...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"...
  29.THE CRAFT BEER REVOLUTION; how a band of microbrewers is transforming   the world's favorite drink (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014, 2015; distr. Raincoast,   252 pages, ISBN 978-1-137-28012-1, $16 US paper covers) is by Steve Hindy,   co-founder of the Brooklyn Brewery, It comes loaded with more than a dozen   different log rollers, most of whom are associated with the US microbrewing   industry. And four glosses of reviews. It is a basic history of the past 50   years' explosion of artisanal crafted beer. The pioneers started the demand for   strong flavours, all-malt, and higher alcohol than the frankly acknowledged   horse piss of the major players. It is also about independence and the frontier,   reflected in the labels that are just short of cuss words and incitement to   riots. There are more than 3000 craft brewers in the US, with more being added   all the time; they have about 10% of the total market. There is comparable   growth in Canada, but the regulatory bodies have nipped the flashy labeling. For   example, in the UK, 140 labels have been pulled since 1989. Rebel brands are a   big deal in the US, especially south of the Mason-Dixon line where some labels   really are rebel, as in Civil War. Still, there are fractious factions in the   craft brewing industry, and he pulls no punches. Hindy also discusses the   acquisition period where big money meets craft brewing (1994 – 2000). There are   notes on the associations (Brewers' Association of America and the Association   of Brewers). But nothing on NAFTA or free trade. There are black and white   photos scattered throughout this good business history book. But as Hindy   says,
  "The future of craft brewing largely depends on how that [Brewer's   Association] power is wielded." Quality/Price Rating: 89.
  30.WORLD CHEESE BOOK (DK, 2009, 2015, 352 pages, ISBN 978-1-4654-3605-4,   $25 US soft covers) has been edited by Juliet Harbutt (cheese expert since   opening Jeroboams Wine and Cheese Shop in 1984, now an industry   consultant-judge) with an international list of 21 contributors, generally one   per country or region. It is a basic reprint of the 2009 edition but in paper   covers. Gurth Pretty (www.cheeseofcanada.ca) covers Canada. He gives 24 cheeses,   three per page, on p310 through p317. He tries for regional representation, but   still, most cheese are from Quebec – and rightly so. And there's even a generic   "cheddar curds" from all over the country. My Canadian fave is the black waxed   cylinder of Dragon's Breath Blue from Nova Scotia, which changes over time and   intensifies its "blueness". The book has 750 cheeses, photographed as you would   buy them AND in close-ups so you can see the cleanly sliced version and check   for colour, holes and texture of the paste. Most should be available at the   larger urban cheese store. Some can come via post from producers or cheese   shops. There is a basic primer on cheeses, well-illustrated, over two dozen   pages. Then there is a country-by-country arrangement beginning, of course, with   France, plowing through the rest of Europe, the Americas, Japan, and Australia   and New Zealand (you'd think that with all those sheep there would be more ewe   cheeses, but no). For each cheese, there is a description, tasting notes on the   paste and rind, how best to enjoy it, its age, weight and shape, size, type of   milk (not broken down by time of day), classification, producers. A first rate   job. The publisher has lots of menu suggestions for accompaniments, with some   wine notes, use in cooking, and cheeseboard ideas and possibilities. And I love   those close-up pix of the pastes and 7rinds. Quality/Price Rating: 91.
  31.THE VEGETABLE GARDEN COOKBOOK (Skyhorse Publishing, 2015, 176 pages,   ISBN 978-1-63220-673-2, $24.99 US hard covers) is by Tobias Rauschenberger, a   chef who is now a food stylist and cookbook author. It was originally published   in German in 2013. 23 veggies are covered through 60 recipes, beginning with   eggplant and running through to fennel and onions. There is a good description   and photo of the plant followed by some recipes. Onion pasta is pretty    simple, but also pretty good. Preparations have their ingredients listed mainly   in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents.   Quality/price rating: 85.
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

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