be found at 
www.diabetes.org/healthyrestaurant,  
especially searching for key terms. Quality/price rating: 95. 
 
  
  
  
  
 12. CRUSH ON NIAGARA; the definitive wine tour guide for Niagara, Lake  
Erie North Shore, Pelee Island and Prince Edward County (Whitecap, 
2009,  
240 pages, ISBN 978-1-55285-980-3, $19.95 paper covers) is by Andrew  
Brooks, a sommelier who not only owns a Niagara vineyard but also a 
wine  tour company (Crush on Niagara Wine Tours. It was originally 
written in 2004  and published as 160 pages. It is now five years later, 
and there are 50%  more pages. The industry has grown dramatically. The 
original coverage was  just Niagara (56 wineries). But now he has 98.
in the Niagara Peninsula, from  the smallest (Domaine Vagners, 1000 
cases) to the largest. And, of course,  the industry continues to shake 
out, with a handful of wineries disappearing  or merging. The directory 
data includes winery hours, contact information,  annual production, 
acreage (not hectares), and where to purchase the wine.  Other basic 
contents include wine serving and wine pairing suggestions,  glassware 
tips, accommodation, shopping, and eating places. The book is very  
useful for information about the smaller and newer wineries, such as  
Caroline Cellars, Palatine Hills, and the organic Frogpond Farm. Each  
Niagara profile gets two pages, accompanied by photos. There are no  
pictures for the other regions' wineries. Chase gives an assessment of  
the better wines and his recommendations ("Sommelier's picks"). But the  
photos are often small and dark, and there are no real Tasting Notes.  
The front and back French covers have page references to wineries,  
listed in alphabetical order. There is a good chapter on tips on buying  
Ontario wines. But there are no fruit wineries except for Sunnybrook  
Farms. Quality/Price Ratio: 90.
  
  
  
 
13. FLAVORS OF PROVENCE (Ryland Peters & Small, 2007, 2009; distr.  
T.Allen, 
160 pages, ISBN 978-1-84597-854-9, $21.95US paper covers) is by  Clare 
Ferguson, a British food and travel writer who also lives in Greece,  
North America, and other parts of the world. It's a very appealing 
book,  good for armchair travelers, and one of a regional series, which 
began with  Tuscany. Here, there are 90 recipes. There is a discussion 
on ingredients  but these are scattered through the book (olives, 
walnuts and their oils;  herbs and garlic; fish and poultry; sweets; 
sheep and goat cheese; wines).  The recipes are arranged by course from 
apps to desserts to beverages.  Websites are noted. Recipes are the 
classics of salade nicoise; pan bagna;  ratatouille; pistou; 
tians; tapenade; and fougasse. The pissaladiere uses 80   100 black 
olives for 8 people. And there are some obscure regional dishes  as 
well. But there are too many locational pictures at the expense of demo  
pix. Avoirdupois measurements are used, but there are metric conversion  
charts. Quality/price rating: 85.
  
 
14. SEASONAL FOOD; a guide to what's in season, when and why (Eden  
Project Books, 2009; distr. Random House, 256 pages, ISBN  978-1-905-
81136-6, $21.95 Canadian paper covers) is by Paul Waddington. It  was 
originally published in 2004; this is the paperback reissue. Waddington  
is an environmental writer. This is a guidebook to seasonal food "in  
Britain, so that locals can eat produce at its best, contribute to a  
renaissance in local production, and simple revel in the variety of the  
seasons." There are charts and chapters starting with January through  
December, listing what's available and when. There are also some common  
but useful recipes (morels on fried bread, ratatouille, et al), all  
indexed. Both avoirdupois and metric forms of weights and measures are  
listed with the ingredients. BUT  the scope is British, and the book  
appears not to have been updated since 2004 (certainly, the former  
bibliography is listed as it was). Quality/Price rating: 82.
  
 
15. EASY MEDITERRANEAN; simple recipes from sunny shores (Ryland Peters  
& Small, 2007, 2009; dist. Thomas Allen, 240 pages, ISBN  978-1-84597-
814-3, $16.95 US soft covers) is a collection of about 100  recipes from 
11 authors who have written books for this publisher. Most of  the preps 
are from Maxine Clark and Clare Ferguson. So it is an omnium  gatherum 
in the truest anthological sense. Ryland has a whole series of  "Easy" 
books, all at the same price, and all in this same format. All  courses 
are covered here, from apps to sweets, mainly from Southern France,  
Italy, Spain, Greece, Turkey, and Morocco. The major classics are here,  
with well-framed photos: fish baked with lemon, oregano, and potatoes;  
Sicilian green vegetables; soupe au pistou; Spanish fish cakes; okra  
with dried limes; and Turkish pizza turnover. Avoirdupois measurements  
are used, but there are metric conversion charts. Quality/Price Rating:  
83.
  
  
  
 16. THE ACCIDENTAL VEGAN (Celestial Arts, 2009, 228 pages, ISBN  978-1-
58761-338-8, $16.95 US paper covers) is by Devra Gartenstein,  chef-
owner of the Patty Pan Grill in Seattle; it is a vegetarian-vegan  
resto. More than 25 percent of North Americans have some form of  
lactose-intolerance, making dairy-free cooking increasingly popular.  
Vegan cookbooks are selling briskly. Gartenstein has revised her 2000  
book, and added 20 new recipes. Instructions have been simplified, and  
the emphasis is now on local and fresh foods. The full range of  
appetizers to desserts has been maintained, and there is a strong  
Asiatic influence plus popular Italian and Mexican dishes. Good leading  
in the recipes. Avoirdupois measurements are used, but there is no  
metric table of equivalents. Try tamari-roasted sunflower seeds, Thai  
noodle salad, Lebanese white been salad, Spanish veggie stew, or barley  
with almonds. Quality/Price rating: 87.
  
 
17. TABLE INSPIRATIONS; original ideas for stylish entertaining (Ryland  
Peters & Small, 2001, 2005, 2009; distr. by T. Allen, 143 pages, ISBN  
1-84172-823-5, $19.95 paper covers) is by Emily Chalmers, a freelance  
stylist and writer. She firmly believes that a decorative table (at 
home  or in a restaurant) gives a sense of occasion and heightens 
anticipation.  Even simple meals can be made memorable this way. She 
gives 20 themed  occasions or festive meals: a brunch, alfresco, Asian-
style elegance,  Christening tea and other events, children's party, 
surprise birthday  buffet. At the end, for reference, there is a visual 
directory of seven  international place settings, both formal and 
informal. The source lists  cover both UK and US stores. Settings are 
easy to create for busy people.  Food does taste better when it is 
beautifully presented. Everything here is  both interesting and doable. 
Quality/Price Rating: 85.
  
 
18. D.K.'s SUSHI CHRONICLES FROM HAWAII; recipes from Sansei Seafood  
Restaurant & Sushi Bar (Ten Speed Press, 2009,244 pages, ISBN  978-1-
58008-963-0, $24.95 US paper covers) is by Dave Kodama, now an  
executive chef/owner of four Sansei restos and other dining  
establishments in Hawaii. He is assisted by Bonnie Friedman who does 
the  PR for Kodama's companies. The book was originally published in 
2003; this  is the paperback reissue of favourite dishes from his 
restaurants. For the  most part, it is Pan Asiatic fusion cuisine, with 
bits of Hawaiian, American  and European ingredients and techniques. 
Arrangement is for sushi and  sashimi, shikomi and sauces, "small 
plates" and "big plates" and "sweet  plates". Avoirdupois measurements 
are used, but there is no metric table of  equivalents. Try foie gras 
nigiri, unagi and avocado nigiri with raspberry  coulis, sweet miso 
scallops, Pacific Rim salmon, or seared buffalo strip  loin sashimi. 
Quality/Price rating: 88. 
  
 
19. BAKING & PASTRY; mastering the art and craft. Second edition  (John 
Wiley & Sons, 2009, 932 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-05591-5, $70 US hard  
covers) is from the Culinary Institute of America. It was originally  
published in 2004. It's one of those books which can serve as a text at  
a hospitality school and/or as a useful reference book for home cooks.  
There are 625 recipes, covering the entire range, from primer  
(ingredients, baking formulas, percentages, techniques) to yeast-raised  
breads, pastry dough, batters, cakes, custards, creams, icings, frozen  
desserts, pies, etc. etc. 244 of the 461 photos and illustrations are  
new to this edition. Newer material covers vegan items, kosher, frozen  
desserts, breakfast pastries, savoury braking, healthy nutrition, 
design  and display, plus wedding cake décor. Recipes are scaled to home 
cooking,  and measurements are in both metric and avoirdupois, and 
sometimes with  percentages. The book weighs six and a quarter pounds. 
Quality/Price rating:  87. 
  
  
  
 20. PURE SIMPLE COOKING; effortless meals every day (Ten Speed Press,  
2009, 192 pages, ISBN 978-1-58008-948-7, $21.95 US paper covers) is by  
Diana Henry, a prominent British cookbook author, award winner, TV 
host,  and food columnist for the Sunday Telegraph. It was originally 
published in  Britain as "Cook Simple" in 2007. The publisher says that 
it is an everyday  cookbook with 150 recipes that feature simple food 
enhanced with fresh  ingredients. Still, log rolling must have been 
needed since both Hugh  Fearnley-Whittingstall ("The River Cottage Meat 
Book") and Deborah Madison  (multiple cookbooks) lend their 
endorsements. Classic recipes dominate, but  each has been gussied up 
with additional taste points and variations. For  example, for desserts, 
try peaches with gorgonzola and mascarpone, peaches  in moscato, 
Prosecco with sorbet and summer berries, figs and raspberries  with 
mascarpone, drained yoghurt with honey and pistachios and berries,  
strawberries in Beaujolais, cherries on ice, boozy raisins and about a  
dozen more. Arrangement is by major ingredient  chicken, chops,  
sausages, leg of lamb, fish, pasta, veggies, fruits, and desserts.  
Avoirdupois measurements are used, but there is no metric table of  
equivalents. The picture of a lamb stuffed with goat cheese, tomatoes  
and basil is dynamite. Mediterranean recipes predominate, mainly  
Provence, Italy, North Africa and Greece. Quality/Price rating: 90. 
  
 
21. MAXINE CLARK'S ITALIAN KITCHEN; simple steps to great tasting  
Italian food (Ryland, Peters and Small, 2009; distr. T. Allen, 192  
pages, ISBN 978-1-84597-829-7, $29.95 US hard covers) is by Maxine  
Clark. Some of this book comes from her previous Italian cookbooks (Al  
Forno, Bruschetta, Flavors of Tuscany, Italian Salads, Italian  
Vegetables, Pizza, Risotto, and Trattoria). These 75 recipes make a 
good  all-round collection, with great photography. These are all the 
fave dishes  of everyday food of pasta, gnocchi, risotto, and polenta. 
Lots of detail on  prep work. Chapters are arranged by course beginning 
with antipasti and  moving to dessert. The weights and measures are in 
avoirdupois, but there  are tables of metric conversions. Most of the 
book is primer-type and the  recipes are basic classics, but that's 
needed for beginners. Try zucchini  and mint fritters, spinach and 
ricotta timbales, fennel and leeks braised in  cream and lemon, warm 
lentil salad, creamy tomato and bread soup, pizza  Bianca. Quality/price 
rating: 84.
  
 
22. THE FILIPINO-AMERICAN KITCHEN; traditional recipes contemporary  
flavours (Tuttle Publishing, 2006, 176 pages, ISBN 978-0-8048-3836-8,  
$24.95 US hard covers) is by Jennifer M. Aranas, formerly chef-owner of  
Rambutan Restaurant in Chicago. Now she teaches and writes about  
Filipino foods. This is both a basic book and a fusion book, with over  
100 recipes. There's not a lot about Filipino cuisine and culture, but  
enough to get you started. The Philippines were a crossroads culture,  
with influences from China, Spain, US and Mexico. I read somewhere that  
Mexico was most highly influential. The book is arranged by course, 
from  apps to desserts. But there are only three adobo recipes in all, 
which is a  bit strange since adobo is the national dish. You'll have to 
read the recipe  for duck adobo in order to find out what adobo is (and, 
or course, it can be  used with any meat or vegetable). Both avoirdupois 
and metric measurements  are used. Unfortunately, while all the preps 
are listed with page references  in the table of contents, there is no 
index. Quality/Price rating: 82.  
  
  
  
 23. THE CALIFORNIA DIRECTORY OF FINE WINERIES; fourth edition (Wine  
House 
Press, 2006, 160 pages, $19.95 US hardbound) is a book package,  with 
Marty Olmstead a travel writer, and Robert Holmes a photographer (there  
are over 200 photos here), plus a slew of designers and copyeditors.  
Sixty-nine wineries are covered, in Napa (31), Sonoma (32) and 
Mendocino  (6). Each is profiled and is physically described (layout of 
winery  operations, buildings, gardens), along with reproductions of 
labels. Various  sidebars list directions, vineyard tours, wine 
tastings, culinary events,  and nearby attractions. Maps show these 
wineries plus about 100 others  within the counties. For example, in 
Napa, there are Beringer, Clos du Val,  and Silver Oak. In Sonoma, there 
are Arrowood, Benziger, and Chateau  St.Jean. There are also no tasting 
notes, nor any recipes, but the book is  very useful for trips and 
tastings. Quality/price rating: 84. 
  
  
  
 24. A RETURN TO COOKING (Artisan, 2009; distr. by T. Allen, 330 pages,  
ISBN 978-1-57965-393-4, $25.95 US soft covers) is by Eric Ripert, chef  
and part owner of Le Bernardin. He also is associated with restos in  
Grand Cayman, Washington, DC, and Philadelphia. Sharing the writing  
credits is Michael Ruhlman, cookbook author and memoirist. Here are 150  
recipes dedicated to the carefully slow approach to cooking. It was  
originally published in 2002; this is the paperback reissue. Advanced  
log rolling comes from Martha Stewart, Anthony Bourdain, and Suzanne  
Goin. The book is also part memoir and part picture-book. His 
influences  in life came from Sag Harbor, Puerto Rico, Napa Valley, and 
Vermont. Thus,  he divides the book up that way, with recipes and 
thoughts from each place.  Try venison loin with parsnip-celeriac puree 
and cranberries, shellfish  ragout, halibut with grapes and wine sauce, 
rice pudding with sautéed  bananas and chocolate sauce, Portobello and 
eggplant tart, and roasted whole  turbot with spring veggies. 
Avoirdupois measurements are used, but there is  no metric table of 
equivalents. Quality/Price rating: 88.
  
 
25. REMARKABLE SERVICE; a guide to winning and keeping customers for  
servers, managers, and restaurant owners. Second edition (John Wiley &  
Sons, 2009, 294 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-19740-0, $29.95 US paper covers)  
is from the Culinary Institute of America. The premise here is that  
competitive restaurants must have consistent, high-quality service  
and  this is hard to do with minimum wages and lowered tips (due to the 
economy).  While chapters cover every angle such as table service, prep 
work, money  handling, reservations, seating, wine service, special 
functions, safety,  customer relations and the like, it falls short on 
"motivation" (there is no  entry in the index). There is nothing extra 
given for great service since  all tips are now normally shared, and in 
some restos, management/owners also  take a portion of the tips. The 
best waiter subsidizes the worst waiter.  Nevertheless, there is expert 
advice here on how to do it all properly and  with élan. The first 
edition was back in 2001. Newer material concentrates  non safety and 
customer relations, plus special function events.  Quality/price rating: 
87. 
  
  
  
 26. THE END OF FOOD (Mariner Books, 2009, 400 pages, ISBN  978-0-547-
08597-5, $14.95 US soft covers) is by Paul Roberts, an author who  
writes on resource economics and politics for magazines and newspapers.  
He wrote the doomsday "The End of Oil" in 2004, and now the failure of  
the modern food economy is his new theme. His book (this is a reprint 
of  his 2008 work) is endorsed by Michael Pollan (In Defense of Food). 
This is  not a hard book to get in to, although it is depressing. It 
certainly is a  timely book because of the excessive rise in food prices 
since January 2008.  Indeed, he has an eight page afterword to bring the 
book up to date. His  scope is broad, ranging from making food to 
marketing food and to moving  what we eat. Of course, it is all entwined 
with OIL, his previous book. So  he has done his basic research. And 
there are extremes here: the "haves" are  now obese while the "have-
nots" are starving. What's new and different over  the past few years 
have been the incredible amount of international  investments and 
speculative food futures markets (commodity exchanges). With  the 
entrance of China as a global player, the whole situation has been  
compounded. Commodity producers have taken over: they spend money on  
political campaign contributions, lobbying, food security, and  
transportation (read: oil) costs. They believe in ethanol which is  
raising grain prices. They set prices yet get government subsidies.  
Their profit margins grow, they don't cover deficiencies. They 
influence  trade policies. Worst still, they have managed to convince 
pension funds to  buy into the investments. There are long-term costs 
associated with  commodity producers, and we need to be aware of them. 
There are extensive  endnotes and a bibliography (strangely enough, 
though, he does not cite  Marion Nestle's 2006 book "What to Eat" 
although her two other books are  there). Quality/Price Rating: 90.
  
  
  
 27. RISOTTO WITH VEGETABLES, SEAFOOD, MEAT AND MORE (Ryland Peters &  
Small, 2009; distr. T.Allen, 144 pages, ISBN 978-1-84597-809-9, $19.95  
soft covers) is by Maxine Clark, a cooking teacher and writer who  
specializes in Italian food. She has also written other such books for  
Ryland in the past. This book was originally published in 2005.  
Beginning with the basics (white risotto step-by-step, broths), she  
continues with sections on Best Broths, Useful Ingredients, Websites,  
and U.S. mail order sources. There is a vegetarian section, but of  
course, risottos deal mostly with cheese, egg, poultry, meats, and  
seafood. There are 46 recipes here plus six others (e.g., "barlotto"  
barley risotto, arancine di riso, and desserts). The book has metric  
conversion charts for the U.S. volume measurements. Try gelato di riso,  
fennel and black olive risotto, pesto risotto, chicken confit risotto,  
or beet risotto. Each recipe is illustrated with a lush presentation  
photo. Quality/Price Ratio: 85.