...all reflect a boom in the cookbook publishing business. A paperback   reprint will lower the cost to the purchaser, and also give a publisher a chance   to correct egregious errors or add a postscript. Some will reissue a book in   paper covers with a new layout or photos. Others will rearrange existing   material to present it as more informative text while keeping the focus tight.   Some magazines will reissue popular or classic recipes in an "easy" format. Here   are some recent "re-editions"...
  21.A LA MERE DE FAMILLE (Chronicle Books, 2014, 280 pages, ISBN   978-1-4521-1828-4, $35 US, hard covers) comes from the Parisian confectioner of   the same name (founded in 1761). It was first published in France in 2011 by   Hachette; this is its North American debut in English, with a text by Julien   Merceron and photography by Jean Cazals. There are 9 locations of the store in   Paris, but of course, only one of them was the first. So of course, this is also   the history of the company. There is a lot of material on the French style or   manner of doing confections, followed by a judicious selection of recipes for   chocolates, cakes and pastries, candymaking, jams, cookies, tuiles and   meringues, syrups, candied fruits, and frozen treats. About 100 in all. The   photography is drop dead gorgeous; my fave is the candied pineapple on p179. "As   with all candied fruits, the process for candying stretches out over a week   (p178)." But the techniques and steps are simple and do not take much time in   themselves. These are recipes for the patient: praline paste, lady fingers,   orange-chocolate cake, montelimar nougat, crunchy almond spread, pistachio ice   pops. Well worth it if you have the available time for the project; many preps   require a maturation period which is down time for the chef. Preparations have   their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of   metric equivalents. No index, but there is a table of recipes and a handy   bookmarker ribbon. Quality/price rating: 88.
  22.THE FLEXITARIAN TABLE; inspired flexible meals for vegetarians, meat   
  lovers, and everyone in between (Houghton Mifflin, 2007, 2014, 342 pages,   
  ISBN 978-0-544-27390-0 $19.95 US soft covers) is by Peter Berley, a   well-
  known former chef and now cookbook author and magazine food writer. 
  This is his third such book – his last one got both a Beard and an 
  IACP. Yet he still needs logrolling from Rachel Ray and Mollie Katzen. This   is the soft cover reprint of the 2007 book, with nothing changed. The book has   been authored "with Zoe Singer" who is not identified, but is presumably a   focusing 
  writer. A "flexitarian" is an outer limit vegetarian operating on the   
  fringes: a flexible vegetarian. It is also an excellent weasel word 
  used to describe those eaters who consume more non-meat than meat. He   
  has 150 recipes, sorted by 40 seasonally arranged menus (10 per 
  season). All recipes can be mixed and matched, but of course should 
  remain within the season if the principle of eating seasonally is to be   
  followed. Thus, he has convertible meals that can be prepared with a 
  vegetable and/or meat protein; some hearty vegetarian meals for the 
  meat lover; and meals with fish, poultry, and some red meats, with 
  ample veggie sides that could become mains when your back is turned. He   
  has additional ideas for adding flesh and for getting dinners quickly.   
  His main foods for heartiness include only organic or wild meats, beans   
  and tofu, dairy and eggs, plus nuts and seeds. US volume measurements   
  are used, but there are no metric tables of equivalents. One menu has   lentil and 
  rhubarb curry with potatoes and peas, a cucumber lime raita, naan 
  bread, and roasted spring carrots with cumin and lime. Another has 
  roast duck with spiced red onion marmalade, goat cheese frittata, rice   
  with herbs, and sautéed asparagus and fiddlehead ferns. Quality/Price   Rating: 86.
  23.THE HEALTHY SLOW COOKER. 2d ed. (Robert Rose, 2014, 352 pages, ISBN   978-0-7788-0479-6, $27.95 CAN soft covers) is by Judith Finlayson, who has sold   over a million cookbooks. The first edition was in 2006 when healthy food meant   low fat, low calorie, no saturated fat. Since then, thought has shifted on   saturated fats and on wheat. So it is back to the drawing board with new   versions of older dishes. Since 2006, Finlayson has authored a slew of slow   cooker books on comfort foods, veggies, gluten-free whole grains, and paleo   dishes. Some of the recipes in this book had appeared in those earlier books.   Indeed, the subtitle now reads "135 gluten-free recipes for health and wellness"   – inasmuch as slow cookers can retain certain nutrients. Try her creamy morning   millet with apples, leek and potato soup, Thai-style coconut fish curry,   butternut chili, New Age succotash, or poached pears in chocolate sauce.   Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois   measurements, but there is no table of equivalents. She also has a reading list   and a table of diabetes food values.
  Quality/price rating: 87.
  24.THE NEW VEGETARIAN COOKING FOR EVERYONE (Ten Speed Press, 1997, 2014,   666 pages, 
  ISBN 978-1-60774-553-2 $40 US hard covers) is by Deborah Madison. It was   
  originally published in 1997, and it had won both a Beard and a Child   
  book award. It came back as a "tenth anniversary edition", but nothing was   changed in that edition. Today, the food world has changed in the past 17 years,   and Madison acknowledges this in a brisk introduction. "you will find nearly all   of the recipes you have come to love. But you will also find over 200 new ones   and information on new ingredients that we have come to know." If you have the   original book, then there is no real need to buy this one, except as a gift or   replacement copy. Our own copy for 1997 is still serviceable, but I will retain   this one for the new recipes. In 1997, she had 9 quinoa recipes, which was   probably – at that time – 9 more than any other book.
  Quality/Price rating: 94 for first time purchase. 
  25.NEW FLAVOURS FOR THE LEBANESE TABLE (Ebury Press, 2007, 308 pages, ISBN   978-0-091917241, $22.99 CAN soft covers) is by Nada Saleh, a cookery writer from   Beirut and lately a cook at Books for Cooks in Notting Hill. It is a straight   reprint in paperback of the 2007 edition. 200 recipes are compiled, most of them   classics with contemporary leanings. Everything here is highly aromatic, but may   I recommend the makdouss? (cooked baby eggplants stuffed with walnuts and chili   – can be frozen). Large typeface too. Preparations have their ingredients listed   in mostly metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of   equivalents. Quality/price rating: 88.
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

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