5. MELISSA'S EVERYDAY COOKING WITH ORGANIC PRODUCE (John Wiley &  Co., 
2010, 336 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-37105-3, $29.95 US hard covers) is by  
Cathy Thomas, food columnist at the Orange County Register. In 1984,  
Melissa's World Variety Produce Inc was formed; it was named after the  
founders' daughter. It is a leading distributor of fruits and veggies 
in  the US, primarily to restaurants and other trade places. This is 
Thomas'  second book for Melissa. She gives us overviews of the 57 most 
commonly  available fruits and veggies (with variations by variety), 
about 225 recipes  with variations and quick-prep ideas, plus the usual 
basics of shopping and  storage, with serving suggestions and 
nutritional info. Preparations have  their ingredients listed in 
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no metric  table of equivalents.
Audience and level of use: those concerned about food  sustainability, 
organic food eaters.
Some interesting or unusual  recipes/facts:  pork chops with curry-
apricot sauce; nuthouse chicken  with roasted bananas; broccoli, beef, 
and brown rice combo; leek and  tarragon soup with melted brie cheese; 
couscous with plumcots and  mint.
The downside to this book: I'm uncomfortable with logos and trademarks  
on my food; the beginning of the book is a bit of an infomercial, but  
then it goes away.
The upside to this book: photographs show intense  colour.
Quality/Price Rating: 87.
  
  
  
 6. ROSE REISMAN'S FAMILY FAVOURITES (Whitecap, 2010, 392 pages, ISBN  
978-1-77050-006-8, $29.95 Canadian soft covers) is by the indefatigable  
Rose Reisman, author of some 17 other cookbooks. But despite her creds  
through a catering company, home delivery, involvement with Pickle  
Barrel, and Breakfast for Learning, the publisher feels that she still  
needs logrolling. There are 4 on the back cover, including Mark McEwan,  
Michael Smith, and Bonnie Stern, and 8 more at the front, including TV  
hosts and a Senator (not a hockey player)! I really don't see a need 
for  any of these, but then I'm only a reviewer, not a marketer. Reisman 
proposes  healthy meals for those who matter most. Here are 270 quick 
and nutritious  recipes for the family. There's a crash course in 
nutrition and why it is so  important, what are the best foods for 
families , and how make meals a  family affair  there are about 40 
pages here. There is even some material  on how to pack a lunch for the 
kids (and yourself).The preps that follow  cover all courses and all 
types of food: breakfast, appetizers, salads,  soups, sandwiches, 
vegetable side dishes, meats and seafood, desserts, slow  cooker, and 
thirty pages of children's faves. Each recipe comes with some  kind of 
advice and tip in a sidebar (actually a midline bar?) plus the usual  
per serving nutritional data. Most preps have only a few steps, and  
there is plenty of white room )and large printing) to allow for visual  
relief and addition of your own comments. The book is probably also  
being pitched to the US market since there are only avoirdupois  
measurements used in the recipes. There is, of course, a table of 
metric  equivalents at the back. There are coloured tabs which are 
useful in  locating sections of the book, but the index is also thorough 
and useful.  
Audience and level of use: families, those who also use Stern and  
Lindsay.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: chocolate and cashew  cream 
cheese pie; pizza quesadillas; pesto chicken; beef, bok choy and  oyster 
mushroom stir-fry; turkey and sautéed corn chili with white cheddar  
cheese; hummus soup with feta and black olives.
The downside to this  book: I have to assume that the binding will hold, 
since it is a paperback  and the paper is heavy. Just be careful, don't 
bend back the book.
The  upside to this book: this book supports Breakfast for Learning, 
which helps  local communities start and sustain programs that provide 
breakfast, lunch  and snacks to students.
Quality/Price Rating: 87.
  
 
7. THE BIG SUMMER COOKBOOK; 300 fresh, flavorful recipes for those lazy  
hazy days (John Wiley & Sons, 2010, 337 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-11427-8,  
$24.95 US soft covers) is by Jeff Cox, author of 17 books about organic  
food, wine, and gardening. He was a managing editor of Organic Farming 
  you can find more details at organicfoodguy.com. This is a staples 
book of  basic summer food preps (he even has a section on homemade 
summer staples:  sauces, condiments, dressings, marinades, and the 
like). He has a lot of  ideas on menu creation for lunches, brunches, 
visits to the beach, picnics,  and other outdoors activities. His food 
emphases are on fresh veggies,  herbs, and fruits since summer is THE 
season. He encourages us to eat more  of these during this season, in 
addition to perhaps using meats as a  garnish. Preps are marked with 
icons to help identify quick-cooking recipes,  ones that can be made 
ahead, and ones that require no cooking at all.  Informative sidebars 
are liberally distributed. As well, he has some  anecdotal tales to 
amuse us. All courses are covered from apps to desserts,  with material 
on drinks, 19 menus (with page references), picks at farmers'  markets, 
and a listing of recipes by both icon and by summer ingredient.  
Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements,  
but there is no metric table of equivalents.
Audience and level of use:  those looking for a summery cookbook.
Some interesting or unusual  recipes/facts: peachberry almond galette; 
pssta primavera salad; summer  stone fruit tart; lobster salad; cold 
summer squash soup; caponata;  melon-lime salad.
The downside to this book: the orange and green colours of  the typeface 
grate after awhile, and the recipes may be hard to read in some  cases, 
depending on your eyesight.
The upside to this book: from time to  time there are wine suggestions.
Quality/Price Rating: 87.
  
  
  
 8. THE COMPLETE ROOT CELLAR BOOK; building plans, uses, and 100 recipes  
(Robert Rose, 2010, 264 pages, ISBN 978-0-7788-0243-3, $27.95 Canadian,  
paper covers) is by Steve Maxwell, a home improvement author with his  
own root cellar, and Jennifer MacKenzie, a professional home economist,  
author and editor. Together they present 30 easy-to-follow illustrated  
plans for all kinds of storage, plus 100 recipes to use the "roots". 
The  variety of storage includes cold rooms, storage containers, 
basement  cellars, stand-alone cellars, outdoor structures, cellars for 
condos and  townhouses, and cellars for a warmer climate. They have a 
huge list of  fruits and veggies, and for each there are notes on 
optimal storage  conditions for both outdoor and indoor storage, storage 
life in a cellar,  plus what to do when the food starts to deteriorate. 
Preparations have their  ingredients listed in both metric and 
avoirdupois measurements, and there is  no table of equivalents. The 
book concludes with a resources list and a  bibliography.
Audience and level of use: the adventuresome, those who want to  create 
their own cold rooms.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts:  beets that have gone soft 
during storage are still good to eat after they  are boiled. Try 
sauerkraut, vegetable pot pie, sage butter parsnip soufflé,  or roasted 
onion and potato soup. Even a rumtopf.
The downside to this  book: I think the book needs a little more hand 
holding in the pest control  section.
The upside to this book: there are many applications here for wine  
cellars too.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
  
  
  
 9. THE GLORIOUSLY GLUTEN-FREE COOKBOOK; spicing up life with Italian,  
Asian, and Mexican recipes (John Wiley & Sons, 2010, 238 pages, ISBN  
978-0-470-44088-9, $19.95 US soft covers) is by Vanessa Maltin, Food &  
Lifestyle Editor for Delight Gluten Free Magazine. Three chefs helped 
to  contribute recipes: Keith Brunell (Italian), Katie Chan (Asian), and 
Edgar  Steele (Mexican). Maltin completes the package with a primer on 
celiac  disease, living on a gluten-free diet, and some gluten-free 
desserts. She  also has a list of celiac disease resources and three 
indexes (one for  dairy-free recipes, one for vegetarian recipes, and a 
general index).  Pantries are suggested for each cuisine. Preparations 
have their ingredients  listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is 
no metric table of  equivalents. Basic sauces are covered, as well as 
risottos, pasta, pizza,  rice and noodles, sushi, and the like.
Audience and level of use: those who  need a gluten-free diet.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: moo shu  beef; rd snapper 
with fresh salsa and quinoa; empanadas; grilled salmon and  green curry 
risotto; eggplant rollatini; calzones.
The downside to this  book: the purple and green typeface colours can be 
distracting.
The  upside to this book: useful to have some ethnic tasty food.
Quality/Price  Rating: 88. 
  
  
  
 10. FOOD STYLING; the art of preparing food for the camera (John Wiley  
& Sons, 2010, 398 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-08019-1, $75 US hard covers) is  
by Delores Custer, a freelance food stylist since 1978. She styles in  
all media and has taught courses around the world. She has major food  
clients such as Budweiser, General Mills, Kraft Foods and ConAgra. More  
about her can be found at delorescuster.com. The book has been highly  
anticipated. There's nothing much I can say about the basic contents  
beyond what the publisher tells us on the flap: the food stylist  
considers, plans, and perfects every detail of the presentation of 
food,  whether in stages or plated as a final. Custer brings 30 years of 
experience  styling for advertising, magazines, books, television, and 
film. Plus she  has taught all of this at New York University, CIA, 
Institute of Culinary  Education, and others. In essence, then, this is 
a definitive reference  book, with detailed information on essential 
tools and useful equipment,  step-by-step guidance on achieving the 
perfect shot, an a collection of  ideas for tricks and techniques to 
bring out the best of the plated food.  Everything is laid out in text-
book fashion, which promotes bites of data on  a couple of pages or so. 
The detail goes through a history, basic primer,  ethics (to enhance, to 
stretch or to cheat?), editorial vs. advertising,  types of media, who 
you work with  all in the first 30 pages. Half of the  book is about 
facing the challenges of food by ingredient: fruit, veggies,  herbs, 
edible flowers, dairy products, breakfast foods, sandwiches, soups,  
meats, grilled food, etc. She had also done a project 10 years ago 
about  the last fifty years of food styling, complete with archival 
photos. Here,  she updates it to cover 1950-2010, adding ten years and 
complete with  timelines. At the back, there is a glossary, a list of 
resources (magazines,  directories, and books: it is up-to-date as 
Gourmet is not here, but  Canadian and Brit mags are). Internet 
resources are exhaustively detailed,  as are organizations and sources 
of supply. 
Audience and level of use:  professional photographers and food 
presenters, libraries, and the curious  public. 
Some interesting or unusual facts: mortician's wax is a clear sticky  
substance and it holds foods in place or gives height. Use petroleum  
jelly (Vaseline) as a clear glue to add crumbs to or fill in gaps in  
cakes and piecrusts.
The downside to this book: it is heavy, with all the  photos on that 
paper  2 kilos weight (4.5 pounds)
The upside to this  book: the photos, of course, are stunning.
Quality/Price Rating: as a text,  it is very comprehensive, so 94.
  
 
11. THE BEER TRIALS; the essential guide to the world's most popular  
beers (Fearless Critic Media, 2010; distr. T. Allen, 312 pages, ISBN  
978-1-6081600-9-9, $14.95 US paper covers) has been pulled together by  
Seamus Campbell and Robin Goldstein. Campbell writes the popular The  
Daily Wort blog from Portland, OR, while Goldstein is also the co-
author  of the companion book, The Wine Trials 2010. In set up, the book 
is similar  to Wine Trials  250 beers are rated in brown-bag blind 
tastings. Each beer  has a full-page review. Primer info includes a 
guide to the major beer  styles, beer flavours, and beer regions of the 
world. All of the  participants and judges have been named. There are 
indexes to both beer  styles and the beers themselves. 
Audience and level of use: beer  lovers.
Some interesting or unusual facts: Drying malts over open fires,  which 
for a long time was the only option in many regions, imparted a  smoky  
signature that simply reflected the cooking fuel used. These  beers died 
out when indirect-heat kilning technology was developed.
The  downside to this book: Canada only gets a couple of entries under 
"Belgian  Ale" and "Pale Lagers". We know that there is more here, but 
the book is  only concerned with what's popular in the US. The 
microbrews, then, are  mainly American.
The upside to this book: good detail and written  descriptions.
Quality/Price Rating: 85,
  
  
  
 
12. MR. BOSTON SUMMER COCKTAILS (John Wiley & Sons, 2010, 106  pages, 
ISBN 978-0-470-18489=9, $15.95 US hard bound) comes from those  
associated with the Mr. Boston series of cocktail recipe books. Here,  
the editors are Anthony Giglio and Jim Meehan, both of whom worked on  
the master series of Mr. Boston preps. And just in time for summer, 
with  100 cocktails. Most use fresh fruit and cooler type thinning. 
There are the  usual primer data on cocktail preparation plus the 
sidebars of trade secrets  (proper muddling, finding inexpensive 
substitutes). Contributors are named.  Preparations have their 
ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but  there is no metric 
table of equivalents. 
Audience and level of use:  patio and pool hounds who love cocktails.
Some interesting or unusual  recipes/facts: blackbeard punch; melon 
stand; rosarita; rude sage cosmo;  arch angel; blood orange; and other 
named concoctions. 
The downside to  this book: could use more cocktails.
The upside to this book: good looking  pictures.
Quality/Price Rating: 86. 
  
 
13. FOR THE LOVE OF SALAD (Whitecap, 2010, 168 pages, ISBN  978-1-77050-
007-5, $19.95 Canadian soft covers) is by Jeanelle Mitchell,  author of 
For the Love of Soup (2002). And just in time for summer
Here she  has 
99 preps for all manner of salads: leafy, veggies, grains, pasta,  
beans, and types of meats. There is the usual primer data on dressings  
and ingredient selections, plus tips on salad techniques. Some of the  
salads are for main courses, but they can be converted to a salad  
course. She's illustrated the pages with her artwork. Preparations have  
their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements,  
but there is no metric table of equivalents. Proceeds of this book (as  
well as from the previous Soup book) go to support her nephew who was 
in  an auto accident.
Audience and level of use: summer salad lovers and  others
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: fresh mushroom salad with  
gremolata vinaigrette; grilled shrimp tabbouleh salad; cabbage slaw 
with  apples; smoked trout salad with endive; grilled tuna nicoise; 
nicoise pasta  salad; tex-mex grilled chicken salad with salsa dressing.
The downside to  this book: I would have liked more salad preps in the 
book.
The upside to  this book: good layout.
Quality/Price Rating: 87. 
  
  
  
 14. BAROLO (University of Nebraska Press, 2010, 227 pages, ISBN  978-0-
8032-2674-6, $24.95 US hard covers) is by Matthew Gavin Frank, a food  
writer who has worked for over 15 years in the hospitality industry. He  
has also been teaching writing at Grand Valley State University. His  
book is published in the "At Table" series from UNP. More and more  
academic presses are publishing food and wine books  academia seems 
top  have discovered ripe research potentials here. This is not a 
scholarly work  about Barolo (as in the wine), but rather it is a 
memoir-travelogue done in  much the same manner as the commercial 
publishers do in covering Tuscany,  Provence, Sonoma, Napa, and the 
like. Blame it all on Peter Mayles? I'm most  happy to see it here 
because Frank is a good writer, perhaps a bit too vivid  from time to 
time, but then that's what creative non-fiction is all about.  There are 
only two long chapters here; most are 4 to 7 pages of vignettes.  Seven 
had been previously published. Through it all we find that Frank is  
living in a tent, absorbing as much as possible about Piedmontese food  
and wine. He ends up picking grapes (as an illegal worker, apparently)  
for a vintner. He shares many stories about the provincial farms and  
merchants, all agricultural (farmers markets, restaurants, butchers,  
bakers). Illustrated with eight black and white photos.
Audience and  level of use: armchair tourists, memoir-lovers, readers of 
Italian food and  culture.
The downside to this book: needs an index to retrieve names and  
locations, food stuffs, etc. 
The upside to this book: it is loaded with  Barolo wine and Alba white 
truffles.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
  
 
15. SUCCESSFUL RESTAURANT DESIGN. Third edition (Wily and Sons, 2010,  
304 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-25075-4 hard covers) is one of the more  
enduring books in the hospitality service industry. It was first  
published in 1989, and it presents an integrated approach to restaurant  
design, incorporating front- and back-of-the-house operations. The  
authors are Regina S. Baraban (founding editor of Hospitality Design  
magazine and teacher at various places including University of New  
Hampshire) and the Joseph F. Durocher (a faculty member at UNH and her  
husband who died in 2009). This latest edition has been revised and  
update with new coverage of the latest technology (usually new 
computers  programs). Case methods were completed within the past five 
years. Case  studies have been used for architectural and decorative 
solutions. All  in-depth interviews here are brand new. The mix of 
people included  architects, designers, restaurateurs, and kitchen 
specialists.  "Sustainability" is a hot issue in the hospitality 
industry right now, and  it has been addressed for both front- and back-
of-the-house. At the end of  the book, the authors forecast what they 
think the future and changes of  restaurants will be over the next 
decade. There are plenty of floor plans,  mostly black and white photos 
(with a colour section) and some charts.  Quality/Price rating: 87.
   
 Dean Tudor, Ryerson University  Journalism Professor Emeritus
Treasurer, Wine Writers' Circle of  Canada
Look it up and you'll remember it; screw it up and you'll never forget  it.
Creator of Canada's award-winning wine satire site at http://fauxvoixvincuisine.blogspot.com