3. 1000 RECIPES FOR SIMPLE FAMILY FOOD (Firefly, 2010, 400 pages, ISBN  
978-1-55407-733-5, $29.95 CAD, hard covers) has been edited by Eleanor  
Maxfield. It's a book packager's opus, from Octopus Publishing in the  
U.K. And as such, it is pretty basic. If you count the spin-off 
recipes,  then you'll get 1000. Otherwise, it is one recipe to a page 
plus photo. For  example, under Budget Meals, there is jerk chicken 
wings. The spin-off, in a  lighter (and thus harder to read) typeface is 
here jerk lamb kebabs. For the  duck breast with a plum and mango salsa, 
there is an apricot and lime salsa.  These are variations. The 
arrangement follows style, such as simple snacks,  midweek meals, family 
faves, one pot, vegetarian, kids, baked items, and  desserts. There is 
something here for everyone, but it is all basic at an  affordable 
price. Many dishes can be created in 30-minutes or so, and  everything 
is easy to follow, although the typeface could have been a bit  larger. 
Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and  
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents. 
Audience  and level of use: general home cooks, beginners.
Some interesting or unusual  recipes/facts: eggplant, tomato and feta 
rolls; lima bean and bacon soup;  goat's cheese and tomato tarts; feta 
cheese and pepper tarts; sesame greens  with black bean sauce; Mexican 
pie; creamy blue cheese pasta; chocolate  soufflés.
The downside to this book: the lighter typeface for the spin-off  
recipes.
The upside to this book: a nice basic  collection.
Quality/Price Rating: 81.   
  
  
  
 4. WHOLESOME KITCHEN; delicious recipes with beans, lentils, grains and  
other natural foods (Ryland, Peters, and Small, 2010, 160 pages,  
$24.95US hard covers) is by Ross Dobson, an Australian chef, caterer,  
and food writer with several cookbooks to his credit from Ryland Peters  
& Small. These are mainly preps for pulses and grains, sorted by course  
(appetizers, soups, salads, side, main dishes, and baking). The thrust  
is ethnic, the excitement is spicy. All the recipes are useful,  
especially for vegetarians. Preparations have their ingredients listed  
in avoirdupois measurements, but there is a metric table of  
equivalents.
Audience and level of use: beginners.
Some interesting or  unusual recipes/facts: ful medames; Moroccan fava 
bean and cumin dip;  Mexican taco salad with pinot beans and avocado; 
chickpea and fresh spinach  curry; chocolate and aduki bean paste phyllo 
fingers; homemade semolina  crumpets.
The downside to this book: there's shading on the pages with the  
recipes, and thus some of them are hard to read.
The upside to this book:  a useful bean cookbook.
Quality/Price Rating: 82.
  
  
  
 
5. THE DIABETES COOKBOOK (DK, 2010, 352 pages, ISBN 978-0-7566-5139-8,  
$25 US hard covers) is from the editorial team at DK Books, along with  
editorial consultant Amy Campbell, MS, RD, LDN, CDE. Who has written  
other books about food and diabetes. There are 220 sensible recipes  
here, with nutritional analysis for each. Preps have an indication of  
service, preparation time, cooking time and freezing time. Much space 
is  also devoted to daily meal planning. Useful websites are noted, such 
as for  the DASH diet, the food pyramid, the glycemic index. Recipes are 
sorted by  meals  breakfasts, snacks, lunches, simple dinners 
(vegetarian, fish, meat,  poultry), sides, and desserts. Preparations 
have their ingredients listed in  both metric and avoirdupois 
measurements, but there are no tables of  equivalents. 
Audience and level of use: diabetics, beginner cooks, even  those 
looking for a healthy lifestyle.
Some interesting or unusual  recipes/facts: curried salmon kebabs; 
spiced bulgar wheat with feta and  salsa; yellow split peas with peppers 
and pea shoots; Spanish eggs; pan  fried shrimp; eggplant and zucchini 
tagine with couscous; pork tenderloin  stuffed with chiles and tomatoes.
The downside to this book: the typeface  seems a bit light even for the 
thin font.
The upside to this book: good  database of preps.
Quality/Price Rating: 85.
  
  
  
 
6. MICROGREENS; how to grow nature's own superfood (Firefly, 2010, 107  
pages, ISBN 978-1-55407-769-4, $19.95 Canadian paper covers) is by  
Fionna Hill, a gardener-floral designer who also writes books and  
magazine articles. It's a wonder that this is one of the first books  
about microgreens, the tiny seedlings of herbs and veggies, since they  
have been on cooks' radar for over five years. Anyway, the volume  
definition is that they are larger than sprouts but smaller than baby  
salad greens. They are useful to grow in a limited amount of space such  
as an apartment balcony or a window sill. Most varieties are ready in a  
week, and they contain a large amount of nutritional material. Hill  
gives us data on 20 popular varieties (arugula, beet, kale, peas,  
broccoli, basil, et al), as well as a dozen recipes. Flavours range 
from  mild to hot, nutty or spicy, but microgreens are also 
interchangeable to  some extent. A recipe may call for only as handful 
of microgreens: what they  are will be up to what you grow.
Preparations have their ingredients listed  in both metric and 
avoirdupois measurements, but there is a table of  equivalents. There's 
a glossary and some international websites, but nothing  specific to 
Canada.
Audience and level of use: adventurous cooks
Some  interesting or unusual facts: "Flavours change as the plant grows. 
As the  leaves open, they begin to manufacture energy from light. That 
gives them a  change in flavour. The most intense flavour comes when 
that first leaf  opens."
The downside to this book: a bit short at only 107 pages, large type.  
More could have been said.
The upside to this book: a useful  single-product book.
Quality/Price Rating: 86. 
  
  
  
 
7. PERFECT ONE-DISH DINNERS; all you need for easy get-togethers  
(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2010, 266 pages, ISBN 978-0-547-19595-7 $32  
US hard covers) is by Pam Anderson, former executive editor for Cook's  
Illustrated and a prolific cookbook author (The Perfect Recipe series),  
winning an IACP Award for best cookbook. Her book is neatly divided 
into  stews, casseroles, roasting pans, and summer salads with grilled 
platters.  It is a nice concept, and gets away from just a slow-cooker 
or a casserole.  These then are easy make-aheads, suitable for potlucks 
or for entertaining  with unique dishes. There are some menu suggestions 
for quick apps, sides  and desserts, plus a dinner drink or wine. 
Preparations have their  ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, 
but there is no metric table  of equivalents. Some dishes use prepared 
foods.
Audience and level of  use: harried home cooks.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: one- pot  penne with turkey-
feta meatballs; grilled antipasto platter; roast chicken  with sausage 
and vegetable stuffing; chicken potpie with green apples and  cheddar 
biscuits. 
The downside to this book: tough competition with  other one-pot books 
out there in these tough times.
The upside to this  book: good layout and enthusiasm.
Quality/Price Rating: 84.
  
  
  
  
  
 
8. PRESERVE IT! (DK Books, 2010, 352 pages, ISBN 978-0-7566-6208-0, $25  
US hard covers) has been edited by Lynda Brown, with Carolyn Humphries  
and Heather Whinney. Recipes come from a variety of sources, including  
the Soil Association. This is another "times are tough" book, joining a  
parade of preservation books this year. DK does it up with a certain  
commercial slickness that I enjoyable to read and see. They always have  
great visuals in the photography. The main theme here is using surplus  
foods: fruit, vegetables, meats, fish, dairy. There are the usual  step-
by-step fully illustrated instructions. The book covers jams, syrups,  
sausages, cheese, butters, ciders and wines  all in 180 recipes and  
with over 600 photos. The arrangement is by type of preservation,  
beginning with natural storage. This is followed by drying, freezing,  
sweet preserves, savoury preserves, bottled and canned foods, 
preserving  in oil, salting and curing charcuterie, smoking, and 
brewing/vinting wines  and beers and ciders. At the beginning of the 
book, there is a heavy  emphasis on equipment and on safety. 
Preparations have their ingredients  listed in both metric and 
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of  equivalents.
Audience and level of use: home cooks.
Some interesting or  unusual recipes/facts: beet wine; pea pod wine; 
cranberry jelly; green bean  and zucchini chutney; mushrooms in oil; 
wet-cured ham; salted turkey.
The  downside to this book: nothing really.
The upside to this book: covers more  than it says it does.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
  
  
  
 9. FAST BREADS; 50 recipes for easy, delicious bread (Chronicle Books,  
2010, 144 pages, ISBN 978-0-8118-6570-8, $19.95 US paper covers) is by  
Elinor Klivans, a magazine food writer who also has written cookbooks 
on  aspects of baking. Here she covers breads, buns and biscuits, both 
sweet and  savoury. It's arranged by topic, so there is a nice chapter 
on quick breads  (no yeast), corn breads, and another on refrigerator 
breads, as well as  bread dishes or bread toppings. The yeasted breads 
use the popular  quick-rise no-knead technique. Preparations have their 
ingredients listed in  avoirdupois measurements, but there is a metric 
table of  equivalents.
Audience and level of use: home cooks.
Some interesting or  unusual recipes/facts: savoury lemon-leek loaf; 
cinnamon-caramel pinwheels;  multigrain crusty bread; Gruyere and black 
pepper gougeres; Sally Lunn  bread.
The downside to this book:  I wish there were more recipes, say  75.
The upside to this book: a nice collection of classic  preps.
Quality/Price Rating: 84. 
  
  
  
  
  
 10. PARTY VEGAN; fabulous fun food for every occasion (John Wiley &  
Sons, 2010, 278 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-47223-1, $17.95 US paper covers)  
is by Robin Robertson, author of Vegan Planet and 1000 Vegan Recipes.  
She writes regularly for magazines on all aspects of vegans. Here she  
promotes some 25 or so menus with animal-free recipes for all 
occasions,  from holiday meals and birthday parties to a tapas table or 
Mother's Day  brunch. The 140 dishes are extremely useful for parties of 
any kind; each  has an indication of whether it is a "make ahead" or 
"Quick & easy".  Preparations have their ingredients listed in 
avoirdupois measurements, but  there is no metric table of equivalents. 
There is also a separate listing of  recipes by course, with an 
indication of their status as a make ahead or as  a quick prep. 
Audience and level of use: vegans and vegetarians.
Some  interesting or unusual recipes/facts: two-potato shepherd's pie; 
fava bean  hummus; olive-and-caper stuffed cherry tomatoes; collard and 
red bean  fritters; baked enchiladas with mole poblano; quinoa-stuffed 
Portobello  mushrooms with wine-braised shallots.
The downside to this book: the purple  ink can be fatiguing. 
The upside to this book: you can still be a party  animal who doesn't 
serve animals at parties.
Quality/Price Rating:  87.
  
  
  
 
11. SUPERFOODS; the healthiest foods on the planet (Firefly, 2010, 256  
pages, ISBN 978-1-55407-684-0, m$24.95 Canadian paper covers) is by  
registered dietitian Tonia Reinhard, who has authored other books  
dealing with vitamins and nutrition. Here, she devotes a page to each 
of  some 200 superfoods. The definition of such is "nutrient-dense", one 
that  provides a high level of nutrients in a reasonable number of 
calories (that  is, more bang for the buck). There have been a number of 
such books over the  past two years; indeed, it has even reached down to 
"Superfoods for  Dummies". This one is arranged by food type: 
vegetables, mushrooms, legumes,  fruits, nuts and oils, herbs and 
spices, grains, meats, dairy food, and  beverages. She gives data on new 
research between each food and health, and  how effective that food is. 
For each, she has details on nutritional  content, seasonal variations, 
curative value, combinations that enhance  their efficacy and those to 
avoid, how to maximize the beneficial effects of  each, prep advice, and 
culinary tips. But no recipes. There are lots here  such as an 
explanation of anti-oxidants, omegas, free radicals, enzymes, and  
minerals. Certainly, you'd want to begin eating these foods before many  
others. 
Audience and level of use: for the nutritionally alert
Some  interesting or unusual facts: 
The downside to this book: just the latest in  a stream of similar 
books, and it may be superseded at some point.
The  upside to this book: there are nutritional tables and a  glossary.
Quality/Price Rating: 85.
  
  
  
 12. INTENSELY CHOCOLATE; 100 scrumptious recipes for true chocolate  
lovers (John Wiley & Sons, 2010, 218 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-55101-1,  
$27.95 US hard covers) is by Carole Bloom, a pastry chef and author of  
ten other cookbooks on desserts (including "Chocolate Lover's Cookbook  
for Dummies"). Chocolate is on a roll again--I'm surprised the price  
hasn't climbed--and this is the latest book. For some people, you 
cannot  have too many chocolate books. This is a basic set of 100 preps, 
covering  cakes and cupcakes, brownies, muffins, tarts, cookies, 
custards and  puddings, mousses, truffles, candies, and frozen desserts. 
There is a  glossary of terms, a list of US sources for ingredients and 
equipment, and  even a table of weight and measure equivalents (all the 
preps use  avoirdupois). She itemizes the different percentage values of 
cacao  components, noting that recipes have to be adapted if you use, 
say, a 85%  chocolate in a prep calling for, say, 62%. Or vice versa. 
There are lots of  cook's notes and cooking instructions.
Audience and level of use: chocolate  lovers, culinary students.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts:  bittersweet chocolate 
caramel swirl brownies; bittersweet chocolate tart  with candied orange 
peel and almonds; cocoa gingersnaps; milk chocolate  chunk-pecan 
biscotti; white chocolate crème caramel; hot malted milk  chocolate.
The downside to this book: there is heavy competition amongst  chocolate 
books at this level.
The upside to this book: good  photos.
Quality/Price Rating: 87.
  
  
  
 13. FALLING OFF THE BONE (John Wiley & Sons, 2010, 254 pages, ISBN  978-
0-470-46713-8, $29.95 US hard covers) is by Jean Anderson, author of  
more than 20 cookbooks (The Doubleday Cookbook, The Family Circle  
Cookbook). She's been a six-time best cookbook award winner (Beard,  
IACP, and others), founding member of Les Dames d'Escoffier and other  
groups, and has been a powerhouse in the field of cookery in North  
America. Impressive credentials -- so why then the log rolling from 
Sara  Moulton, Paula Wolfert, and James Villas? This is a basic meat 
book  collection of stews, soups, pies, ribs and bones, and the like, 
for beef,  veal (shortest chapter), lamb and pork. The emphasis, of 
course, is on the  cheaper cuts, both to save costs and to make more 
flavourful food. The only  connection is that there must be meat 
"falling off the bone". For each she  describes the best way to cook 
each cut, along with a nutritional profile  and advice on shopping, 
storage and freezing tips. For beef and veal, there  is brisket, chuck, 
flank, oxtail, rump and shanks. For lamb there is breast,  neck, 
riblets, shanks and shoulders. And for pork, there is fresh ham, pig's  
feet, and spareribs. At the back there are web resources for learning  
more and buying off-cuts that supermarkets do not have. Preparations  
have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is  
no metric table of equivalents. 
Audience and level of use: home  cooks
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: Finnish layered pork and  
apple loaf; lamb neck slices in dill and lemon sauce; Lancashire hot  
pot; Andalusian shepherd's stew; Lithuanian veal and cabbage pie;  
Norwegian skipper's stew; stufatino; jade soup with pork and veal  
dumpling balls.
The downside to this book: I was hoping for more exciting  lamb recipes, 
but most of the preps deal with Mediterranean-style lamb stews  made 
from the shoulder. Lamb necks used in stews seem to be UK in  origin.
The upside to this book: a nice book for meat  eaters.
Quality/Price Rating: 86.
  
  
  
 
14. 7-DAY MENU PLANNER FOR DUMMIES (Wiley Publishing, 2010, 342 pages,  
ISBN 978-0-470-87857-6, $19.99 US paper covers) is by Susan Nicholson,  
RD/LD (registered and licensed dietitian). She has been writing a  
syndicated newspaper column ("7-Day Menu Planner") since 1995, and her  
book is based on that series. It manages to combine a number of 
features  that are trending in cookbooks these days: quick and easy 
under 30 minutes,  nutrition with low-fat and low-sugar, small budget, 
seasonal, menus, and  family meals. The book covers 52 weeks, beginning 
with January. So if you  buy the book in December, remember to start 
with the appropriate week, such  as week 48 or 49. Otherwise, you will 
lose the seasonality. There's lots of  primer type material on cooking 
and nutrition, balance, and creating menus.  Preparations have their 
ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but  there are metric 
tables of equivalents. Each recipe is laid out one to a  page, good type 
face and leading, with an indication of prep times, cook  times, yields, 
and nutritional analysis. The menus are categorized, so that  every week 
you can get something that matches "family", "heat and eat",  "budget", 
"kids", "express", "meatless" and "easy entertaining". And of  course, 
you don't have to follow the scheme, nor the seasonality. In effect,  
this is a book of some 364 menus, a boon to the harried home cook for  
the dinner meal. Breakfasts and lunches are on your own.
Audience and  level of use: home cooks.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: week six  provides a Mexicali 
Round steak, rice, grapefruit salad, corn tortillas,  flan, steak 
tortillas, salsa, chopped lettuce and tomato salad, tropical  fruits, 
fettuccine, garlic breads, lettuce wedge, kiwifruit, sloppy joes,  baked 
chips, stuffed celery sticks, black bean soup, brown rice, banana  
pudding, green salad, bow-tie pasta, winter squash and walnuts, spinach  
salad, peaches, baked scallops, angel hair pasta, snow peas, Bibb  
lettuce, sourdough bread, fruit tarts.
The downside to this book: the  preps are basic, and can involve some 
short cuts and prepared  purchases.
The upside to this book: while I may not cook from this book's  recipes, 
I intend to use it for ideas and assessment, perhaps taking  comparable 
recipes from elsewhere.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
  
  
  
 15. BON APPETIT DESSERTS (Andrews McMeel, 2010; distr. Simon &  
Schuster, 689 pages, ISBN 978-0-7407-9352-3, $40 US hard covers) is by  
Barbara Fairchild (editor-in-chief of Bon Appetit) and her staff, with  
contribution from a wide-ranging collection of contributors (some from  
Europe, others from the Caribbean). It's a basic book, with all of the  
classics  totaling some 600 recipes, most from the magazine but also a  
few that have not been published before. And it is an important book.  
Yet it still has logrolling, such as by Molly Wizenberg and David  
Lebovitz  logrolling has now become standard. If a book doesn't have  
any, then the book may not be worthwhile  at least that's how the  
thinking goes in marketing divisions. The range here is complete: 
cakes,  cheesecakes, pies and pastries, custards and puddings, fruit 
desserts,  frozen desserts, cookies, and candy. In addition to basic 
primer material on  equipment, pantry, and techniques, there is a 
breakdown by degree of  difficulty. Each prep gets rated: one "whisk" is 
the easiest, four "whisks"  are for the expert baker. So at the back of 
the book there is a listing of  preps by degree of difficulty, with each 
prep being given a page reference  and falling within one of the 
categories such as cakes or cookies. The  recipes are nicely laid out, 
one or two to a page, with judicious use of  bold face to indicate 
important items (ingredients, quantities made, etc.).  There's also a 
list of online and mail-order sources (all US). Preparations  have their 
ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there are  metric 
tables of equivalents. There's an index, of course, and it is quite  
detailed, and presented in a larger font; this is a boon for tired 
eyes.  
Audience and level of use: home cooks or even small restaurants  
attempting their own desserts, cooking schools.
Some interesting or  unusual recipes/facts: Valentine cake; baklava 
cheesecake; chocolate truffle  croquembouche; profiteroles with caramel 
sauce; frozen white chocolate and  hazelnut dacquoise; tiered almond 
cake; chocolate, orange, and macadamia  buche de noel.
The downside to this book: given that there are few photos   only 50 
for the plated product -- (this is the first Bon Appetit cookbook  with 
full-colour throughout, even though most of that colour is just  
different ink for text), there is no need for every single page to be  
clay-coated heavy. The book weighs an astounding 6.25 pounds and is 
thus  maddening to use. The gutters do not spread, so photocopying 
recipes for  in-kitchen use can be a trial.
The upside to this book: it needed to be done,  especially since there 
are others in the Bon Appetit  series.
Quality/Price Rating: 88.