25. ARTISAN BREADS; practical recipes and detailed instructions for  
baking the world's finest loaves (Skyhorse Publishing, 2004, 2011, 240  
pages, ISBN 978-1-61608-487-5, $24.95 US hard covers) is by Jan Hedh, a  
Swedish bread maker. The book was originally published in 2004 in  
Swedish, and here it has been translated and released into North  
America. He's got 110 recipes that are internationally based, and are  
quite suitable for home cooking. There are lots of primer-type  
information and photos of techniques and finished breads. There's  
nothing gluten-free here, and most of the preps are European 
influenced.  There are sandwich breads, sweet breads, dark breads, 
savoury bread,  brioches, Christmas breads, and the like. Preparations 
have their  ingredients listed in only avoirdupois volume measurements, 
with no scaling,  and there is no table of metric equivalents. A 
concession to the American  market? Quality/price rating: 82.
  
 
26. THE COMPASSIONATE COOK; or, "Please don't eat the animals!" a vegan  
cookbook (Grand Central Publishing, 1993, 2011, 24 pages, ISBN  978-0-
446-39492-5, $13.99 US paper covers) is by People for the Ethical  
Treatment of Animals and Ingrid Newkirk, president of PETA. It was  
originally published in July 1993, and here it has been reprinted in  
2011. It's a guide to low-fat, cholesterol-free and animal-friendly  
eating, with over 225 basic vegetarian/vegan dishes covering all 
courses  and meal patterns. There are the usual substitution tips, 
listing of healthy  ingredients, and some advice on how to eat out. 
Preparations have their  ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, 
but there is no table of  metric equivalents. Well-worth an affordable 
look. Quality/price rating:  85.
  
 
27. THE BOOK OF YIELDS; accuracy in food costing and purchasing. Eighth  
edition. (John Wiley, 2012, 298 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-19749-3, $37.50 
US  spiral comb) is available separately from the hard cover book done 
by  Francis Lynch. I had reviewed the book previously as: "a basic work 
for  students and chefs, and it comes with a workbook. It tells you what 
you need  to know for how much food to buy". It is a collection of 
accurate food  measurements for over 1,350 or so raw food ingredients 
(200 new foods since  the 2008 edition). Measurements are given in 
weight-to-volume equivalents,  trim yields, and cooking yields. Part One 
of the contents covers herbs and  spices, produce, starchy foods, 
baking, fats and oils, dairy, beverages,  meats, seafood, and poultry. 
Part Two is the workbook of costing sheets and  conversion tables. Here, 
recipe cost and yield are most important.  Spreadsheets, though, should 
be able to handle all of this. There's also a  new chapter on standard 
portion sizes to assist in menu planning, recipe  development and 
costing. For the most part, only US measurements are given,  so you will 
need to convert to metric or imperial. That is why a spreadsheet  works 
better than paper and pen. But there are conversion charts inside the  
book. Quality-to-Price Ratio: 90.
  
 
28. FOOD AND BEVERAGE COST CONTROL. 5th ed. (John Wiley & Sons,  2011, 
544 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-25138-6, $97.95 CAD hard covers) last came  
out in 2008. The authors are academics and consultants Lea Dopson and  
David Hayes. We all know that there are razor-thin profits in the food  
hospitality industry. Such outlets embrace all types of restaurants,  
bars, sports complexes, grocery stores, room service, country clubs,  
banquet halls, etc. This book emphasizes the need for control, in order  
to maximize profits and minimize shrinkage. Its contents cover managing  
as a Food and Beverage Manager (basic accounting, forecasting,  
predicting sales), the cost of food, storage, and inventory  with  
plenty of forms to view. More chapters cover the cost of beverages,  
labour, and "administration". Another part of the book deals with  
pricing, analyzing charts, and verifying data. There is information on  
security, such as dishonest employees, false invoices, scams, skips, 
and  the like. For example, chapter four is on beverage control (45 
pages). This  is mainly booze control for all of the industry as noted 
above. There is how  to forecast sales of beer, wine (wine by the glass, 
too), spirits, cocktails  and their mixes. All of it applies to 
standardized drinks and portions,  markups, constructing a wine list, 
storage and inventory, and to the  ubiquitous forms. Forms are available 
for finding how to compare the costs  of beverages. I'm not sure how 
much of the record keeping applies to Canada,  since there are 
provincial regulations on what has to be recorded for  government 
inspectors and revenue filing. Anyway, the appendices have all of  the 
useful formulae. As a textbook for the hospitality schools, it fulfills  
its functions: there are questions and answers for students to discuss  
and then to apply. Each chapter has lists of key terms and concepts,  
plus selected tests for you to try out. Additional readings are also  
suggested. New to this edition are sections on sustainability and  
environmental responsibility, and more on international foodservice  
operations. Quality/Price Rating: 90.
  
  
  
 29. EASY PARTY FOOD; simply delicious recipes for your perfect party  
(Ryland, Peters & Small, 2011, 240 pages, ISBN 978-1-84975-162-9,  
$19.95 US hard covers) has over 100 recipes taken from the publishers'  
books of cookery authors Fiona Beckett, Susannah Blake, Maxine Clark,  
Ross Dobson, Lydia France, Fran Warde, Jennifer Joyce, and others.  
Everything is easy to prepare, and broken down into categories such as  
"light bites and dips", tartlets and toasts, canapes, sticks and  
skewers, breads and crackers, buffet dishes, sweet treats, and drinks  
(which include crowd faves such as mulled wine, sangria, mulled cider,  
and punches). It's one of two dozen books in the "Easy" series.  
Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and  
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents.  
Quality/price rating: 85. 
  
 30. WHERE WOMEN COOK CELEBRATE! Extraordinary women & their  signature 
recipes (Lark, 2011, 176 pages, ISBN 978-1-60059-898-2, $24.95 US  hard 
covers) is by Jo Packham, editor of "Where Women Cook" magazine. The  
book profiles 28 women who share their passion for cooking and  
entertaining, and there are about 50 preps. Most of the women are food  
bloggers and/or authors/writers for magazines or newspapers. Here they  
all write about festivities or large dinners. There's food for every  
course, such as caramelized onion and gruyere tart, lemon pepper tea  
biscuits, pumpkin donuts, or carrot orange soup. There's a biography 
for  each and some text on how and why they did the celebration, plus 
most of the  recipes. The rest of the recipes may be found at the 
magazine's website 
www.wherewomencook.com; much of the  material here 
had been published in the magazine. Preparations have their  ingredients 
listed avoirdupois measurements, but there are tables of metric  
equivalents. Quality/price rating: 85. 
 
 
31. SOUP; a kosher collection (Whitecap, 2004, 2011, 210 pages, ISBN  
978-1-77050-062-4, $24.95 CAD paper covers) is by Pam Reiss, who joined  
the family business in Winnipeg (Desserts Plus, a kosher catering  
company). There's 150 kosher soup preps here, and for the 2011 revision  
she has added 20 new soups, full-colour photos, and nutritional  
information for every recipe. There's a full-range here, from Passover  
to parve, dairy, fish, meat, fruit and dessert soups. As one reviewer 
of  the first edition said, everything here is both creative and easy.  
Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and  
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents.  
Quality/price rating: 87.
  
  
  
 32. EASY COCKTAILS; over 200 classic and contemporary recipes (Ryland,  
Peters & Small, 2011, 240 pages, ISBN 978-1-84975-164-3, $19.95 US hard  
covers) has enough preps to get your home bar started. Most of the  
recipes come from Ben Reed, but Louise Pickford and Tonia George also  
contribute. There's the basic primer on home bars, followed by separate  
chapters on martinis, sparkling cocktails, smashes, sours, manhattans,  
rum-based, highballs, shooters, and creamy cocktails. There's even a  
short chapter on hangovers and mocktails. It's one of two dozen books 
in  the "Easy" series. Preparations have their ingredients listed in 
both metric  and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of 
metric equivalents.  Quality/price rating: 85. 
  
 
33. PURCHASING; selection and procurement for the hospitality industry.  
Eighth edition. (John Wiley, 2012, 688 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-29046-0,  
$111.65 US hard covers) is by Andrew Hale Feinstein and John 
Stefanelli,  both academics teaching in American hospitality programs. 
It was last  published in 2008. It is a basic book, used as a text, and 
on the desks of  current Food and Beverage Managers. New to this edition 
are the latest  thoughts on green practices, sustainability, socially 
responsible suppliers,  buying locally, new technology, new products, 
novel approaches to  procurement, and new techniques for costing. There 
are interviews which show  the daily lives of workers doing typical 
purchase decisions. There are  exercises for students and practitioners 
alike. Bibliographic references  include websites and newer periodical 
articles. Key words and concepts have  been increased and revised. And 
there are scores of new illustrations and  photos. Quality/price rating: 
91.
  
 34. THE CALIFORNIA SEAFOOD COOKBOOK; a cook's guide to the fish and  
shellfish of California, the Pacific coast and beyond (Skyhorse  
Publishing, 2011; distr. T. Allen, 288 pages, ISBN 978-1-61608-344-1,  
$24.95 hard cover) is by the team of Isaac Cronin (a PR director), Paul  
Johnson (owner of a fish company and chef), and Jay Harlow. All three  
are also cookbook authors. It was first published in 1983, and sold 
over  125,000 copies. It's encyclopedic in scope, covering some 75 
species with  about two recipes apiece on average (150 in all). About 
half of the species  are also in the Atlantic and Gulf waters, and each 
recipe suggests  alternative fish and shellfish from other regions, so 
it is wider in scope  than just "California". The titling was just an 
unfortunate marketing  practice. There's primer data on cooking methods 
such as cleaning and  shucking oysters, crabs, and the like. and some 
wine notes. There's a colour  illustration for each fish, and a 
concluding bibliography. Print size is  nicely large for these tired 
eyes of mine. Preparations have their  ingredients listed in avoirdupois 
measurements, but there is no table of  metric equivalents. 
Quality/price rating: 87. 
  
  
  
 35. COOKING VEGETARIAN; healthy, delicious, and easy vegetarian cuisine  
(Wiley Publishing, 1998, 2011, 274 pages, ISBN 978-1-118-00762-4, 
$26.95  soft covers) is by Chef Joseph Forest and Vesanto Melina, a 
nutritionist who  writes books. It was originally published with 40 
fewer pages in 1998. It is  an easy book to get into. Preparations have 
their ingredients listed in both  metric and avoirdupois measurements, 
but there is no table of metric  equivalents. There are updated 
reference charts and guides to food, as well  as and all-new book list 
and added resources. The first 70 pages concern  health benefits and 
cooking techniques. The recipes cover all courses, and  include their 
take on ice cream (Vegan Dasz). Lots of menus and good sense  here, 
although it is actually a vegan book (no fish, eggs, dairy, honey).  
Quality/price rating: 88.
  
  
  
 36. 300 BEST POTATO RECIPES (Robert Rose, 2011, 448 pages, ISBN  978-0-
7788-0278-5, $24.95 CAD soft covers) is by Kathleen Sloan-McIntosh, a  
well-known Canadian cookbook and food freelance writer, now based in  
Bayfield, off Georgian Bay. It's a vastly updated and expanded version  
of a 2002 book she did for Penguin, which had only 150 recipes for the  
same price. She's said the Canadian-originated Yukon Gold potato was 
the  impetus for that book. A member of the belladonna family (tomatoes, 
sweet  peppers, eggplant, tobacco), the potato is a good source for 
niacin,  riboflavin, thiamin, essential minerals, and complex 
carbohydrates. One 150  gram potato can supply half the RDA of Vitamin 
C. It is probably everybody's  favourite vegetable. Over 400 species of 
white potatoes are in production  (about 4000 have been catalogued). And 
there are plenty of yellow, red,  purple varieties, in all shapes and 
sizes, all year long. And they are used  in every conceivable way: 
boiling, baking, roasting, steaming, frying, and  mashing. The only 
difference between most potatoes which appear at the  market: some are 
floury (best for baking and mashing) and some are waxy  (best for 
salads). She's got many sidebars of tips and advice. Her chapters  are 
arranged beginning with "classic" recipes (roast, mash, fried,  
scalloped), and moving on to appetizers (potato focaccia, potato bread,  
brandade), French potato galette, oyster pie, potato soup and pesto,  
salads, grilled, souffles, stews, noodles, and a concluding section on  
sweet potatoes which is mostly desserts but with some interesting  
concoctions involving dry mashed white potatoes. But "classic salade  
nicoise" has no place here: a classic nicoise uses only raw veggies.  
Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and  
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents.  
Quality/Price rating: 90.
  
 
37. THE GOOD COOKIE; over 250 delicious recipes, from simple to sublime  
(John Wiley & Sons, 2002, 2011, 390 pages, ISBN 978-1-118-16954-4,  
$22.99 US soft covers) is by Tish Boyle, cookbook author and food 
editor  at Chocolatier and Pastry Art & Design magazines. It was 
originally  published in 2002; here is the paperback reprint. There's 
the usual primer  on cookie dough and equipment. At the back, there is 
an updated source list,  with websites. Of particular value is the 
series of "Cookies for Every  Occasion", a listing by categories 
(unfortunately without any page  references, so you will have to look 
them up yourself). So under the "Coffee  Hour" there are almond anise 
biscotti, almond java rounds, chocolate almond  biscotti, chocolate 
walnut bars, cinnamon dough nut holes, hazelnut  biscotti, and toasted 
almond crunch cookies. Other categories are "for  kids", "picnic fare", 
"ship well", "nuts about nuts", "holidays",  "over-the-top chocolate" 
and six morefor a total of thirteen. A good  wide-ranging assortment of 
cookies here.  Preparations have their  ingredients listed in 
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of  metric equivalents. 
Quality/price rating: 87.
  
  
  
 38. HOME-GROWN HARVEST; delicious ways to enjoy your seasonal fruit and  
vegetables (Ryland, Peters & Small, 2011, 192 pages, ISBN  978-1-84975-
149-0, $27.95 US) is a collection of some 150 recipes  concentrating on 
the bounty of any home-grown fruit or veggies that you may  have. 
Recipes come from the stable of the publisher's cookery writers such  as 
Fiona Beckett, Maxine Clark, Ross Dobson, Tonia George, and 19 others.  
The arrangement is two or four to ma page, categorized by type: root  
veggies, bulbs and stems, fruiting veggies, podding veggies, salad  
greens, squash, mushrooms, tree fruits, and soft fruits. The  
organization makes it a nice concept. Preparations have their  
ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is a table of  
metric equivalents. Try flamiche (leeks), belladonna tart, pea and 
parma  ham crostini, squash and eggplant chutney, or summer crumble. 
Quality/price  rating: 87.
  
 
39. BREWED AWAKENING; behind the beers and brewers leading the world's  
craft brewing revolution (Sterling Epicures, 2011, 292 pages, ISBN  978-
1-4027-7864-3, $24.95 US hard covers) is by Joshua M. Bernstein, a free  
lance writer who writes beer articles for Imbibe magazine. Most of this  
book comes from articles he had written for Imbibe, Others come from 
his  writings for the New York Press. It is loaded with stories about 
craft beer  makers, illustrated with a variety of pubs and labels. There 
is also a  number of different typefaces for the reader to enjoy, plus 
material on food  and beer pairings. He manages to cover super-bitters, 
cask-conditioning,  organic beers, gluten-free beers, high alcohol 
beers, and the like. He also  manages to cover limited production beers, 
usually in lots of 800 or so  bottles which sell out in an hour. There 
are stories about lost recipes,  back-to-the-land beers, and extreme 
beers. But there is not a lot here on  draught beers. Throughout the 
book there are 150 craft beer reviews. At the  back there's material on 
craft beer weeks around the US, with three listed  for Canada. There is 
also a glossary and an index. Canada gets a few pages,  principally 
about Dieu du Ciel in Montreal. Quality/price rating: 85.