...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"...
  22.BETTER HOMES AND GARDENS NEW COOKBOOK. GIFTS FROM THE KITCHEN, plus   
  Food Gift Chapter. 16th edition. (Wiley, 2012, 2014, 672 loose leaf 
  pages, ISBN 978-544-30707-0, $29.99 US, ring binder) is from the 
  magazine of the same name. In fact, with each book US and Canada residents   can get 
  a free subscription for one year (value: $6 US). Since the book is 
  widely discounted at box stores and Amazon, with the subscription the   
  book can be had at virtually next to nothing. The 15th edition was 
  published in 2012. It is important to remember: this is a classic that   keeps getting 
  better, for the basic home cook. Now in this edition of more than 1400   
  preps are 1300 recipes with 1200 photos (800 new) and 400 photos of 
  techniques. And there is more complete nutritional data for each dish. New   features include a chapter on "Cook's Secrets", "8 to Try" (flavour changes to   perk up simple recipes), and a new chapter on holiday faves. Recipes have been   laid out in a more eye appealing fashion, and there is advice on how to   customize basic recipes. Preparations have their ingredients listed in   avoirdupois measurements, but there is still no table of metric equivalents.   Quality/price rating: 85.
  23.THE LOW-SUGAR COOKBOOK (Nourish Books, 2010, 2014, 256 pages, ISBN   978-1-84899-975-6, $17.95 CAN paper covers) is by Nicola Graimes, an   award-winning healthy-food writer of more than 25 books. The recipes were taken   from an earlier book published in 2010 as Quick & Easy Low-Sugar Recipes.   The other material is newly written, and of course, some of the preps have been   updated. It is a British context, by=but then sugar is sugar. These low-sugar   versions do not resort to artificial sweeteners, so of course they are more   healthy. Her collection includes some basic preps (such as chutneys, relishes,   jams, almond milk), breakfasts and brunches, light meals and snacks, dinners,   desserts, cakes, breads, and some menu planning. The index could have been more   useful if more ingredients were indexed: for example, spelt soda bread is only   under soda and bread, but not spelt. Preparations have their ingredients listed   in some metric but mostly avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of   metric equivalents. Preps and cooking times are given, and there are four 5-day   menus. Quality/price rating: 87.
  24.THE BEER BOOK (DK, 2008, 2014, 352 pages, ISBN 978-1-4654-1952-1, $25 US   hard covers) has been pulled together by Editor-in-Chief Tim Hampson. There are   14 contributors (with bios), but no signed reviews or entries. Most of the beers   are bottled, but there are some from microbrew pubs. There is a pix of a beer   bottle or can or pump for all the major beers covered. The directory-type data   includes names and addresses, websites, and a mini-capsule history. There are   also maps which include the US, Germany, UK, Belgium, and the Czech Republic   (considered the Key Nations in beermaking). There are more maps of "Beer Trails"   in Oregon, Bamberg, Cotswold's, Brussels, and Prague. There are features on the   biggies Anheuser-Busch, Brooklyn, Guinness, Hoegaarden, Pilsner Urquell, and   others. And essays on tasting, malts, German beer, lager, hops, glasses, wild   beer yeasts, and beer-food matching. There is a glossary and index to beers, as   well 
  as space for your own tasting notes. More than 800 breweries are covered in   this updated 2014 edition, with some tasting notes for more than 1700 beers.   Canada gets six pages for Amsterdam, Creemore, Granville Island, Pump House,   McAuslan, etc. (27 companies in all), with 2 to 4 beers apiece. We needed more   on Canada – also why was there 
  Labatt and Molson coverage? Quality/Price Rating: 88.
  25.LA TARTINE GOURMANDE; recipes for an inspired life. (Roost Books, 
  2011, 2014; distr. Random House of Canada, 314 pages, ISBN   978-1-61189-078-4, 
  $26.95 CAN soft covers) is by Beatrice Peltre, creator of 
  latartinegourmande.com weblog. She's also a free-lance food writer, 
  stylist and photographer, working in and around Boston. So she did 
  almost everything in the book: food writing, food styling and food 
  photography. There's log rolling from David Lebovitz, and Dorie Greenspan.   This is a soft cover reprint from the 2011 hardbound book. There are about 100   recipes, mostly 
  inspired by her French roots. Other preps come from Denmark, New 
  Zealand, and Boston. She's also slightly gluten-intolerant, so most of   
  the baked goods here have gluten-free flours. She's careful to explain   
  all of this and to list her organic flours. Every prep comes with a 
  memoir-like anecdote, so it is a bit of a personal book. After a 
  kitchen primer, the arrangement is by course (breakfast, lunch, dinner,   
  and dessert). Preparations have their ingredients listed in mainly 
  avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric   equivalents.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes include cold honeydew and cucumber   
  soup, omelet wraps with nori and crunchy veggies, cumin and parsley-
  flavored cheese gougeres, white lentil soup with chorizo and poached 
  eggs, and lavender ile flottantes. Quality/Price Rating: 87.
  26.RAW SNACKS (Grub Street, 2011, 2014; distr. Fitzhenry & Whiteside,   160 pages, ISBN 978-1-909808-05-8, $24.95 CAN paper covers) is by Caroline   Fibaek, a Danish naturopath who consults for raw food restaurants. It was   originally published in Denmark in 2011; this is the English translation. It is   an engaging collection of raw food, emphasizing the entry points of spicy nuts,   raw chocolate truffles, grape lollipops, date fudge, coffee substitutes and   energy drinks. As the title says, they are all snacks, and these can be the   easiest to handle for non-raw food eaters – and great at mixed parties.   Arrangement is by type: salty, chocolate, liquorice, wine gums, caramel, "ice   cream", milkyshakes, sparklers, and more. These have  no dairy, no white   sugar, no gluten, no animal fat. Just 100% raw vegan. There is an international   list of suppliers' websites at the rear. 
  Preparations have their ingredients listed as hybrids in both metric   and  avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents.   Quality/price rating: 86.
  27.COFFEE TIME TREATS (Ryland Peters & Small, 2014; distr. T. Allen,   192 pages, ISBN 978-1-84975-569-6, $24.95 US hard covers) is a publisher's   collection of some 80 recipes for coffee cakes, sticky buns, muffins, and other   soppers for the morning espresso, mid-day latte, and after-dinner cappuccino.   Only a few (under 15) actually have coffee in them; the bulk are meant as   spicy-nutty accompaniments. Credits go to the RPS stable of cookbook writers   such as Liz Franklin, Hannah Miles, Isadora Popovic, Sarah Randall, and Julian   Day. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but   there is no table of metric equivalents. Quality/price rating: 85.
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

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