B.   For the more literate person, there are the histories , "memoirs"  and   humour of writers, chefs, 
  and wine people. Some have called these memoirs "creative non-fiction",   many with 
  embellishments and gilding. And most – not all -- of them suffer from a   lack of indexing, which 
  makes it difficult to find what the writer said about another person or   subject. But this 
  also avoids the potential for lawsuits and disjointed noses. Nevertheless,   they are 
  rewarding to read. Who cares about poetic license? Here then are some that   stood out 
  from last year's run, and any of them would make great gifts for the   reader. Here we go, 
  in no particular order…
  --MEET PARIS OYSTER (Grand Central Life & Style, 2014, 149 pages, $22   CAN hard covers) is by Mireille Guillano, author of French Women Don't Get Fat.   It is a stylish book, meant for the oyster lover, and endorsed by Daniel Boulud   himself. This is the culture of the oyster lover in Paris; it begins with   Huitrerie Regis, probably the best oyster bar in Paris. She chats with Regis,   and then moves on to purveyors in Marennes-Oleron and winemakers in Sancerre.   Along the way she writes of the health benefits of oysters, and then shares her   fave oyster recipes and wine pairings. A book to give to oyster lovers.
  --THE BREAD EXCHANGE (Chronicle Books, 2014, 240 pages, $40 hard covers) is   by Malin Elmlid. She launched the Bread Exchange in 2008 when was a   fashion-industry professional with an obsession for making her own bread. She   started offering her breads to others in return (exchange) for recipes, handmade   goods, and services. Her bok is the story of how managed it all, including   traveling (she's from Sweden) to Berlin, Bavaria, Warsaw, Kabul, Antwerp,   California, London and New York. There are more than 50 recipes here for   naturally leavened breads and her exchange foods. Lovely photos.
  --THE TEMPORARY BRIDE (Little, Brown, 2014, 240 pages, $22.99 CAN soft   covers) is by Canadian-born Jennifer Klinec, who now runs a cooking school in   London UK. Its subtitle is "a memoir of love and food in Iran" so it is part   romance and part foodie. She searches for ancient recipes in offbeat places, and   ends up in Iran helping a woman with her cooking and learning from her. This is   a relationship venture as well since Klinec gets involved with the woman's son.   He gives her a food tour of Iran, including a camel slaughterhouse. Good   reading, great for discussion about Persian food and love.
  --INVENTING BABY FOOD (University of California Press, 2014, 236 pages,   $39.44 CAN soft covers) is by Amy Bentley, a public health professor at New York   University who has also published other food cultural history books. Her   subtitle is "taste, health, and the industrialization of the American diet" .   She shows how the invention of commercial baby food shaped American notions of   infancy and influenced the evolution of parental and pediatric care. By the   1950s, babies were eating a lot of the wrong ESSES: sugar, salt and starch. It's   well-researched with extensive endnotes and a bibliography, plus index and some   black and white illustrations. 
  --SOUS CHEF (Ballantine Books, 2014, 214 pages, $29.95 hard covers) is from   the executive sous-chef  at Tavern on the Green in NYC, Michael Gibney. It   is about 24 hours on the line, with nuts and bolts about the restaurant industry   and its insanity, spread over a full day. Gibney is descriptive of jobs and   duties. It comes complete with a kitchen floor plan and a kitchen   chain-of-command chart; it is told in second person narrative. Well worth a   read.
  --MASTERING THE ART OF SOVIET COOKING (Crown, 2013, 2014, 352 pages, $18   CAN paper covers) is a paperback reissue of food writer Anya von Bremzen's now   classic memoir of food and longing. She's the winner of three Beard Awards and   the author of five cookbooks. It's her story of life in the USSR, the privation   of 18 families sharing one kitchen. She and her family eat their way through the   decades, from the 1910s and the Czar to Lenin, Stalin, Glasnost and Putin on the   Ritz. Along the way there are some non-indexed USSR recipes as well as sharp   writing. 
  --COOK YOUR DATE INTO BED (Dog 'n' Bone, 2014, 128 pages, $19.95 CAN hard   covers) is Helen Graves's look at the relationship between food and romance:   eating out, sharing recipes, and how to make all foods delicious (she's got some   preps like boozy Mexican hot chocolate, snacks, cocktails, and saucy breakfasts   for apres. Plus some aphrodisiacs.
  --HOW TO DRINK AND NOT LOOK LIKE AN IDIOT (Dog 'n' Bone, 2014, 128 pages,   $19.95 CAN hard covers) is a guide to distinguishing quality booze from cheap   rubbish. When you want something sophisticated, reach for this book. Emily Miles   has the tips, tricks and tools for high-end restaurant or cocktail bar drinking.   This is food and wine matching, sipping single malts, preparing a home liquor   cabinet, and more. Deftly illustrated.
  --THE PERFECT KEG (Greystone Books, 2014, 210 pages, $19.95 CAN paper) is   by Ian Coutts who has written many articles and books about beer in Canada.   Here, he looks to make the perfect keg of beer, from the beginnings of sowing,   scything, malting and brewing up his best-ever pint of beer. It ia the record of   a year long journey. He grew everything and made it all himself. It was part of   his 100-mile-diet approach. The barley and hops came from the Ottawa Valley; the   yeast he captured himself. Of course, it was not easy – but read it for   yourself. He's also got 10 recipes for making different  beer styles.
  --WE MAKE BEER (St. Martin's Press, 2014, 213 pages, $28.99 CAN hard   covers) is by Sean Lewis, former columnist for BeerAdvocate. It is all about a   variety of American craft brewers and their artisanal workmanship. 31 breweries   are covered, including such well-known names in Canada as Samuel Adams and   Sierra Nevada. Personalities, inventiveness, and hard work is covered in this   community of brewers. 
  --A BOWL OF OLIVES (Workman Publishing, 2014,  128 pages, $23.95 CAN)   is by Sara Midda, a UK illustrator , principally of food (she's done In and Out   of the Garden and South of France; a sketchbook).. Her watercolour paintings   here celebrate food and memory (a salad from the garden, a picnic on the beach,   podding peas. There are even a few recipes amongst the excellent illustrations.   A treasure for holiday gifting!
  --THE PORTLANDIA COOKBOOK; cook like a local (Clarkson Potter, 2014, 176   pages, $28.95 CAN hard covers) is by an assortment of people. According to the   verso, it is copyrighted by Broadway Video Entertainment Inc., with Library of   Congress authorship attributed to Fred Armisen and Carrie Brownstein from the TV   show, and  photos by Evan Sung. Near the bottom, it says the text is by   Alice Mathias and the recipes by Grace Parisi. The book is a collection of preps   from all over Portland, from chefs to home cooks (although the photos look   suspiciously like TV celebrities). The recipes look pretty good, divided into   small plates, desserts, brunch, main courses, and drinks. But it is hard to   figure out if food trucks are involved. Anyway, the recipes come from Grace   Parisi, and include Brussels sprouts with bacon, grilled cheese nests, basket   salads, lavender shortbread, Sichuan chicken wings, and other stuff that young   people eat. Background on the restaurants is humourous and may be spurious, as   is the show itself. 
  --DIRTY FOOD (Ryland Peters & Small, 2014, 160 pages, $31.95 CAN hard   covers) is by Carol Hilker. She promises us it is "the best worst food you will   ever eat" – ribs, burgers,  fried chicken, sassy sandwiches, bbq, grilled   foods. Stuff like the grilled steak ranchero burrito or maple-cured bacon and   tomato sandwich. She manages, quite easily, to lift the fat and sugar content of   everything.  But essentially, these are "gourmet" versions of fast   finger-licking food. 
  --FOOD; a love story (Crown Archetype, 2014, 341 pages, $31 CAN hard   covers) is by food comedian Jim Gaffigan. It is a hilarious follow-up to his   first too, Dad Is Fat. It is full of memories, opinions, and fantasies, and it   is also heavily illustrated with black and white pix. These are worth a 1000   words each since the text is chopped into 62 chapters dealing with buffets,   gravy, BBQ, Mexican food, wine, coffee, donuts, bagels, hot dogs, corned beef –   and lots more. Fun over the holidays!
  --THE CALL OF THE FARM (The Experiment, 2014,  273 pages, $19.95 CAN   paper covers) is by Rochelle Bilow, now a staff writer at Bon Appetit, formerly   a line cook and farmer. It is about an unexpected year of getting dirty, home   cooking, and finding herself. With a broken heart, she moved from the city to a   New York state CSA farm, ostensibly to write a short profile of a sustainable   food venture. There she learned about food in the rough, and stayed – and found   another romance. A great read for the holidays, complete with a few   recipes.
  …and some worthwhile novels include – 
  --A TABLE BY THE WINDOW (WaterBrook Press, 2014, 306 pages, $17.99 CAN soft   covers)  is by Hillary Manton Lodge. It is a novel of family secrets with   heirloom recipes. The youngest heir to a French-Italian restaurtant dynasty is   also a food writer, and this is the story of her moving through life. Chick lit   and romance, but it does not beat  Stanwyck's The Mad Miss Manton....
  --DELICIOUS (Appetite by Random House, 2014, 383 pages, $29.95 CAN hard   covers) is a justly acclaimed novel by triple threat (food reviews, memoirs,   fiction) Ruth Reichl, who now has more time on her hands since Gourmet folded.   It is all about Billie Breslin who leaves Cali for NYC and a job at a food mag.   In the mag's library, she finds letters from Lulu in Ohio to James Beard from   over 50 years ago. There's a love story here plus a family tragedy and some   detective work. It is literature.
  --
  C. Family values Christmas gift cook books would have to include:
  --IN HER KITCHEN (Clarkson Potter, 2014, 248 pages, $35 CAN hard covers)   has been pulled together by Gabriele Calimberti, a photographer and storyteller.   Nothing says family more than grandmothers who cook, and Calimberti gives us   profiles of some 58 grandmothers from around the world. Each has a  story,   a recipe, a portrait, and a plated dish photo. It is one   Nana/Nonna/Murmor/etc  per country, such as Kathy O'Donovan in Whitehorse   (bison casserole under the midnight sun) or Melanie Hill in Utah (chocolate   toffee trifle). There's the common (tiramisu from Tuscany) and the uncommon (lok   lak from Cambodia). The profiles of the villagers are marvellous, and the   recipes scrumptious. I do wish I knew some of these cooks.
  --BEST OF THE BEST; the best recipes from the 25 best cookbooks of the year   (Food & Wine Books, 2014, 272 pages,  is from "Food and Wine Magazine"   in the US. This is the latest -- there were 15 or so earlier ones, with   different books of course. The editorial team has selected 110 recipes from 25   cookbooks published in 2013, and has kitchen-tested them. Some titles:   Vegetarian Literacy (Deborah Madison), One Good Dish (David Tanis), Root to   Stalk Cooking (Tara Duggan), River Cottage Veg (High Fearnley-Whittingstall),   and Smoke & Pickles (Edward Lee). Some preps are unique to this book, having   been contributed by the selected cookbook authors:  scallops with orange   sauce, orange and fennel gravlax, chocolate caramels, eight-layer nachos, blood   orange panna cotta parfaits, et al.  The selection of recipes definitely   emphasizes the home cook, with easy to do cakes, bagnat, dumplings. Still, a   basic level of cooking expertise is expected. The index is by principal   ingredient and course -- so you can put together a whole meal from the different   cookbooks.
  --THE KITCHEN TABLE COOKBOOK (Whitecap, 2014, 290 pages, $29.95 CAN paper   covers) is by Moira Sanders of the Harrow Fair Cookbook, who presents  some   family-friendly preps for a 365 eating pattern. "I generally focus on eating   local, seasonal an real food, and moderation is the umbrella that everything   falls under". Amen to that. Her 150 dishes include Dagwood sandwich with   homemade mayonnaise, rhubarb vanilla soda, lamb burgers, and more.
  --ONE POT (Clarkson Potter, 2014,  256 pages, $31 CAN paperback)   covers the range of Dutch ovens (beef stew, baked risotto), slow cooker (pulled   pork, pot roast), skillet sautes (poached cod, stir-fried chicken),    roasting pan (rib-eye with root veggies, Tuscan pork roast), pressure cooker   (short ribs, chickpea curry), stockpot (soups), and desserts. It is "From the   Kitchens of Martha Stewart Living", so it is reliable and user friendly. 
  --THE POLLAN FAMILY TABLE (Scribner, 2014, 334 pages, $36 CAN) is by, well,   the Pollan family – touted by the publisher as "the best recipes and kitchen   wisdom for delicious healthy family meals". This has been seconded by log   rollers Ina Garten, Alice Waters, Michael J. Fox, and Mario Batali. Oh, yes the   Pollan family authors are mother Corky plus sisters Lori, Dana and Tracy. The   100 preps are well-illustrated with family photos in addition to the plated   dishes. Lots of tips and advice, but minus any metric measurements or   equivalents. There is a foreward by Michael Pollan. One of my fave recipes is   penne alla sherry with shiitake mushrooms and spinach.
  --COMFORT FOOD (The Old Farmer's Almanac, 2014, 288 pages,  $23 CAN)   is by Hen Haedrich and the Almanac editors. Indeed, nothing says family more   than the Old Farmer's Almanac. Every course is covered, and there is an index by   tips as well as by ingredient, Typical are bacon baked beans, avocado cream,   deviled eggs, cherry tea cake, pumpkin burgers, butterscotch pudding – plus many   variations. 
  --DELICIOUSLY VINTAGE (Ryland Peters & Small, 2014, 144 pages, $24.95   CAN hard covers) is Victoria Glass' charting of the range of fave classics in   the area of cakes and bakes, concentrating on family preps passed down from   generation to generation. It's Brit based since she has a bespoke celebration   cake business in London. Traditional scones, rock cakes, lamingtons, cinnamon   buns, sachertorte, eclairs – about 60 vintage recipes in all.
  --THE SKINNYTASTE COOKBOOK (Clarkson Potter, 2014, 320 pages, $35 CAN) is   by www.skinnytaste.com owner and blogger Gina Homolka. Her response to   WeightWatchers (which she actually liked but was not tempted by the recipes) was   to simply re-use her favourite flavoured recipes for herself and family. She   worked them out all over again so that they retained a maximum amount of flavour   while reducing calories, fat, and sugar. So here are her 150 top recipes, which   include flank steak salad, lemon sole, lamb chops, apple spiced oatmeal, French   onion soup  (hold the bread), and potato and kale sausage frittata. She's   done all the work for you by reducing what she could but still retain flavours.   There's nutritional information and photos, plus the "skinny" (i.e., tip). And   there are more recipes at the website.
  --BEST OF BRIDGE HOLIDAY CLASSICS (Robert Rose, 2014, 303 pages, $29.95   CAN  spiral bound) is by the Bridge Ladies. This is the first time they   have collected holiday recipes from amongst their vast collection of preps.   There are also two chapters devoted to Leftovers and Food Gifts: using up the   food not consumed at holidays, and making gifts for friends and hosts. Typical   here are eggnog supreme, cheddar rabbit, Christmas marmalade, fruit and nut   shortbread, and the inevitable roasts. 
  --THE FAMILY COOKS (Rodale, 2014, 278 pages, $29.99 CAN) has more than 100   recipes to spice up regular meals at home. Kirstin Uhrenholdt did the recipes,   and Laurie David did the text. There are preps for basic food such as scrambled   eggs, with thoughts and variations on how to play with it and make frittatas.   
  --THE AMERICAN COOKBOOK (DK Books, 2014, 256 pages, $26 CAN hard covers)   means American classics, and nothing says "family food " as well as American   cuisine. It is arranged by course with side trips to the Northeast, Southeast,   Southwest, Midwest, and Pacific Northwest. Some preps have a classic   presentation with contemporary variations. The 150 comfort food recipes include   apple pie, burgers, french fries, and salads, and explore the Spanish, Italian,   Asian, and African influences. 
  --THE REALLY HUNGRY VEGETARIAN STUDENT COOKBOOK (Ryland Peters & Small,   2014,  144 pages, $21.95 CAN) is a publisher's package with recipe credits   going to Chloe Coker, Jan Montgomery, Laura Washburn, and 14 others. These are   preps that vegetarian students would enjoy, plus tips on how to eat well on a   budget. These are also quick and easy, beginning with breakfast boosters,   lunchboxes with carbs, and a pot luck section for quick items such as bean   chili, lentil curry, or tofu stir-fry. The healthy snacks here are basically   popcorn-based, and they are really inexpensive. Sweets can be a problem; I would   simply go back to popcorn and add caramel.....yummy. But then that's me.
  --HOW TO COOK EVERYTHING FAST (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2014, 1056 pages,   $45 CAN) continues Mark Bittman's How to Cook series with new ways on how to do   it quickly. He gets the preps that consider cooking time, and speeds it up, such   as wonton soup in 30 minutes, cheddar waffles, charred Brussels sprouts, or   fruit crisp on the stovetop, and others. It is mainly a game plan (time   management) book that deals with over 2000 main dishes and sides. It means you   work harder by prepping one dish while cooking another or two. Apart from the   time element, the theme here is flexibility.
  SUBSET FOR FAMILY:  Your  HEALTH – 
  --150 BEST INDIAN, ASIAN, CARIBBEAN DIABETES RECIPES (Robert Rose, 2014,   256 pages, $24.95 CAN paper covers) is by Sobia Khan, a nutrition prof at George   Brown College in Toronto. She's also an RD speacializing in areas relating to   the prevention and management of diabetes. The text  is very appealing: it   deals with alternative food for Indian, Asian and Caribbean people suffering   from diabetes, and it offers some adventurous food eating for others. So it is   win-win. All of the preps have crafted and tested by George Brown College, and   most of them can be made in under 20 minutes. Each has a complete nutritional   analysis and handy tips. The organization is by region, with Bangladesh, India,   Pakistan, and Sri Lanka followed by Sichuan, Hakka, Cantonese, Latin America,   Spain, Antigua, Barbados, Guyana, Jamaica and Trinidad. It is an important too   for its multiple diversity, with vegetable and cheese curry, bora beans,   Caribbean pumpkin soup, Cantonese scallop fry, and others.
  --NOURISHING BROTH (Grand Central Life & Style, 2014, 338 pages, $25   CAN paperback) is by Sally Fallon Morell who proposes that you can treat the   symptoms of autoimmune disorders, infectious disease, digestive problems, and   other chronic ailments with broths (seasoned stocks). These are made from bone   stocks, so there are no veggie stocks here. It is a good premise that seems to   work, as with psoriasis or eczema. The section on broth recipes also comes with   a variety of soups, aspics, stews and stir-fries. 
  --THE GRAIN BRAIN COOKBOOK (Little, Brown, 2014,  339 pages, $33 CAN)   is a New York Times best-selling too already. Here are more than 150 gluten-free   recipes that purport to transform your health, written by Dr. David Perlmutter   who also authored Grain Brain. He makes the case for a wheat-free approach, but   also includes sugars and carbs. Basically, if you eat the right foods, you can   reduce your chances of getting Alzheimer's, ADHD, depression, epilepsy,   headaches, insomnia, etc.  It is arranged by course, and once you've gone   through it, you can find other recipes on your own. Just stay away from    wheat, remembering that barley and rye also have gluten.
  --THE PH BALANCE HEALTH & DIET GUIDE FOR GERD, IBS & IBD (Robert   Rose, 2014, 408 pages, $24.95 CAN paperback) offers practical solutions, diet   management and 175 recipes – from  naturopath Fraser Smith, Susan Hannah   (researcher) and Daniel Richardson, PhD.  These experts in nutrition   attempt to restore the body's acid-alkaline balance which is a key to good   health: highly processed foods and meat-dairy-sugar acidify the body. Get the   balance back through a 28-day meal plan, and you will be a happy camper. Good   quality recipes from about 21 authors in the Rose stable of cookbook   writers.
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com   
 
 

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