3. SMALL SWEET TREATS (Gibbs Smith,  2011, 168 pages, ISBN 978-1-4236-
0694-9, $19.99 US soft covers) is by  Marguerite Marceau Henderson, food 
writer and cookbook author (Small Plates,  Small Parties). Apparently, 
she is specializing in "small" foods! The  overriding factor here is the 
nature of small: cookies, frozen desserts,  breakfast goodies, pies, 
tarts, the cobbler family, cakes, and other baked  goods, etc. You'll 
need a lot of temptation resistance here, for one bite  will lead to 
another. Preparations have their ingredients listed in  avoirdupois 
measurements, but there is a table of metric  equivalents.
Audience and level of use: family bakers
Some interesting or  unusual recipes/facts: chocolate zucchini cake; 
apricot fool; lemon cream  stop fruit-filled crepes; sesame anise bites; 
strawberry panna cotta with  strawberry-basil balsamic compote.
The downside to this book: I could use  more preps.
The upside to this book: but there are some nifty treats  here.
Quality/Price Rating: 86.
  
  
  
 4. THE FINEST WINES OF CALIFORNIA; a  regional guide to the best 
producers and their wines (University of  California Pr., 2011, 
320 pages, ISBN 978-0-520-26658-2, $34.95 US soft  covers) is by Stephen 
Brook, who has written for Hugh Johnson and has also  authored "Wines of 
California" as a Mitchell Beazley Wine Guide in 2006. The  book, co-
published with Quarto Group in the UK, is one of an illustrated  series 
created by The World of Fine Wine magazine. These are guides to the  
classic regions and their producers, vineyards and vintages. As Hugh  
Johnson, one of the editorial team, would say "These are the wines most  
worth talking about". Thus far, the company Fine Wine Editions has  
looked at Champagne, Tuscany, Rioja, and Bordeaux. The format is pretty  
straight-forward at this point, with Hugh Johnson giving many of the  
series' forewords their lustre. There's material in about 50 pages or 
so  on history, culture and geography, along with winemaking, grapes, 
and  viticulture. Then comes the biggest section: producers and their 
wines,  sub-arranged by region. The 250 pages here cover Napa, Sonoma 
and the  important regions to the south. Then there is a final 25 pages 
on wine  appreciation, vintages, top-ten tables, glossary, bibliography, 
and how (and  where) to buy California wines. The photography is mainly 
centered on the  producers. Overall, this is an excellent guide to the 
region.
Audience  and level of use:  the serious wine lover who also loves to 
read,  reference libraries and wine schools. 
Some interesting or unusual facts: for  whatever reason, Screaming Eagle 
and The Bryant Family are not included. I'd  have thought that "these 
are the wines most worth talking about". They're  good albeit 
overpriced, but that gets people talking about them!! By the  same 
token, Gallo IS included, and "these are the wines most worth talking  
about".
The downside to this book: California is too diffused to cover in  just 
one book.
The upside to this book: there's a ribbon  bookmark.
Quality/Price Rating: 90.
  
  
  
 5. TART LOVE; sassy, savory, and sweet  (Gibbs Smith, 2011, 144 pages, 
ISBN 978-1-4236-1894-1, $24.99 US hard  covers) is by Holly Herrick, 
former restaurant critic for the Charleston SC  newspaper. She now 
writes cookbooks (this is her second). Tarts are  open-faced (no double 
crust) thin pies. She covers savoury tartlets, tarts,  pot pies (with 
the single crust on top), quiches, sweet custards, cream  pies, and 
fruit tarts. She begins with a primer on pastry making: but she  doesn't 
like lard in her dough, nor does she have any gluten-free  alternative. 
Main course and dessert preparations have their ingredients  listed in 
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric  equivalents. 
Audience and level of use: pie makers, home cooks
Some  interesting or unusual recipes/facts: winesap apple and walnut 
tart;  eggplant and cream cheese tapenade tartlets; salade nicoise tart; 
panna  cotta tart with roasted fresh figs; creamy blue crab and salmon 
quiche;  raspberry crème brulee tartlets; drunken pumpkin-bourbon tart.
The downside  to this book: no gluten-free pie crust preps.
The upside to this book: good  large print size
Quality/Price Rating: 85.
  
  
  
 6 AUTHENTIC NORWEGIAN COOKING (Skyhorse  Publishing, 2011, 192 pages, 
ISBN 978-1-61608-217-8, $24.95 US hard covers)  is by Astrid Karlsen 
Scott, who has written many books about Norwegian food  and customs. 
Here she presents an all-purpose book of more than 300  traditional 
Norwegian recipes. The foods come from every region, and are  useful for 
every occasion. There's a small culinary history with background  for 
most dishes. As well, there are full colour photos and line drawings.  
Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and  
avoirdupois measurements, but there are also tables of metric  
equivalents. The book also includes a sources list, material on 
parties,  napkin folding, spice charts, glossary and pantry of common 
Norwegian foods.  Of course, three are lutefisk, farikal, and rakorret 
recipes here.  
Audience and level of use: Scandinavian food lovers, home cooks.
Some  interesting or unusual recipes/facts: open face sandwich tidbits; 
gravlaks;  baked trout; New Year's Eve game; stuffed cabbage leaves; 
yogurt mousse;  Daim cake; crisp waffles with cream; Birthday kringle. 
Smoked eel; mackerel  fillets.
The downside to this book: she makes it look easier than it  is.
The upside to this book: there are two indexes, one in English and one  
in Norwegian.
Quality/Price Rating: 87.
  
  
  
 7. FRUGAVORE; how to grow organic, buy  local, waste nothing, and eat 
well (Skyhorse Publishing, 2011; distr. T.  Allen, 336 pages, ISBN 978-
1-61608-408-0, $16.95 US soft covers) is by  Arabella Forge, an 
Australian nutritionist. She offers us her advice on how  to live and 
eat well using local food. She shows us how to access quality  produce 
from local farmers, use older cooking techniques, create compost for  
our own garden, stock our pantry well, shop for economic cuts of meat,  
and use co-ops. She has about b100 recipes. Preparations have their  
ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table 
of  metric equivalents. Specific chapters deal with minimizing waste at 
home,  grassroots movements, making your own food, team efforts, working 
a  vegetable garden, and then chapters on food such as meat, fish, whole  
grains, and more. WARNING: Most of the indexed recipes are off by two  
pages, that is, an oatmeal pastry is referred to on page 252, but it  
should really be page 250. You'll need to add a note to the index  
yourself in order to remember this detail.
Audience and level of use:  concerned home cooks, frugal eaters.
Some interesting or unusual  recipes/facts: "Fermented milk products 
such as yogurt and kefir are  traditional staples in all milk-drinking 
societies
creates healthy  lactic-acid bacteria and makes other 
nutrients in milk easier for the human  body to use."
The downside to this book: most of us don't have all the time  required 
to do this work. I'm retired from a day job but I still cannot keep  up 
with the demands of frugavores.
The upside to this book: there are  nice preps for homemade condiments, 
but she does use too much sugar in the  ketchup.
Quality/Price Rating: 80.
  
  
  
 
8. QUICK-FIX VEGAN; healthy, homestyle meals in 30 minutes or less  
(Andrews McMeel Publishing, 2011, 212 pages, ISBN 978-1-4494-0785-8,  
$16.99 US paper covers) is by Robin Robertson, author of Quick-Fix  
Vegetarian. She's a major food writer with about two dozen vegetarian  
and vegan books to her credit, as well as articles in a number of  
periodicals and newspapers. So here are 150 or so recipes, covering the  
gamut from apps to desserts. The overriding rule is that they must be  
prepared in 30 minutes or less. But there are make ahead meals that can  
be baked at the last minute, again less than 30 minutes. The preps call  
for an organized pantry and a good setup (mise en place). There are 
many  simple ethnic foods here, especially from those places with a 
dairy-free  culture. Both ends of the Mediterranean, Mexican, Asian, and 
even Cajun  foods are here. As with her other quick-fix book, Robertson 
gives some basic  primer material on how to cook smarter and organize 
yourself. Preparations  have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois 
measurements, but there are  three pages of tables of metric 
equivalents.
Audience and level of use:  vegans, vegetarians
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: spicy smoked  Portobello 
tacos; creamy balsamic dressing with tahini; farfalle with sesame  
cabbage; Moroccan pumpkin hummus; apple pie parfaits; Korean hot pot;  
Tuscan kale lasagna; zucchini frittata; tzatziki sauce.
The downside to  this book: gluten-free only comes up with reference to 
pasta dishes, using  purchased versions.
The upside to this book: good idea, save a lot of  time.
Quality/Price Rating:
  
  
  
 9. THE VENISON COOKBOOK; venison dishes from fast to fancy (Skyhorse  
Publishing, 2011, 128 pages, ISBN 978-1-61608-456-1, $19.95 US hard  
covers) is by Kate Fiduccia, who has hunted and cooked venison, plus  
prepared many game cookbooks. Just about any kind of "venison" (a  
generic term which also includes moose, elk and caribou as well as 
deer)  is a great low-fat alternative to beef. Unless you shoot it 
yourself, what  you get in Canada comes from a game farm, which is "next 
best". Here are 150  preps, ranging from easy to hard, simple to 
gourmet, fast to complex. Many  are adapted from beef preps. There are 
photos, anecdotes and advice.  Arrangement is by course, with apps, 
mains, breakfast dishes, pies and  casseroles, soups and stews, 
marinades and rubs, and some accompaniments.  There's material on game 
care tips and butchering. Nutritional information  has its own separate 
pages. And there are US mail order sources; the only  source from Canada 
in BC is for wholesale distributors only. Preparations  have their 
ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no  table 
of metric equivalents. 
Audience and level of use: extremely useful  for hunters and game 
lovers.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts:  venison and vegetable 
kabobs; venison stew with barley; chicken-fried  venison; Sicilian 
venison burgers; venison tamale pie; Salisbury moose  steak. 
The downside to this book: I wish the nutritional data had been with  
the recipe, saving the extra step of looking it up.
The upside to this  book: good material on gaming.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
  
  
  
 10. THE CHEESEMONGER'S KITCHEN; celebrating cheese in 90 recipes  
(Chronicle Books, 2011; distr. Raincoast, 224 pages, ISBN  978-0-8118-
7766-4, $35 US hard covers) is by Chester Hastings, a  cheesemonger at 
Joan's on Third in Los Angeles. He's also a writer and chef.  It's 
actually more of a cookbook, with 90 preps. It's not a reference book  
on cheese, but a cookbook that uses cheeses through the spectrum of 
apps  to desserts, including of course the cheese board. There are some 
wine  pairing notes of a general sort for cow, sheep and goat milk, and 
then  recommendations for each recipe. Preparations have their 
ingredients listed  in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but 
there is no table of  equivalents.
Audience and level of use: cheese lovers
Some interesting or  unusual recipes/facts: Flamiche (Belgian tart with 
bacon, beer and munster);  burrata with asparagus, pine nuts, and golden 
raisins; taleggio fried in  cornmeal and grappa batter; robiola verde; 
zucchini and goat gouda fritters;  handmade garganelli with gorgonzola 
and walnuts.
The downside to this  book: it might have been interesting to have beer 
recommendations as  accompaniment as well as wine pairings.
The upside to this book: good idea,  recipes really knit well together.
Quality/Price Rating: 89
  
  
  
 11. VEGETARIAN ENTREES THAT WON'T LEAVE YOU HUNGRY (The Experiment,  
2011; distr. T. Allen, 244 pages, ISBN 978-1-61519-033-1, $17.95 US 
soft  covers) is by Lukas Volger, a chef who is now a cookbook author 
(he wrote  Veggie Burgers Every Which Way). Here are 70 mains that 
promise to be  "nourishing, flavorful main courses that fill the center 
of the plate". It  comes with log rolling from Martha Rose Shulman and 
Deborah Madison.  Volger's mission is to get the cook away from using 
burgers, pastas, and  stir-frees as a constant stream of main dishes at 
home. So there is good  variation here, from hearty salads and soups 
through dumplings, curries,  oven-baked dishes, savoury cakes, eggs, and 
pizzas and tarts. There is also  a primer on vegetarian pantries, 
emphasizing the need for staples of sauces  and condiments (toasted 
bread crumbs, roasted veggies such as tomatoes and  Bells and garlic, 
caramelized onions, pestos, tapenades, bean dips, peanut  sauce, and 
more). And a short resources list. Preparations have their  ingredients 
listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is  no 
table of metric equivalents. Try saag paneer, cashew and cauliflower  
curry, spiced lentil soup, delicate squash soup, pumpkin risotto, pad  
Thai (with variations), or vegetarian banh mi. Quality/price rating:  
89.