GRILL THIS, NOT THAT! (Rodale, 2012, 362 pages, ISBN 978-1-60961-
822-3,   $19.99 US paper covers) is a cheeky book from David Zinczenko, 
editor worker   at Men's Health, Women's Health, and Prevention 
magazines. It's a spin-off   from the successful "Eat This, Not That!" 
series of books (going back to   2008), concentrating this time on 
grilled foods. The basic premise in these   books is the creation of 
home-cooked knockoffs of popular restaurant foods.   For example, Red 
Lobster's Cedar Plank Salmon is about $20, with 1050   calories. The 
book's comparable salmon recipe costs $2.91 with 240 calories.   You can 
do the math. Unfortunately, the recipe is indexed under "Fish", and   not 
under "cedar" or "salmon". This makes it hard to find -- at least the   
first time. So there are the basics here on grilling, plus coverage of   
all the fast food and restaurant meals type of foods such as burgers,   
sandwiches, pizza, pasta, poultry, meat, fish, seafood  and more. Each   
prep has a calorie count and a cost per person. So you can save money   
and calories at the same time. There are tables and guides to meats and   
their cuts, veggies, and sugars. It's a colourful book. Preparations   
have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is   
no table of metric equivalents. Nutritional data is, of course, stated   
in metric alone.
Audience and level of use: grillmasters,   dieters.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: western bacon   cheeseburger; 
sausage and pepper pizzas; prosciutto pesto chicken; balsamic   lamb 
chops; steak and potato skewers; mahi-mahi with fennel-orange   salsa.
The downside to this book: the index could use an expansion.
The   upside to this book: lots of colour and vivid writing.
Quality/Price Rating:   88.
   
  
4. GLUTEN-FREE SLOW COOKING; over 250 recipes of wheat-free wonders for   
the electric slow cooker (Cider Mill Press, 2012; distr. Simon &   
Schuster, 256 pages, ISBN 978-1-60433263-6, $18.5 US paper covers) is 
by   Ellen Brown, who has written more than 30 cookbooks (mostly on 
gluten-free   and slow cookers). Here, she promotes gluten-free foods, 
arranged from soups   through desserts. You can, of course, not use a 
slow cooker; preps can be   easily modified since they are for braising. 
Some preps, such as Moussaka,   have been modified to use gluten-free 
ingredients. These re-formulations can   be transferred from the book to 
all of GF cooking. While wheat, barley and   rye are missing from the 
preps, there are plenty of ethnic meals to satiate,   using rice and 
other grains. 
Preparations have their ingredients listed   in avoirdupois measurements, 
but there are tables of metric   equivalents.
Audience and level of use: gluten-free users and slow-cooker   fans.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: chao; kasha; Greek fish   
stew; feijoada; fontina polenta; vegetarian hoppin' john; salmon with   
salsa; potage saint-germain.
The downside to this book: the index could   use an expansion.
The upside to this book: a single implement   cookbook.
Quality/Price Rating: 85.
   
   
   
  5. CHIA; the complete guide to the ultimate superfood (Sterling   
Publishing, 2012, 192 pages, ISBN 978-1-4027-9943-3, $14.95 US paper   
covers) is by Wayne Coates, an agricultural engineer who developed the   
system currently used to harvest and clean chia seed. He's been 
assisted   by Stephanie Pedersen, a health writer and counselor who 
concentrates on   "wellness". It is, of course, another superfoods book, 
along the lines of   quinoa, amaranth, teff and various berries 
(cranberries, wolfberries). About   half the book is about chia; the 
other half has the 75 recipes. Chia has   omega-3, antioxidants, calcium, 
protein, and fiber. It is also consumed for   boosting endurance and 
losing weight. I already eat (every morning) a small   bowl of hemp 
seeds, pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds, and ground flax seeds    so I can 
easily add some chia seeds to get extra taste and endurance. There   is a 
FAQ section and a resources listing with websites. Preparations have   
their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is a   
table of metric equivalents. The author is to be commended for his   
enthusiastic writing.
Audience and level of use: runners, health lovers,   dieters
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: Chia seed is the highest   
known plant source of omega-3 fatty acids  2 tablespoons gives 5 grams   
of acid.
Quality/Price Rating: 90. 
   
   
   
  6. COUNTRY COMFORT: CASSEROLE COOKING; over 100 easy and delicious   one-
dish recipes (Hatherleigh Press, 2012; distr. Random House of Canada,   
178 pages, ISBN 978-1-57826-404-9, $12.50 US soft covers) is by Monica   
Musetti-Carlin, a food writer doing a "Country Comfort" series of   
cookbooks. These are collections of recipes garnered by the author, and   
sourced from friends, restaurants, farmers' markets, chefs, and more    
with a credit line for each. It's a basic book with basic preps, plus a   
section on pantries and biscuits, and meal/menu planners (with page   
references for the dishes). No illustrations, but good large type and   
easy-to-follow instructions. Preparations have their ingredients listed   
in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric   
equivalents.
Audience and level of use: beginners
Some interesting or   unusual recipes/facts: spaghetti pie; pork loin 
with raisin sauce; Penn   Dutch chicken and dumplings; bread pudding and 
whiskey sauce; hot fudge   cake.
Quality/Price Rating: 85. 
   
   
   
  7. FOOD BLOGGING FOR DUMMIES (John Wiley & Sons, 2012, 308 pages, ISBN   
978-1-118-15769-5, $24.99 US paper covers) is by Kelly Senyei, a food   
journalist (Columbia MA), stylist, photographer, and chef. She blogs at   
www.justataste.com. This is one of   the first books to explicitly guide 
a writer through the food blogging   process, although it is relatively 
easy to pick up through reading a lot of   food blogs. However, if you 
are a Dummy, then this is the book for you. Most   people do it because 
they want to share their passion for food. Some want to   preserve their 
family's dishes. Others have a specialty not addressed   elsewhere, such 
as blogging only about teff. This basic guide is also in   colour, since 
design, layout and colour is included in food blogging. It   more than 
quadruples the weight of the book. Material covers choosing a   name, 
claiming a domain, getting a platform, design, food-styling tricks,   and 
how to market the blog. Other material includes editing guidance, ideas   
and inspirations, avoiding obsessions, comments and responses, and the   
ten hardest foods to photograph (meatloaf, poached or fried eggs,   
oatmeal, etc.) with her ideas. Here's another winner in the Dummies   
series, especially for food bloggers wishing to learn something   new.
Audience and level of use: food bloggers new and old.
Some   interesting or unusual facts: chocolate pudding and melted cheese 
are very   hard to photograph.
Quality/Price Rating: 88. 
 
   
   
  8. FOOD STYLING & PHOTOGRAPHY FOR DUMMIES (John Wiley & Sons, 2012,   312 
pages, ISBN 978-1-118-09719-9, $29.99 US paper covers) is by Alison   
Parks-Whitfield, a technical writer and food photographer in the San   
Francisco Bay Area. It's useful for books, articles, and of course   
blogging (see above); it can form a subscript to the above book. It 
does   cost five dollars more because there is more photography in this 
book. This   Dummies book will appeal to both amateurs and professionals 
because it   concerns the passion of food photography. Basically, she 
tells you how to   make food look more attractive, to sell the product. 
Topics include   equipment, toolkits, dealing with sets and employers, 
preparing the shoot,   composition, tilts and angles, focus, and how to 
start your own business.   Along the way you'll get a good list of 
indispensable items for a food photo   shoot and some notes on terrific 
garnishes to photograph (sesame seeds,   microgreens, etc.)
Audience and level of use: photographers, food   lovers
Some interesting or unusual facts: meat proteins dry out very quickly,   
especially under hot lights.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
   
  9. CHEESE FOR DUMMIES (John Wiley & Sons, 2012, 382 pages, ISBN   978-1-
118-09939-1, $19.99 US paper covers) is from culture magazine 
www.culturecheesemag.com  which   covers everything about cheese 
including travel, pairings, recipes, and DIY   cheese. It was co-founded 
in 2008 by Thalassa Skinner, co-author here with   Laurel Miller, a 
writer at culture, and owner of a food store. What's   amazing to me is 
why it took Dummies so long to put out a book on cheese.   Other 
similarly titled books have been available for years. So here are the   
basics: what it is (types, regions), how to serve, how to cook with   
cheese, pairing cheese with wines and other foods, 39 recipes, DIY   
cheese, cheese festivals, some US artisanal cheese-makers, bizarre   
cheeses (e.g., stinking bishop which is a smelly cow cheese from   
England, camelbert from camel milk in Jordan), and more. Preparations   
have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is   
no table of metric equivalents. There are colour photos of cheeses in   
the middle of the book.
Audience and level of use: cheese lovers who need   a primer.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: gougeres; bistro salad   with 
poached egg and Parmigiano Reggiano; sopa de quinoa; pan-roasted wild   
mushrooms over cheddar polenta with pumpkinseed oil.
The downside to this   book: I'm curious why it took so long to be 
published. Also, it needs more   recipes.
The upside to this book: a good entry in the Dummies   category.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
 
   
   
  10. PURE VEGAN; 70 recipes for beautiful meals and clean living   
(Chronicle Books, 2012, 224 pages, ISBN 978-0-8118-7863-0, $29.95 US   
paper covers) is by Joseph Shuldiner, a designer and writer. It comes   
with log-rolling by Deborah Madison and the Lee Brothers. The book is   
oversized, to allow for large close-ups of gastric delights, some of   
which were shot by the author (who also designed the book). He's also   
got a great recipe for a No Cheese Plate  with all the elements 
usually   found on a cheese platter minus the cheeses! (Figs, nuts, dried 
pears and   apricots, fig paste, quince paste). Just add bread, crackers, 
fresh   fruit
The book is arranged by time of day, with chapters for 
morning,   afternoon, evening, late night, and very late night (although 
I'm not sure   I'd like a lot of chocolate late at night: caffeine and 
sugar? But that's   just me). There is also a resources list for 
obtaining upscale or   hand-to-find items. Preparations have their 
ingredients listed in   avoirdupois measurements, but there is a table of 
metric   equivalents.
Audience and level of use: vegans and others.
Some   interesting or unusual recipes/facts: potato torte; nutty mushroom 
risotto;   ginger pound cake; pistachio olive oil cake; garbanzo bean and 
tomato soup;   vegan tapas plate; savory breakfast tarts.
The downside to this book: it   could use more than 70 recipes, I'd guess 
100 is a good minimum.
The   upside to this book: superb photography and boldface for listing 
the   ingredients.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
   
  
11. UNCORKED; my journey through the crazy world of wine (Clarkson   
Potter, 2012, 214 pages, ISBN 978-0-307-71984-3, $28) is by Marco   
Pasanella, who has owned a wine shop in Manhattan since 2005. Before   
that he was a designer, a teacher of design, and a columnist. The book   
comes with log rolling by Martha Stewart (who employed his wife) and   
Steven Dublanica (Waiter Rant). He wanted a career change  and he got   
it. So just about all of the book is based on the past half-decade of   
his life. According to the Library of Congress, it's a collection of   
anecdotes; it's not even a memoir. He's divided his stories up into   
eight regions: plow, prune, harvest, crush, ferment, bottle, age, and   
drink. The appendix lists material that could form a sort-of primer to   
the world of tasting wine, including a list of 27 toasts in 27   
languages, such as salut, prost, but no chimo (Inuit). It's a   hodge-
podge of material about wine, eclectic enough that an indexer would   
have trouble. So there is no index. There are a couple of recipes for   
such as roasted parsnips, fish linguini, and fried sage leaves.   
Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements,   
but there is no table of metric equivalents. This sort of thing works   
well is you are a wine writer, as in Natalie MacLean's two books, but   
there is no coherence here. It's like a series of short newspaper   
stories, about 800 words apiece. Given that, then it is a good book for   
light and enjoyable reading. You'll learn a bit about renovating a five   
story house at the Manhattan waterfront, traveling in Italy, and the   
uniqueness of the New York wine industry. But in summary, it is mainly   
about the struggles of a small business. Given the price, you might 
want   to wait for the paperback or borrow it from the library. 
Currently, it is   $16 at Amazon.
Audience and level of use: the compleat wine reader
Some   interesting or unusual facts: He "unloaded 660 cases by hand(no 
forklift) of   his house red, Pasanella & Figlio Rosso.
Quality/Price Rating: 82.
   
   
   
  12. MOROCCO; a culinary journey with recipes (Chronicle Books, 2012,   
223 pages, ISBN 978-0-8118-7738-1, $29.95 US hard covers) is by Jeff   
Koehler, a writer-photographer specializing in food. He's written for   
many papers and magazines, and has authored several Mediterranean food   
books from the same publisher. He has just about the highest degree of   
log rolling I have even seen, with accolades from Naomi Duguid, Colman   
Andrews and Clifford Wright  other well-known and good Mediterranean   
food writers. The subtitle says he goes from the spice-scented markets   
of Marrakech to the date-filled oasis of Zagora, photographing along 
the   way. There are 70 recipes here, complemented by a brief culinary 
history, a   cook's tour of the land, and a discussion on the Moroccan 
pantry (all in the   first 50 pages). Arrangement is by course, with 
digressions for street food,   savoury pastries, tagines, couscous, and 
drinks (authentically   non-alcoholic, featuring mint tea, almond milk, 
spiced coffee). There's a   useful bibliography, and a ton of people are 
cited in the acknowledgments,   forming a useful source list (if you can 
read the small typeface   used).
Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and   
avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents.
Audience   and level of use: international food lovers.
Some interesting or unusual   recipes/facts: cucumbers in sweet marinade 
with oregano; berber omelet   tagine; calamari with tomato dipping sauce; 
fish brochettes; kefta lamb   brochettes; seafood pastille; lamb tagine 
with oranges, saffron, and candied   orange peel.
The downside to this book: I would have liked more than 70   recipes.
The upside to this book: dishes are indexed under both indigenous   name 
and English.
Quality/Price Rating: 90.
   
  13. SMOKING MEAT; the essential guide to real barbecue (Whitecap, 2012,   
222 pages, ISBN 978-1-77050-038-9, $29.95 CAN paper covers) is by Jeff   
Phillips, creator 
www.smoking-meat.com which has 34,000   forum members 
and 140,000 subscribers to his monthly e-newsletter.   Currently, he 
lives in Oklahoma. The publisher claims that this book is "the   ultimate 
how-to guide for smoking all kinds of meat and fish".    Certainly, it is 
an authentic book with Phillips' takes on smokers   (charcoal, gas, 
electric), woods, tools, and pantry-stocking. His main   "secret" is "low 
and slow". It is a good, basic book, arranged by the major   elements of 
poultry, pork, beef, fish, and seafood, along with sides and   desserts 
plus cheese for smoking. There's good detail here, such as the   bacon-
wrapped stuffed sausage patty with its interlacing bacon and 16 photos   
to show the techniques. There is also a source list on where to 
purchase   smoking equipment and supplies. Preparations have their 
ingredients listed   in avoirdupois measurements, but there are tables of 
metric equivalents.   Nothing beats smoked BBQ. Nothing.
Audience and level of use: BBQers.
Some   interesting or unusual recipes/facts: smoked duck with wine butter 
sauce;   smoked hot wings; smoked pork spare ribs; pulled pork burritos; 
Cajun smoked   frog legs.
The downside to this book: it would not open flat; I had to prop   it 
open.
The upside to this book: larger than normal type, which is a   boon.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
 
   
   
  14. SLOW FIRE; the beginner's guide to barbecue (Chronicle Books, 2012,   
176 pages, ISBN 978-1-4521-0303-7, $22.95 US hard covers) is by Ray   
Lampe, a multiple cook-off champion and BBQ food writer with other meat   
books. Look at 
www.drbbq.com. It is   another basic BBQ book, pitched at 
the entry level. There's a primer on   tools and equipment, charcoals, 
spices and rubs, and then individual   chapters on types of meat: ribs 
(back, spare, tips and short), pork, beef,   poultry, and a catch-all 
chapter for lamb, kielbasa, bologna, salmon, and   tilapia. Plus side 
dishes. Preparations have their ingredients listed in   avoirdupois 
measurements, but there is a table of metric   equivalents.
Audience and level of use: BB lovers, novices
Some   interesting or unusual recipes/facts: Memphis-style wet or dry 
ribs;   Memphis-style pulled pork; bacon-wrapped pig wings; homemade 
pastrami;   Texas-style beef brisket; planked salmon.
The downside to this book: only two   wine preps (chicken and turkey)
The upside to this book: easy to use and   convenient to store. Large 
typeface.
Quality/Price Rating: 84.
 
  15. THE FIRE ISLAND COOKBOOK (Atria, 2012; distr. Simon & Schuster,   180 
pages, ISBN978-1-4516-3293-4, $30 US hard covers) is by Mike Desimone   
and Jeff Jenssen, both lifestyle writers (Wine Enthusiast, Wine   
Spectator, Saveur). They're at 
www.worldwineguys.com. There's some log   
rolling, but Daisy Marinez cookbook author) says it best: "Easy,   
effortless entertaining with delicious, user-friendly recipes". This is   
seasonal produce to create a meal for each weekend from US Memorial Day   
through Labour Day. Ach of the 14 menus is global in scope, with food   
and wine pairings. So there is Spain, France, a Pool Party, Greece,   
Mexico, Mediterranean, Tuscany, the Caribbean and others. Preparations   
have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is   
no table of metric equivalents. An interesting collection of recipes,   
with wines being named by label  no alternatives proposed.
Audience and   level of use: beginners.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: Tuscan   dinner  penne with 
prosciutto and peas; bistecca alla fiorentina; shaved   fennel salad; 
cinnamon caramelized gnocchi.
The downside to this book: no   generic wines expressed.
The upside to this book: it is hard to believe but   the index is in a 
larger typeface than the recipes.
Quality/Price Rating:   83.
 
  
16. THE GLUTEN-FREE COOKBOOK (DK, 2012, 352 pages, ISBN   978-0-7566-
8216-3, $25 US hard covers) is by Fiona Hunter, Heather Whinny,   and 
Jane Lawrie, all experienced food writers and stylists. But only Fiona   
Hunter (also a nutritionist) gets a credit on the front cover. It's   
another book in the gluten-free sweepstakes, part of the   vegan-
vegetarian category of books now being published throughout North   
America. Here are 230 "easy" preps, step-by-step illustrations, plus   
advice for the gluten-free diet. Hunter provides a nutritional analysis   
of every recipe and special "nutrient boost" features for menu 
planning.   Essentially, gluten-free means no wheat, barley or rye. But 
there are plenty   of choices for other kinds of flours, which work 
rather well. Only breads   suffer, and if you are as picky as I am, then 
you might avoid gluten-free   breads and move on to other foods. The 
taste is different and there is no   chew factor. There's about 40 pages 
on flours and making pastry, cakes,   pastas and breads. Preparations 
have their ingredients listed in both metric   and avoirdupois 
measurements for weight (not for volume), but there is no   table of 
metric equivalents.
Audience and level of use: those needing a   gluten-free diet. 
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: lavosh with   eggplant dip; 
tuna and vegetable pasta salad; fattoush with corn tortillas;   crispy 
fish; beef burgers; smoked salmon and cream cheese picnic   pies.
The downside to this book: the typeface is a shade of gray, lighter   
than the usual darker black,
The upside to this book: good indexing plus   highlighted heads.
Quality/Price Rating: 85.
   
   
   
  
17. THE FRESH & GREEN TABLE; delicious ideas for bringing   vegetables 
into every meal (Chronicle Books, 2012, 224 pages, ISBN   978-1-4521-
0265-8, $24.95 US paper covers) is by Susie Middleton, who also   wrote 
"Fast, Fresh & Green". She's a former editor of Fine Cooking   magazine, 
now writing about vegetables for that magazine. She concentrates   here 
on quick methods, such as pre- or quick-braising, short sautéing,   stir-
frying, and quick roasting. Some preps have meat in them such as   
pancetta. She encourages substitution of vegetables, as she did in her   
first book. But here her preps are more substantial, being a good   
collection of mains. The book's arranged by nine cooking techniques,   
such as main-dish salads, hearty soups, veggie pasta sauces, and   
including gratins and tarts and pizza. Preparations have their   
ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but   
there are no tables of equivalents. 
Audience and level of use: home   cooks
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: roasted eggplant galette   
with mint and honey; spicy garlicky corkscrew pasta with broccoli; 
bread   stuffing with asparagus and peas; pasta frittata with leeks, goat 
cheese and   arugula; brussels sprouts and carrot ragout with peas, 
cipollini onions and   citrus butter.
The downside to this book: these are not all veggie preps,   which could 
be confusing to some readers.
The upside to this book: yummy   looking photos.
Quality/Price Rating: 87.