4. THE INTOLERANT GOURMET; glorious food without gluten & lactose  
(Artisan, 2011; distr. T. Allen, 240 pages, ISBN 978-1-579765-1, $29.95  
US hard covers) is by Barbara Kafka, an award-winning cookbook author  
and free-lance writer who was a recipient of the James Beard Foundation  
Lifetime Achievement Award. She has a collection of some 300 preps 
here,  with sections on breakfast, hors d'oeuvre, apps, pastas, 
risottos, soups,  salads  right through to desserts. Quinoa gets enough 
space for 10 recipes.  Preparations have their ingredients listed in 
avoirdupois measurements, but  there is no table of metric equivalents.
Audience and level of use: those who  need to be free of gluten and 
lactose.
Some interesting or unusual  recipes/facts: although they are unrelated 
genetically, lactose intolerance  and gluten intolerance often occur in 
the same person. They can vary in  evidencing their presence or 
intensity over time, but they do not disappear.  Gluten intolerance has 
increased ten fold over the past decade; 60% of the  North American 
population cannot fully digest dairy.
The downside to this  book: the closing chapter on starches might have 
been more useful at the  front of the book.
The upside to this book: there's a good section on  polenta.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
  
  
  
 5. COOK WITHOUT A BOOK; meatless meals (Rodale, 2011, 276 pages, ISBN  
978-1-60529-176-5, $32.50 US hard covers) is by Pam Anderson, a  
bestselling author of a half-dozen award winning (or nominated)  
cookbooks, including "How to Cook Without a Book", one of my faves. 
Here  she tackles vegetarian and vegan foods in about 250 basic meal 
templates,  styled as her earlier book. She opens with breakfast foods 
(she has a  liberal definition for the first meal of the day): oats, 
grits, wraps,  pizzas, potatoes and eggs, chipped veggies on toast, 
pancakes, and sweet  scones and bran muffins. This is the first quarters 
of the book. Then  begins, "fun food the rest of the day", with chapters 
on salads, soups,  stews, sandwiches, afternoon eggs and potatoes, and 
some quick idea on fast  food (Italian, Asian, Mexican). But of course, 
her use of cheese and eggs  does limit its usefulness for vegans. In 
fact, if there is an overarching  philosophy here, it is that we should 
all eat less meat, and here are some  nifty preps for us. Preparations 
have their ingredients listed in  avoirdupois measurements, but there is 
no table of metric  equivalents.
Audience and level of use: vegetarians, and to a lesser extent,  vegans.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: a master formula for  skillet 
potatoes and eggs (which also calls for varying amounts of feta or  goat 
cheese, or swiss and cheddar, plus accompanying spices and herbs for  
variations); savoury scones with variations on cheeses and flavourings;  
grain and legume salads which are dairy-free.
The downside to this book:  there may not be enough here to interest 
vegans, yet the book's PR info on  the dust jacket is directed to 
vegans.
The upside to this book: variety  is supposed to be the spice of life, 
and it certainly is with food. She  advocates being a part-time vegan or 
vegetarian if you do not want the  commitment.
Quality/Price Rating: 88.
  
  
  
 
6. POULET; more than 50 remarkable meals that exalt the honest chicken  
(Chronicle Books, 2011, 240 pages, ISBN 978-0-8116-7969-9, $27.50 US  
hard covers) is by Cree LeFavour, cookbook author (The Steak Book,  
2008). Overall, there are 150 preps here for the 50 meals, which are  
categorized by flavour profiles or regions. First up is the American  
chicken meal, followed by the "Bistro" chicken (mostly French, mainly  
European), Latin chicken, East Asian, South Asian, and Africa 
(including  the Middle East). It is an interesting concept, and it 
works. Each meal,  such as the Sorrel Chicken Troisgros, serves 4, and 
usually calls for a 1 to  2 kilo chicken, the appropriate seasoning, and 
some veggie or salad or bread  accompaniment (no dessert). Here, the 
veggie is pea puree. This chicken prep  has been adapted from Troisgros' 
signature salmon plate. Many recipes in the  book only call for thighs, 
which are actually the most flavourful part of  the chicken. 
Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and  
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents. All the  
classics appear to be here, including Sengalese chicken, saffron  
chicken, chicken in parchment, and chicken pot pie. She even has some  
wine, cocktail and beer suggestions.
Audience and level of use: home  cooks looking for a routine but with 
different ingredients. 
Some  interesting or unusual recipes/facts: roadside chicken tacos; 
chankonabe;  grilled thighs with BBQ; chicken-fennel meatballs; truffled 
roast chicken;  chicken-vegetable kadhi.
The downside to this book: I could not find a prep  for chicken 
cacciatore. Was this an oversight?
The upside to this book: a  chicken for every week of the year, with a 
turkey at Thanksgiving and  Christmas?
Quality/Price Rating: 87.
  
  
  
 
7. THE BIG HANDOUT (Rodale, 2011, 288 pages, ISBN 978-1-60961-113-2,  
$24.99 US hard covers) is by Thomas M. Kostigen, a co-author of The  
Green Book. The subtitle says it all: "how government subsidies and  
corporate welfare corrupt the world we live in and wreak havoc on our  
food bills."  He tries to give us an expose of how subsidies pervert  
our North American way of living, making us fatter, poorer and  
unhealthy. There are a couple of references to Canada (none to the  
European Union) which show us in a more favourable light, but just  
barely. And of course it is all about Big Ag and protectionism. There's  
a lot here to digest, but none of it is new. Government subsidies seem  
to have been around forever (think sugar and corn lobbies). Currently,  
the most heavily subsidized commodities are cotton, wheat, corn, soy,  
and oil: over $200 billion per year. We end us spending good money for  
bad business practices. He ends the book with chapters suggesting what  
we can do to make change, and what the world would look like without  
subsidies. At the back, there's a sources list and an index.
Audience and  level of use: conspiracy theory readers, those with low 
blood pressure.  
Some interesting or unusual facts: subsidies are government grants to  
private businesses if it is advantageous to the public. Subsidies 
enable  businesses to actually charge MORE than a free market system, 
and can create  goods that aren't even produced for sale (kept off the 
market). It is all  artificial pricing.
The downside to this book: he doesn't cover the EU, where  the 
situations can be even worse.
The upside to this book: good writing  style that convinces.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
  
  
  
 8. THE GOLDEN-BRISTLED BOAR; last ferocious beast of the forest  
(University of Virginia Press, 2011; distr. by Scholarly Book Services,  
183 pages, ISBN 978-0-8139-3103-6, $22.95 US hard covers) is by Jeffrey  
Greene, an award-winning poet who has written books about living in  
Burgundy and the Bamberger Texas restoration project. Here, he returns  
to Burgundy. He bought a place in northern Burgundy that was one of the  
most densely populated boar areas in Europe. Following the gift of a  
side of boar from a neighbor and meeting a boar-hunting party, he began  
to collect information about boars. Boars seem to have no natural  
enemies, except for man. They are regarded as pests in many cultures,  
and throughout history have been thusly portrayed. They cause over  
14,000 car accidents a year in France alone. I used to know a chef in  
Menton who loved hunting boars but always dreaded having to carry one  
down a mountainous ravine. Greene delves into boar lore, and travels to  
Sardinia, Corsica, Tuscany, and the US South in pursuit of stories. He  
interviews museum curators, scientists, hunters, chefs, chateau owners,  
and others. He's even got some wide-ranging recipes such as roast loin,  
jabali (Spanish adobo), Inoshishi botan nabe hot pot,  
Wildschweinschnitzel from German immigrants in Texas, Cinghiale 
(Italian  boar ragu), and Burgundian sanglier. These preparations have 
their  ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no 
table of  metric equivalents. Unfortunately for us in Ontario, all wild 
boar sold here  is farmed, so the flavour has been muted. 
Audience and level of use: wild  animal lovers, culinary historians.
Some interesting or unusual facts: In  England, indigenous boars were 
rendered extinct in the thirteenth century,  but many escapees from 
boar-breeding farms have brought them back. Natural  England, an 
advisory board, recognizes the boar as indigenous and wishes to  manage 
the population.
The downside to this book: there is the occasional  illustration, but 
the book could use more.
The upside to this book: a  good, solid, single ingredient/product book
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
  
 
9. CRAZY ABOUT CAKES; more than 150 delectable recipes for every  
occasion (Sterling, 2011, 370 pages, ISBN 978-1-4027-6914-6, $17.95 US  
paper covers) is by Krystina Castella, who has also written a whole  
crazy series: "Crazy About Cupcakes", "Crazy About Cookies"  and now  
"Cakes". It is a useful book if you like to bake AND decorate. Many  
people do. There is something every occasion here (birthdays, brunches,  
holidays, weddings, and the like), plus everyday cakes. There are also  
some modern interpretations of classics that contain less fat, fewer  
calories, and more natural ingredients. There are also some savoury  
cakes and some fusion cakes too. She has plenty of variations too.  
Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements,  
but there are tables of metric equivalents.
Audience and level of use:  those who like to bake and decorate.
Some interesting or unusual  recipes/facts: peanut sesame raspberry 
roll; banana agave cakes; chocolate  fried twinkies; cream-filled 
cupcakes; chocolate chip cranberry roll;  butterscotch and sea salt 
bundts; meringue layers with marshmallow filling;  jalapeno cake with 
molasses.
The downside to this book: volume measures  are used, but I prefer 
scaling by weight. It is more exact.
The upside to  this book: good looking photos of decorations.
Quality/Price Rating:  88.
  
 10. THE BONNE FEMME COOK BOOK; simple, splendid food that French women  
cook every day (Harvard Common Press, 2011, 420 pages, ISBN  978-1-
55832-749-8, $24.95 US hard covers) is by Wini Moranville, who writes  a 
monthly wine column and reviews restaurants in and around Des Moines,  
IA. She's also a free lance writer. Log rolling comes from Dorie  
Greenspan and Amanda Hesser. Here she deconstructs French cooking for  
North American kitchens by presenting what she has learned after twenty  
years of summering in France. It's the bonne femme housewife style,  
which she extols at 
www.chezbonnefemme.com. This current  book is a 
collection of some 250 preps, done up in the French family style  of 
dining (a style, I might add, that seems to be disappearing). Her book  
ranges from appetizers (amuse-bouches of hard sausages, olives, nuts 
and  cheese) and cocktails to salads, soups, the concept of saute and 
deglaze (a  meal in 30 minutes or less), braises-stews-roasts, 
casseroles and pasta,  side dishes, savouries, eggs and cheese, and 
desserts. Still, she mentions  that she cannot recall ever being served 
home-baked desserts in French  homes. "That's not to say that French 
women don't bake, it's just that they  don't have to."  there are many 
pastry shops in France. She uses three  cheeses in cooking: goat, sheep, 
and French Gruyere (Comte); the latter  tastes better than Swiss 
Gruyere. Preparations have their ingredients listed  in avoirdupois 
volume measurements, but there is a table of metric  equivalents.
Audience and level of use: the harried North American home  cook
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: In her book, she mostly  
offers the kinds of desserts that French women would bake at home:  
crêpes, upside-down cakes, a pear tart tatin, a fruit crumble, crème  
brulee, clafouti, Alsatian apple tart, and chocolate pound cake.  
Vermouth-Braised Chicken with Black Olives and Prosciutto;  Moroccan-
Spiced Chicken Braise Ce Soir; Poulet Bijoutière (chickenbraised  with 
garlic, wine, pomegranate juice and a touch of currant jelly);  
Choucroute Garnie; Normandy Pork Chops; Tuna Steaks Braised with  
Tomatoes, Olives, and Fennel.
The downside to this book: call me a snob,  but I'd still like to read 
French recipe titles in addition to English  language ones. 
The upside to this book: a good idea for a book  fast food  French 
style.
Quality/Price Rating: 88. 
 
  
  
 11. ECO-INNOVATORS; sustainability in Atlantic Canada (Nimbus  
Publishing, 2011, 199 pages, ISBN 978-1-55109-863-0, $22.95 CAD paper  
covers) is by Chris Benjamin, currently the "Sustainable City" 
columnist  for The Coast, a Halifax newspaper. He is also an awards-
nominated novelist.  Here he profiles some of Atlantic Canada's 
innovative sustainability  leaders: entrepreneurs, educators, activists, 
farmers, and fishermen  about  three dozen in all. As Benjamin says, 
each person featured in this book has  a different idea about what it 
means to be green. But they all have respect  for natural resources and 
they all want to work communally. Chapters are by  themes, with 
recycling, reusing, choosing a home, using household cleaners,  lawns, 
transportation, and the work place. For us in the food and wine area,  
there are interesting profiles on green gourmets choosing sustainable  
foods, such as David and Edith Ling of Fair Acres Farms, Richard 
Wetmore  of Speerville Flour Mill, Sean Gallagher of Terroir-Local 
Source Catering,  Steve Law and Evelyn Jones of Sunroot Farm, and Chris 
Hudson of Off the Hook  fishery. There's a bibliography for further 
reading, but no index.  Quality/Price Rating: 88.
  
  
  
 12. WHOLE BEAST BUTCHERY; the complete visual guide to beef, lamb, and  
pork (Chronicle Books, 2011, 239 pages, ISBN 978-1-4521-0059-3, $40 US  
hard covers) is by Ryan Farr, chef and butcher. He and his wife founded  
4505 Meats in San Francisco in 2009, an artisanal meat company, where 
he  also teaches butchery and charcuterie. Birgit Binns assisted him; 
she's an  author or co-author of about two dozen cookbooks. As we all 
know, meat has  been back for some time, but it takes awhile for 
publishers to get  manuscripts/ideas and then produce a book  about two 
years. This is a basic  nose-to-tail book, with all the basics in 
techniques and more than 500  photos. It's a bones and muscle book, with 
lots of white fat in each  picture. There's a primer on tools and 
techniques, meat storage and  handling, plus some 14 master recipes 
scaled from 2 to 20 people.  Preparations have their ingredients listed 
in avoirdupois measurements, but  there is no table of metric 
equivalents. 
Audience and level of use: home  cooks who want DIY butchery, and others 
who want to know about the  process.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: beef tongue pastrami;  onion-
braised beef neck; merguez sausage; charred scallion pork sausage;  pork 
jowl and clams; pork belly and garbanzo soup.
The downside to this  book: the beef section is admirable, but I'm not 
so sure how to tackle a cow  in my house. Maybe veal. Lamb and pigs can 
be done at home.
The upside to  this book: good reference material.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
  
  
  
 13. THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING TEST KITCHEN COOKBOOK; essential recipes for  
every home cook (Hearst Books, 2011, 690 pages, ISBN 978-1-58816-905-1,  
$29.95 US ring binder) has been coordinated by Susan Westmoreland from  
the Test Kitchen. The group performs 1700 taste tests every year, from  
preps that have been triple-tested to make sure the recipe works. This  
is GH's first ring-binder book. Fourteen chapters include breakfast,  
brunch, stews, soups, meats, pasta, casseroles, meatless, salads, and  
desserts, 375 recipes in all. There are tips and advice, photos,  
techniques, and nutritional analyses. Preps are coded with icons for  
lo-cal, heart-healthy, 30-minute meals, make aheads, or slow-cooker  
recipes. There are even smartphone tags that link to 35 GH cooking  
videos on the web. 
Audience and level of use: general home  cooks.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: the turkey with roasted  
apples and pan gravy recipe has a link to a video for "Best Do-Ahead  
Gravy", as well as an explanation of wild turkey, thawing instructions,  
and shopping tips.
The downside to this book: the ring binder is useful  for detaching the 
recipe from the book, but there may be a pilferage problem  in stores 
and libraries.
The upside to this book: there's other material  here, such as setting a 
table, food and wine matches, an entertaining guide,  ingredient 
substitutions, freezer guidelines, and handy  charts.
Quality/Price Rating: 87.
  
  
  
 14. A TASTE OF THE MARITIMES; local, seasonal recipes the whole year  
round (Nimbus Publishing, 2011, 150 pages, ISBN 978-1-55109-869-2,  
$22.95 CAD soft covers) is by Elizabeth Bailey, a food and gardening  
writer with a passion for the Maritimes. She says that over 90 percent  
of food eaten in the Maritimes today is imported. But there are many  
local foods in supermarkets, farmers markets, CSAs, co-ops, and natural  
food stores. And of course, they are seasonally available. Most of the  
preps can be used anywhere in North America, although fiddleheads,  
Dragon's Breath cheese, and various seafood might be limited. The  
arrangement is by season, with two chapters for summer (early and 
late),  about 20 for each. Interspersed are profiles of Speerville Flour 
Mill,  Galloping Cows Fine Foods, Fox Hill Cheese House, Canadian 
Organic Maple  Company, and several others. Preparations have their 
ingredients listed in  avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table 
of metric  equivalents.
Audience and level of use: Maritime food lovers, seasonal food  lovers.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: scape and ginger bisque;  
fiddleheads and bacon; inside-out Dragon burgers; heritage bean chili;  
late summer rum and fruit salad. 
The downside to this book: while a  nifty basic book, it covers a larger 
range than merely local Maritime  foods.
The upside to this book: the profiles illuminate the foods of the  
Maritimes. 
Quality/Price Rating: 87.
  
  
  
 
15. HANDHELD PIES; dozens of pint-size sweets & savories (Chronicle  
Books, 2011, 143 pages, ISBN 978-1-4521-0214-6, $19.95 US hardbound) is  
by Sarah Billingsley, a cookbook editor, and Rachel Wharton, a Beard  
Award-winning food writer and editor. These are all small treats, eaten  
with one hand, often also called "two biters"  a tart that can be  
consumed in two bites, and perfect (for the most part) at cocktail  
parties or other social, walkabout events. Or, take some to lunch. 
There  are about 40 preps here, plus variations, arranged by format, 
such as  free-form pies, structured pies, and jar pies. At the end there 
is a section  on pie crusts, which are referred to in the recipe (cream, 
cheese crust,  butter crust, chocolate crumb, lard crust, and more. 
There is also a run  down on the more common fruit fillings. Many 
chapters have the occasional  profile on pie businesses, such as The 
Original Fried Pie Shop. It's a great  idea, and the only thing lacking 
is the use of any gluten-free adaptations.  It isn't even mentioned, 
although they have almost a page on using locally  milled grains. 
Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and  
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents.  
The weight measurements are scaled in the metric, but not in the  
avoirdupois.
Audience and level of use: home cooks who entertain.
Some  interesting or unusual recipes/facts: bacon, egg and cheese 
breakfast pie;  orange marmalade-mascarpone pop tarts; mozzarella, 
tomato and prosciutto  pie; chicken chile relleno pie.
The downside to this book: the lack of  gluten-free crusts.
The upside to this book: a nifty idea.
Quality/Price  Rating: 87.
  
 
16. RUSTIC ITALIAN; simple, authentic recipes for everyday cooking  
(Weldon Owen, 2011, 224 pages, ISBN 978-1-61628-165-6, $29.95 US hard  
covers) is from Williams-Sonoma, authored by Domenica Marchetti, a food  
writer specializing in casual Italian fare. This is her fourth such  
cookbook. She's got about 100 simple preps, arranged by course from  
antipasti, to soups and salads through to dolci. There's also a short  
wine guide, a guide to salumi and cheeses, and an inventory of Italian  
pantry staples. It's a classy book with first rate photography. But  
while the recipe titles are in both Italian and English, only the  
English titles are indexed, which is annoying. Preparations have their  
ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but  
there is no table of metric equivalents. Recipes all come with Italian  
wine suggestions. 
Audience and level of use: Italian food lovers, basic  home cooks.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: roasted delicate  squash with 
sage; tomato tart with goat cheese; cavatelli with zucchini  blossoms; 
Tuscan-style steak with crispy potatoes; spicy sauteed kale and  
chickpeas; ricotta and bittersweet chocolate crostata.
The downside to  this book: there are many other books with the 
classics.
The upside to  this book: the photos are very appealing.
Quality/Price Rating: 85.