* THE REISSUES, THE REPRINTS,  AND THE NEWER EDITIONS...
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 ...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"...
  
  
 WILD GARLIC,  GOOSEBERRIES
AND ME; a chef's stories  and recipes from the land (Collins, 2007, 2010, 320 pages, ISBN  978-0-00-736406-0, $28.99 Canadian soft covers) is by Denis Cotter, Irish author  of the Café Paradiso Cookbook and chef-operator of that place in Cork. It is a  reprint of the 2007 hardback book. It's a vegetarian book, and the main premise  is foraging for food in the wild. It has good application to the local veggie  fare of the UK. He tells  us what's available and when, and how to use it. Preparations have their  ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no  table of equivalents. He has quite extensive notes for most plants, and of  course there is also some memoir material. Try chard, new potato, and chickpea  soup with lemon and roast garlic, or sea spinach with oyster mushrooms and soba  noodles, or even bok choy and rice vermicelli salad with egg, apple, and a  peanut dressing. English cognates are used throughout, such as aubergine (for  eggplant) and courgette (for zucchini). Quality/price rating: 84.  
  
  
 THE ILLUSTRATED STEP-BY-STEP COOK; more than 300 updated  recipes from DK's classic Look & Cook series (DK, 2010, 544 pages, ISBN  978-0-7566-6753-5, $35 US hard covers) is based on material from Anne Willan  originally published in 1992 through 1995. This is virtually a brand new book  since all the preps have been modernized. The whole range is covered: starters,  salads, vegetarian, one-pots, comfort food, bread, pies, cakes, desserts, and  midweek cooking. Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and  avoirdupois measurements, and there are tables of equivalents on the inside  covers, a boon. All recipes have been photographed to illustrate techniques  (each prep gets a two page spread), and there are symbols to indicate service,  prep time, cooking time, and the like. A good book of basic foods, such as onion  and Roquefort quiche, Asian noodle salad, tuna Nicoise salad, Nori-maki sushi,  cod and mussel chowder, blackberry and apple pie. Quality/price rating:  85.
  
  
  
 THE I HATE TO COOK BOOK. Updated and revised (Grand Central  Publishing, 2010, 208 pages, ISBN 978-0-446-54592-1, $22.99 UD hard covers) is  the 50th Anniversary Edition of an American classic. It was  originally written by Peg Bracken in 1960. Here, it has been updated and  tweaked, with new material by Jo Bracken, her daughter. The original had 200  recipes and many "hints" and "tips"; it sold some three million copies. Indeed,  I had just read that this Anniversary Edition had already sold 24,000 copies by  August. Classics shouldn't be reviewed: they get annotated gracefully. Bracken  and her friends wanted to shave a few minutes off the cooking chores, and to  some extent, they succeeded. The emphasis was on quick and tasty. There was no  concern for preservatives or for dairy fats. As her daughter says, you can now  use fresh food or yogurt as appropriate, relevant substitutes. And everything  works well. It's all pretty basic, and Bracken continued with eight other books  and many articles. So: the steak is made with an onion-soup mix, the stew with  the peas and carrot plus a can of thinned down soup, and the stroganoff with a  cream of chicken soup can. Some of the others are quite tasty, such as a basic  lamb shank recipe with no additions or a meatloaf with swiss cheese. The book  has some menus (a boon for any home cook) and some last-minute suppers.  Quality/price rating: 85. 
  
  
 BETTER HOMES AND GARDENS  NEW COOKBOOK. 15th edition. (Wiley, 2010, 608  loose leaf pages, ISBN  978-0-470-55686-3, $29.95 US ring binder) is from the magazine of the same name.  In fact, with each book US residents can get a free subscription for one year  (value: $6.13 US). Since the book is widely discounted at box stores and Amazon,  with the subscription the book can be had at virtually next to nothing. The  14th edition was published in 2007. The important thing is that this  is a classic that keeps getting better for the basic home cook. New to this  edition of 1400 preps are 1000 recipes with 1000 photos (800 new) and 400 photos  of techniques. New features include a chapter on "Cook Once, Eat Twice",  creating two meals out of one, and an exploration of new flavours to perk up  basic foods. There is also new stuff on breakfast, brunch, casseroles,  sandwiches and pizzas, as well as convenience cooking. Recipes have been laid  out in a more eye appealing fashion, and there is advice on how to customize  basic recipes. Ingredients are listed in US weights and measures. Quality/price  ratio: 85.
  
  
 THE GREAT DOMAINES OF BURGUNDY; a guide to  the finest wine producers of the Cote d'Or. 3rd ed.  (Sterling, 2010, 288  pages, ISBN 978-1-4027-7882-7, $35 US hard covers) is by Remington Norman and  Charles Taylor. It was originally published in 1992, with a revised edition in  1996 at the same number of pages as now: 288. There are 140 or so Domaines (up  from 130), the best of the properties in Burgundy, with an  assessment of the vintages 1971 through 2009 (all the data here was collected  May through November 2009). 39 entries are new, so 29 Cote D'Or Domaines from  the earlier book have been dropped. Norman was a Master of  Wine for 20 years, while Taylor was the  youngest ever member of that august society. I gather that  Taylor did much of the  spade work here, with interviews of the owners and winemakers, plus an update on  the 25 important communes. There's a page or two for each, with a table of  vineyard holdings (with the average age of the vines) and some photographs.  Viticulture, viniculture and wine style are discussed. There's a lot of primer,  basic information to complete the book (about 40 pages), material on  microclimates, grape varieties and clones, oaking, biodynamics, tasting, and a  glossary. Frankly, I would have appreciated more Domaines being listed since the  primer can be found elsewhere in Coates or in Hanson. Anybody who buys this book  will probably know most of the primer anyway. The non-Burgundian specialist will  find the Domaine data arcane. For the Burgundy wine lover, this is a  terrific book. Quality/price rating: 91.
  
  
  
 THE VEGETARIAN COLLECTION; creative meat-free dishes that  nourish & inspire (Transcontinental Books, 2010, 288 pages, ISBN  978-0-9813938-0-3, $22.95 Canadian paper covers) has been pulled together by  Alison Kent and the Canadian Living Test Kitchen (with its team of seven chefs  and stylists). The preps come mainly from the pages of the magazine, and have  been grouped around an ingredient category such as pulses and beans, grains,  tofu, seeds and nuts, eggs and cheese, and then forty pages devoted to  "vegetables". Recipes are one to a page, and there are just over 200 of them.  Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois  measurements, but there is no table of equivalents. Nutritional information is  listed, as well as some helpful hints from page to page. Expect a savour-flavour  with double mushroom hot and sour soup, crunchy almond noodle salad, wild rice  with pepitas, or vegetarian ceviche. Another good book for the home cook.  Quality/price rating: 89. 
  
  
  
 BARTENDING FOR DUMMIES. 4th edition. (John Wiley Publishing,  2010, 366 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-63312-0, $16.99 US paper covers) has been  revised to include more hip and trendy drinks. Ray Foley, the publisher of  "Bartender" magazine, is the author. Preliminary matter deals with home bar  setups and the base drinks. The A - Z alphabetical format has been retained, for  about 1000 recipes with illustrations of what stemware to use for each drink.  There are lots of charts, websites for producers and suppliers and information,  a recipe index, and a topical index. This is a value-driven book in a respected  off-handed series. Quality/price rating: 89.
  
  
 MATT KRAMER ON WINE; a  matchless collection of columns, essays, and observations by America's most  original and lucid wine writer (Sterling Epicure, 2010, 334 pages, ISBN  978-1-4027-7164-4, $19.95 US hard covers) is by the well-known author of the  "Making Sense" wine series who is also a columnist for the Wine Spectator. This  latest book is a collection of his shorter works, a sort of retrospective, all  noted as to original publication source and date. Most are, of course, from the  Wine Spectator, but there are also some from the  New  York Sun and from his books.  They cover the gamut of wine knowledge, and his own interest in wines (how to  taste, California, older  wines, Burgundy, and  Italy). He's  also an easy reader, with a breezy but literate style. You can always learn  something from him. Topics also include Gaja, wine and women, and  Bordeaux. There is  even a Devil's Dictionary on wine terms from 1995, although some of it can be  termed "libelous". As a writer on food and wine, Kramer has been at the top of  his game for over 34 years. And the best value of this collection is that,  unlike just about all the other anthologies, there is an index! Use it to track  down such elusive topics as why wine isn't art, cloning cabernet to  meaninglessness, why there is no wine writing in the New Yorker, how Kramer got  a $15,000 kill fee (for a Gaja article, included in this book), and much more.  Fascinating. Quality/price rating: 91.
  
  
  
 THE FRENCH COUNTRY TABLE; simple recipes for  bistro classics (Ryland, Peters & Small, 2010; distr. T. Allen, 159 pages,  ISBN 978-1-84975-023-3, $24.95 US hard covers) is by Laura Washburn, who  currently translates French cookbooks into English and tests recipes. It was  originally published in hard covers in 2003 (as Bistro) and in 2005 (as French  Desserts). Here are the 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. For desserts, there are tarte tatin, soufflé, clafouti, tarte au  citron, napoleons, oeufs a la neige, mousse, and parfaits. Everything is  relatively easy to make if you apply yourself. Good sharp photography, as always  from Ryland. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois  measurements, but there is a metric table of equivalents. Quality/Price rating:  87. 
  
  
  
 THE FOOD SUBSTITUTIONS BIBLE;  more than 6,500 substitutions for 
 ingredients, equipment & techniques. 2nd ed.  (Robert Rose, 2010, 695 pages, ISBN 978-0-7788-0245-7, $27.95 Canadian paper  covers) has been compiled by David Joachim who has authored, edited or  collaborated on more than 30 cookbooks. It was originally published in 2005,  with 1,500 fewer substitutions. The new edition also has five new ingredient  guides and measuring tables, plus 50 new recipes. It's also physically larger,  with about 70 more pages. This is a solid reference book emphasizing, through  over 1500 complete entries, more than 6500 reasonably approximate substitutions   all of it cross-referenced and arranged alphabetically. The ingredients are  listed with both avoirdupois and metric measurements. There are 175 recipes for  larder type items (sauces, stocks, spice mixes, herb blends, syrups, flavoured  butters, cheese, dips, spreads, relishes, and beverages). There are handy  reference charts for metric equivalents, high altitude cooking, stages of cooked  sugar, pan sizes. There are ingredient tables for edible flowers, types of salts  and vinegars, oil substitutions, picking apples and pears, dried beans and  lentils, olives, mushrooms, potatoes, chilies, flours, and rice. He has useful  website listings and a bibliography. Quality/Price Rating: 89.  
  
  
  
 THE BARTENDER'S BEST FRIEND. Updated and revised. (John Wiley  & Sons, 2010, 392 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-44718-5, $19.95 US soft covers) is  by Mardee Haidin Regan, an American wine and spirits consultant with a Julia  Child Cookbook Award nomination. It's a basic book, originally published in  2002, with over 850 recipes (including new ones such as the whole slew of what  are now "new martini"). There's about three to a page, with bold face for the  ingredients, making it easier to use in a setting of a dim barlight. It is an  all-in-one alphabetical listing of cocktails. There are tabs for easier  retrieval, plus an index for retrieval by spirit or form of drink, and a  waterproof, wipe-dry cover with a book ribbon for bookmarking. There's also a  bibliography but with bad indentations. It is all kept up to date at www.ardentspirits.com. No pictures, which is nice since it keeps the weight and  the price of the book down. Quality/Priced rating: 88.
  
  
  
 SEASONS; the best of Donna Hay Magazine  (HarperCollins, 2010, 324 pages, ISBN 978-1-55468-906-4, $39.99 Canadian soft  covers) is by Donna Hay, the foodie Martha Stewart of  Australia,  with a string of successful cookbooks (17), newspaper articles, and her own  self-named magazine. These preps in this book, originally published last year by  Murdoch Books in Australia,  come from her magazine. And her Canadian fans will lap it up, because the  magazine is not that widely available here. It is all arranged by season, with  coverage of "savoury" and "sweet" for each. Preparations have their ingredients  listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there are tables of  equivalents. It is pretty basic, marred slightly by many overly touristy or  non-food pictures (some double-spreaded over the book. But the oversized book  does give us four or so recipes per page. There's red mullet with cherry  tomatoes and garlic crumbs, spinach and feta pies, blistered plums and vanilla  mascarpone tart, mixed berry clafouti, cauliflower soup with porcini oil,  roasted pumpkin and garlic soup, and three pepper pork stir-fry. Quality/Price  rating: 84.
  
  
 EVERYDAY EASY CAKES & CUPCAKES; cheesecakes, muffins,  brownies, sponge cakes (DK 2010, 224 pages, ISBN 978-0-7566-6731-3 $20 US hard  covers) is a collection of 85 dessert preps from the previously published DK  books, The Illustrated Kitchen Bible (2008) and The Illustrated Quick Cook  (2009). There's a lot of useful information here, specifically on these types of  desserts. As well, the DK photography is pretty good too. Preparations have  their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there are metric table  of equivalents on both the inside covers. The large print is useful, as well as  a variety of icons used to show how long to freeze a dish, its prep time, and  what kind of equipment is needed. Quality/Price rating: 84.
  
  
 EXPLORING WINE. Completely revised third  edition (John Wiley & Sons, 2010, 792 pages, ISBN 978-0-471-77063-3, $65 US  hard covers) is by Steven Kolpan, Brian Smith and Michael Weiss  all professors  of wine at the Culinary Institute of America. It is meant as both a textbook for  hospitality students, especially those at the CIA, and for the informed  consumer who wishes to pursue his vinous knowledge. It has a fairly complicated  past. The second edition was in 2004 at 1070 pages (now out of print). The first  edition was in 1996 from Van Nostrand Reinhold. Meanwhile, in 2008, Wiley  published "WINEWISE; your complete guide to understanding, selecting, and  enjoying wine" (360 pages) by these same three authors. So the best way to  describe the current book is to say that it is a book that has doubled in size  from 2008, borrowing elements from the second edition and with new material by  two new authors. It is a fairly complete basic guide within two covers at a  decent price. There are over 600 colour photos and over 32 maps (in colour, and  with sufficient detail). The authors aim to prepare the basic consumer to  appreciate wines, to select and buy the best bottles in both stores and  restaurants, and to pair wines with foods (and vice versa). They begin coverage  with material on the major white and red varietals. They continue with profiles  of the major wine regions in the world. Here,  Canada is  given the usual three pages. Ok, I can handle that. But (shamefully) there is  still nothing on Prince  Edward County.  Additional material concerns lists of value wines. As for restaurant pricing  policies, the authors say "the wine should never cost double its retail price on  the wine list." With a straight face, I can say that for  Ontario, the wine  should ALWAYS cost quadruple its retail price. An $8 bottle from the consignment  warehouse is regularly priced in the $30 to $40 range. I wished they had some  more details on some 
 of the minor grapes. We do not really know which will be the  next "star". Quality/Price Rating: for this price, try 90.
  
  
 EVERYDAY EASY FREE-AHEAD MEALS;  casseroles, hearty soups, pizzas, one-pots, oven bakes (DK 2010, 224 pages, ISBN  978-0-7566-6732-0 $20 US hard covers) is a collection of 85 preps from the  previously published DK books, The Illustrated Kitchen Bible (2008) and The  Illustrated Quick Cook (2009). There's a lot of useful information here,  specifically on these types of vehicles listed in the sub-title. As well, the DK  photography is pretty good too. Preparations have their ingredients listed in  avoirdupois measurements, but there are metric table of equivalents on both the  inside covers. The large print is useful, as well as a variety of icons used to  show how long to freeze a dish, its prep time, and what kind of equipment is  needed. Try stuffed eggplants (imam bayildi) or fish and lee pie or salmon fish  cakes. Quality/Price rating: 84.
  
  
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