WHY CALORIES COUNT; from science to politics (University of 
California   Press, 2012, 288 pages, ISBN 978-0-520-26288-1, $29.95 US 
hard covers) is by   Marion Nestle, an academic at New York University, 
and Malden Nesheim, a   professor emeritus from Cornell University. They 
had collaborated on an   earlier work about pet food, while Nestle is 
well-known for such political   books as Food Politics, Safe Food, and 
Pet Food Politics. This book is one   of the California Studies in Food 
and Culture series, but of course, its   scope is not limited to 
California. It's a look at underlying issues related   to diet, food, 
weight loss, weight gain, and obesity around the globe. The   authors 
constantly have rough edges when they look at food manufacturers and   
diet promoters. Politics comes in because there is a food industry, it   
employs people, it has lobby groups, it is profit-making, and it wants   
to make more money. In some respects, it's a lot like Big Pharma, but   
while the prices are lower, the stakes are higher. Nestle (no relation,   
of course) and Nesheim give plenty of facts to support their cases, and   
there is much detail here for readers to do their own interpretation of   
food labeling, diet claims, weighing the evidence, and the like. The   
book concludes with a FAQ that should be of interest to book clubs or   
promotional tours. And copious end notes with bibliographic notes for   
further reading.
Audience and level of use: those who ant to know more   about the 
politics of food, food activists, libraries.
Some interesting   or unusual facts: 2% of the calories from ingested 
alcohol were lost from   the lungs, skin and kidneys. 98% of the calories 
obtained from alcohol are   processed by the body, and they are "empty" 
calories. 
The downside to   this book: people who hear about this book are bound to 
be one of the   congregation anyway  there still needs to be a more 
"popular" shoutout or   Internet meme series.
The upside to this book: they give a mantra for all of   us  GET 
ORGANIZED. EAT LESS, EAT BETTER. MOVE MORE. GET   POLITICAL.
Quality/Price Rating: 90.
   
   
   
  
4. HERBS; a global history (Reaktion Books, 2012; distr. University of   
Chicago Press, 166 pages, ISBN 978-1-86189-925-5, $17 US hard covers) 
is   by Gary Allen, author of The Herbalist in the Kitchen (2007), 
amongst other   books. 
   
  5. GIN; a global history (Reaktion Books, 2012, 167 pages, ISBN   978-
1-86189-924-8, $17 US hard covers) is by Lesley Jacobs Solmonson, a   
print food writer and a blogger (
www.12bottlebar.com).
 
  6. RUM; a global history (Reaktion Books, 2012, 141 pages, ISBN   978-
1-86189-926-2, $17 US hard covers) is by Richard Foss, a food historian   
and journalist.
   
  7. VODKA; a global history (Reaktion Books, 2012, 165 pages, ISBN   978-
1-86189-929-3, $17 US hard covers) is by Patricia Herlihy, who once   
taught at Brown and is now Professor at Emmanuel College in Boston.
   
  These books are all part of the Edible Series; they now number some 30   
books in a uniform format. Edible is a great series, offering thumbnail   
profiles and engaging memoirs of foods. You don't need to collect them   
all: if you hate olives (as does a friend of mine), then just avoid 
that   book. They've all got some traditional history, cultural history, 
food   history, and some travel/geography notes. Each volume has a 
selection of   recipes (with both metric and avoirdupois measurements), 
end notes,   bibliography, and a listing of websites and associations. 
There are also   terrific full-colour photos and an index. 
   
  "Herbs" are often considered weeds, but there are hundreds of uses for   
them, from medicinal to savoury dishes  and throughout history.
   
  "Gin" is a brief history, from Dutch origins to British misery to its   
current global status. It uses "herbs" in its blending, and there are   
secretive formulas of botanicals. Gin was probably more responsible for   
cocktails than any other distilled spirit.
   
  "Rum" is a colourful book, in that it documents elements of the slave   
trade and highlights rum's early base character as a raw spirit derived   
from molasses. It has had an impact on punches, the British Navy, as   
well as the islands of the Caribbean, of course, and popular music.
   
  "Vodka" is basically a non-descript spirit (it is, after all, just   
alcohol) which can be flavoured thousands of different ways. This   
history begins with Slavic origins from the 14th century, and moves   
through the tumultuous war periods. Again, like Gin, Vodka is a source   
of misery for certain cultures, like Russia. Still, a fascinating book   
on how life got that way.
   
  Audience and level of use: culinary historians, food lovers, spirits   
lovers.
Some interesting or unusual facts: The Poles prefer to believe   that 
vodka originated with them in the 11th century. In 1710, rum rations to   
the British Navy were set at half a pint a day (10 ounces). Rip Van   
Winkle blames "genever" for his twenty-year sleep. Japanese nori 
seaweed   is also in the west of England and Wales where it is known as 
laver.
The   downside to this book: as with any profile, occasionally one may 
wish for   more detail about certain points.
The upside to this book: good, nifty   self-contained books.
Quality/Price Rating: 90 each.
   
   
   
  8. THE TRUCK FOOD COOKBOOK; 150 recipes and ramblings from America's   
best restaurants on wheels. (Workman Publishing, 2012; distr. T. Allen,   
294 pages, ISBN 978-0-7611-5616-1, $18.95 US soft covers) is by John   
Edge, director of the Southern Foodways Alliance at the University of   
Mississippi and free-lance food writer (he's been nominated five times   
for a Beard Award). Here he explores the culture of street food, with   
preps adapted for home cooking. They come from restaurants on wheels in   
New York and Los Angeles, plus food carts and wagons in Portland,   
Austin, and Minneapolis (among others). The arrangement is by food:   
fries and pies, waffles, brunches, sandwiches, hot dogs, tacos, and   
sweets. Within each category there's a couple of pages devoted to a   
place, such as Jamerica Restaurant in Madison Wisconsin, with detail   
about the establishment and a rundown on the special food, in this 
case,   Jamaican meat patties. This is followed by a home cook style 
recipe (hey   folks, do try this at home!!) You can adapt your own 
seasoning level. Now   you will miss chatting with the vendor and getting 
all the latest scoops and   anecdotes, but you'll be well-fed. 
Preparations have their ingredients   listed in avoirdupois measurements, 
but there are tables of metric   equivalents.
Audience and level of use: armchair travelers, food   culturalists.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: toritos; elotes;   tamarind-
glazed fried chicken drumettes; falafel and egg hoagies; Korean   short 
ribs; Taiwanese fried chicken; garlic beef sauerkraut; adzuki chili;   
kalbi beef sliders.
The downside to this book: it's over too soon.
The   upside to this book: colourful, nicely adapted food, great for home   
use.
Quality/Price Rating: 88.
   
  
9.SHORT COURSE IN BEER; in introduction to tasting and talking about   
the world's most civilized beverage (Skyhorse Publishing, 2012; distr.   
T. Allen, 216 pages, ISBN 978-1-61608-633-6, $14.95 US hard covers) is   
by Lynn Hoffman, who remains unidentified in the book. It's a basic   
affair, originally published in 2009, and comes without an index 
(points   off). Yet it is an interesting read since it covers the major 
ground in a   good writing style. There's the flavour of beer, food and 
beer pairing,   primer on brewing, a dictionary and glossary, beer 
tourism, and some   recommended reading. A solid basic book at an 
affordable price.   Quality/price rating: 84.
   
   
   
  10. TASTES MATTERS; why we like the foods we do (Reaktion Books 2012,   
208 pages, ISBN 978-1-86189-914-9, $30 US hard covers) is by John   
Prescott, an Australian food scientist and editor of "Food Quality &   
Preference" journal. It is a good explanation of why some of us enjoy   
some foods while others don't. We all crave sweet tastes at birth   
(energy, growth). Salt levels will vary from person to person and 
region   to region (I have a very low tolerance for salt and must 
remember to drink   liquids). Both sourness and bitterness are acquired 
tastes; both are   indicative of "bad" food, in varying degrees, and 
again reflect personal   choices (I don't like sour but I enjoy bitter 
such as caffeine or herbs).   Genes play a strong role: about a quarter 
of the world are "supertasters"   (such as myself). Each of those people 
can have sixteen times more taste   buds than the other three-quarters of 
the world. His book is loaded with   details of food cultures. Try also 
www.taste-matters.org for more   material.
Audience and level of use: parents with fussy or picky   eaters.
Some interesting or unusual facts: Regular people seem to prefer   fatty 
foods, and hence can be more obese than supertasters. The latter,   
though, are reluctant to consume "bitter greens".
The downside to this   book:
The upside to this book: written for the common man.
Quality/Price   Rating: 90.
 
   
   
  11. TASTE WHAT YOU'RE MISSING; the passionate eater's guide to getting   
more from every bite (Free Press, 2012; distr. Simon & Schuster, 416   
pages, ISBN 978-1-439190-73-9, $26 US hard covers) is by Barb Stuckey, 
a   food developer researcher at Mattson, North America's largest 
independent   developer of new foods and beverages. It's a semi-technical 
look at our   taste buds and how and why we taste the way we do. Later, 
she expounds on   "how to get more from every bite". Her primer covers 
the five basic tastes   (bitter, sweet, sour, salt, and umami). But she 
also explores other factors   here such as "carbonation" and "fat", more 
mouth-feels than tastes.    There is also the major importance of the 
olfactory portion of enjoying our   food, and, to a lesser extent, touch, 
hearing and sight. Much of what she   says is complemented by witty 
humour and anecdotes. She provides "exercises"   that we can perform to 
learn about our basic preferences in tastes. There   are web resources 
listed for taste and smell centres around the world, a   checklist of 15 
ways to get more out of every bite (e.g., chew well), many   taste 
exercises, and some serious footnoting references. The half-dozen   
preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements,   
but there is no table of metric equivalents. 
Audience and level of use:   curious people who wan to know about 
tasting.
Some interesting or unusual   facts: Smoking impairs your ability to 
smell. Don't smoke for two hours   before and after a meal  you'll enjoy 
the food more.
The downside to   this book: there's a lot of tech talk, useful for the 
committed   foodie.
The upside to this book: good humour,
Quality/Price Rating: 90.   
   
  
12. COFFEE LIFE IN JAPAN (University of California Press, 2012, 222   
pages, ISBN 978-0-520-27115-9, $24.95 US soft covers) is by Merry 
White,   an anthropology professor at Boston University, and the author 
of other   books about Japanese culture. It is number 36 in a series, 
"California   Studies in Food and Culture". It traces Japan's café 
society over 130 years.   According to the publisher's succinct notes, 
she "explores how coffee and   coffee spaces have been central to the 
formulation of Japanese notions about   the uses of public space, social 
change, modernity, and pleasure." One of   the specific highlights is 
that this is where women became free. The book is   more on cafés than on 
coffees, and it is more about urban spaces than a   Japanese tea 
ceremony. The café is the space in Japan's cities, not the   teahouse. 
There are extensive end notes and bibliographies, plus, of course,   a 
topical index. Black and white photos are scattered throughout. There   
is also a listing (with notes) of important cafes in Japan.
Audience and   level of use: coffee lovers, followers of Japanese culture 
and   history.
Some interesting or unusual facts: Café Paulista, founded in 1908 in   
Ginza, is the oldest remaining coffeehouse. It was named after the city   
of San Paulo because the Brazilian government furnished 100 free bags 
of   coffee each year, for promotional considerations.
The downside to this book:   scholarly, detailed reading at times.
The upside to this book: a good slice   of a mini-culture.
Quality/Price Rating: 89.
   
  
13. FORKS OVER KNIVES: the cookbook (The Experiment, 2012; distr. T.   
Allen, 320 pages, ISBN 978-1-61519-061-4, $18.95 US soft covers) has   
been assembled by Del Sroufe, and is based on the documentary "Forks   
Over Knives" (2011) which examined the impact of animal/dairy foods on   
the causes of degenerative diseases in humans. Apparently, a plant-
based   diet decreases cancer growth and heart disease. There is a 
compelling   argument for this, in both the book and the movie. The book 
is meant to   accompany the movie since it provides 300 recipes. 
Actually, there was an   earlier book from last year that provided more 
text but fewer recipes (125   or so from about two dozen people who 
contributed the recipes, maybe five   apiece).  Here, there's a broader 
range, but a good introduction for   those who are used to eating few 
veggies. The food is both hearty and   substantial, relying on legumes, 
grains, fruits, roots and salads. There are   a few of the really best 
green plants here, but only 5 Swiss chard preps and   7 kale recipes. The 
veggies with lower appeal seem to be missing (no   Brussels sprouts) 
although there are a dozen broccoli, eleven for cabbage.   Still, it is a 
good beginner book, driving home the philosophy of Michael   Pollan and 
the film. Preparations have their ingredients listed in   avoirdupois 
measurements, but there are tables of metric equivalents.   Quality/price 
rating: 84.
   
   
   
  14. CURRIED CULTURES; globalization, food and South Asia (University of   
California Press, 2012, 316 pages, ISBN 978-0-520-27012-1, $27.95 US   
paper covers) is a collection of articles edited by Krishnendu Ray and   
Tulasi Srinivas. It's number 34 in the California Studies in Food and   
Culture [California refers to the Press not the region being studied].   
Both editors are academics and they deal with the manner in which the   
urban middle class of India is driving the country, both within India   
and abroad (the globalization). That's the simplistic annotation. Of   
course, to academics, it is much m=re complex. These twelve essays   
(three of which are basically reprinted from earlier times) cover the   
range of historical pastas through colonial India, colonial Bengal,   
hotels, foodways in Mumbai, South Asian restaurants in Britain, the   
Pakistani grill in Manhattan, curry mahals, and female food   
entrepreneurs. Many locations around the world have been impacted by   
South Asian food, and this book explores just a few of them, through 
the   people, practices, culture and eating habits. Next up in the near 
future:   Indian agribusinesses expanding to Africa, buying up land. Ell 
worth a read.   Murky black and white photos, essay end notes, an 
extensive bibliography for   further reading, and an equally-extensive 
index. Quality/Price Rating:   88.
   
   
   
  15. TURKEY (Chronicle Books, 2012; distr. Raincoast, 272 pages, ISBN   
978-1-4521-0770-7, $35 US hard covers) is by Leanne Kitchen, an   
Australian chef who travels around Asia and the Middle East. The   
location photos in this book are from her camera. Her book was   
originally published in 2011 in Australia by Murdoch Books. The 100   
preps cover the range from regional cooking to the Ottoman Empire   
palaces. It is a combo travel and food book, oversized, useful as a 
gift   too. The cuisine was shaped by three cultures: Mediterranean, 
Middle East,   and Slavic, with a healthy mix of Islamic and Orthodox 
religious foods.   Short travelogue pieces set the tone for the regional 
specialities,   artisans, culinary techniques and restaurants. Each of 
the seven geographic   regions provides their own unique food cultures. 
The book, though, is   arranged by course: meze, soups, breads/pasta, 
veggies and salads,   rice/bulgur, seafood, poultry and meat, and 
desserts, about 12 preps each.   Preparations have their ingredients 
listed in avoirdupois measurements, but   there is no table of metric 
equivalents.
Audience and level of use:   armchair travelers, culture food lovers.
Some interesting or unusual   recipes/facts: lahmacun; beet green, 
ricotta and hazelnut gozleme;   turluturlu; kisir; baked fish with dill 
butter and raki, roasted tomatoes   and pine nuts; octopus stew with 
wine, spices and caperberries.
The   downside to this book: I wish there were more preps.
The upside to this book:   great photographs.
Quality/Price Rating: 89. 
   
   
   
  16. THE COOKBOOK LIBRARY; four centuries of the cooks, writers, and   
recipes that made the modern cookbook (University of California Press,   
2012, 330 pages, ISBN 978-0-520-24400-9, $50 US hard covers) is by Ann   
Willan, founder of La Varenne Cooking School, and a Beard Award winner   
(Country Cooking of France). She's been assisted by her husband Mark   
Cherniavsky and Kyri Claflin, both food researchers. It is number 35 in   
the respected California Studies in Food and Culture. The book began as   
notes on the 400-volume personal collection of Anne and Mark's   
cookbooks, dating back to 1491 and centering on European and American   
sources. They chronicle the life of cooks and writers who produced 
these   books, with 120 rich black and white illustrations of historical 
title pages   and other illustrations from these books. The range is from 
"upstairs" to   "downstairs", from the banquet halls of royalty to 
communal tables of the   poor. They explore the foods that these people 
ate, and the religious and   political effects on their meals. There are 
also 40 recipes from the 15th to   the 19th century books, updated for 
today. Essentially, it is a history of   the cookbook, tracing the 
development of the recipe, explaining the forms of   measurement, looking 
at the medieval kitchen, exploring the role of women in   the kitchen, 
and the impact of ingredients from the New World (the Columbian   
Exchange). Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois   
measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents. There are 
end   notes and a copious bibliography for further reading. As well, 
there is a   recipe index separate from the general index. A great read.
Audience and   level of use: food researchers, cookbook collectors.
Some interesting or   unusual recipes/facts: cailles au laurier; soufflés 
parisiens aux pommes de   reinette; ypocras; zu mache ein krapffen teig.
Quality/Price Rating:   90.
   
   
   
  17. JOEY GREEN'S KITCHEN MAGIC; 1,882 quick cooking tricks, cleaning   
hints, and kitchen remedies using your favorite brand-name products   
(Rodale, 2012; distr. Raincoast, 370 pages, ISBN 978-1-60971-703-5,   
$18.99 US paper covers) is by someone who has quirky yet clever   
household hints (
www.wackyuses.com).   Perfect reading for summer. Bake 
moist brownies with cola, rescue burnt   gravy with peanut butter, make 
creamier mashed potatoes with canned whipped   cream, flavour a roasted 
chicken with beer, keep milk fresh longer with   baking soda, soften 
stale marshmallows with white bread, and 1875 more
Not   for the faint of 
heart. Many items can be processed or attended to by   generic or other 
brand names, so I'm not giving any of them a free plug. Or,   maybe if I 
did, you might avoid them, and the companies will come after me,   
claiming loss of sales
.LOL. As I said, a good read, especially in the   
bathroom. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois   
measurements in the handful of recipes, but there is no table of metric   
equivalents. Quality/price rating: 80. 
 
  
18. THE FISH THAT ATE THE WHALE; the life and times of America's banana   
king (Farrar, Straus Giroux, 2012; distr. D & M Publishers, 270 pages,   
ISBN 978-0-374-29927-9, $27 US hard covers) is by Rich Cohen, a   free-
lance magazine writer and book author. It is a light hearted but   well-
researched business and personal biography of Sam Zemurray, a peddler   
of bananas who eventually created the United Fruit Company that we have   
all grown to love and hate. It's also an exploration of the diplomatic   
and military moves in Central America, to corner the banana market   
("banana republics" and "Yankee go home"). This is good story telling,   
so I won't reveal the "plot". He arrived in America in 1891 and died 69   
years later in grandest house of New Orleans. There are copious end   
notes and a good bibliography, but sadly, no illustrations beyond a   
basic map, and NO INDEX, which makes the material difficult to 
retrieve,   and gives it points off in my rating. Quality/price rating: 
81.
   
  
19. SWEET TOOTH; the bittersweet history of candy (St. Martin's Press,   
2012; distr. Raincoast, 312 pages, ISBN 978-0-31-66810-5, $25.99 USW   
hard covers) is by Kate Hopkins, a book author and food blogger in   
Seattle. It comes with praise from Elizabeth Abbott, the author of the   
sterling "Sugar; a bittersweet history". Hopkins takes the action one   
processed step further: sugar candy. Hopkins desired candy as a child,   
and believed that when she was an adult, she could have all she wanted.   
But as she approached middle age, she realized that being an adult 
means   having the means to buy all the candy you want but no longer 
wanting to.   Hey, that was like ice cream and me!! I loved Baskin 
Robbins but when I   could afford it and when the franchise came to town, 
I stayed away. Hopkins   decided to at least visit stores and explore the 
history of candy. Along the   way, she came across the same factors that 
Abbott did in her researches: the   darker side of the commercial 
ventures of sugar and candy. So the book is   partly memoir (Hopkins' 
addiction to candy) and partly a look at its   positives and negatives in 
its history. So there is a big dose of   unhealthiness here in the 
addiction, the cutthroat business competition, and   the slave trade. 
It's an enjoyable read and ride through history, with a   smattering of 
asides, a bibliography, and (thank heavens) an index.   Quality/price 
rating: 88.