...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"...
  25.THE GOOD COOK'S BOOK OF OIL AND VINEGAR (Skyhorse Publishing, 1992,   2015, 429 pages, ISBN 978-1-63220-587-2, $18.99 US hard covers) is by Michele   Anna Jordan, a Bear Award winner and cookbook author (Good Cook's series and a   dozen more). She still writes for a local paper and hosts a radio show in   California. It was originally published in 1992 (23 years ago) at 264 pages,   with 100 recipes, by Perseus Books. Here, it has been expanded to 429 pages and   with 150 recipes (50% more). It is a good guide, one which has withstood the   test of time. There is a discussion on oils and vinegars in two chapters,   updated with the latest health information. She's got notes on oil tasting and   vinegar tasting, as well as stocking the pantry. The cookbook itself begins on   page 71, and runs through the gamut of courses, apps to desserts and beverages.   The appendices list an updated bibliography, resources, glossary, and templates   for tracking tasting note and recommendations. She's got Fall Fruit Gazpacho   with watermelon, Garden Minestrone , umpteen salads, and the usual standards of   bruschetta, tuna tapenade, feta with olive oil, grilled pizzas, spaghettini with   walnut and parsley sauce, and poached eggs with warm shallot vinaigrette.   Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but   there is no table of metric equivalents. Some dishes come with beverage   recommendations. Quality/price rating: 89.
  26.THE APPLE COOKBOOK, 3rd edition (Storey Publishing, 1984, 2001, 2015,   240 pages, ISBN 978-1-61212-518-3, $14.95 US soft covers) is by Olwen Woodier   who has written six cookbooks. This is an updated collection to some 125   "freshly picked" preps, originally published in 1984 with a second edition in   2001. The range is both sweet and savoury, from breakfast through late night   snacks. There is material on pick-your-own farms, cider mills, and nostalgia. It   is all accented by 95 updated recipes and 30 brand-new ones. At the end she's   got a description of the more prominent 28 varieties, with pictures, and some   material on 27 heirloom varieties. Then she has charts showing which varieties   are best for eating, salads, sauces, baking whole, pie and freezing. Be prepared   for fragrant lamb stew, curried ham and apples, polish sausage with apples and   red cabbage, and a variety of pies and salads. Preparations have their   ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there are tables of metric   equivalents. Quality/price rating: 89.
  27.THE VEGETARIAN'S BIBLE (Skyhorse Publishing, 2012, 2015, 351 pages, ISBN   978-1-63220-309-0, $18.99 US paper covers) is by Inga-Britta Sundqvist, a   chef-writer in Sweden. The book was originally published in 2012 in Sweden with   an English translation that same year. This is the paperback edition of that   hardback book. She's got 350 quick and relatively easy preps for a fresh take on   food and life. The recipes are good for a range of conditions: raw food, low   glycemic, vegan, lacto-ovo, and gluten free. This is home cooking, and she   recommends five seasonal buffets for any large crowd when entertaining. She's   got a whole range of descriptions about non-meat foods, and finishes with   vitamin and mineral guides and a variety of indexes for recipes and foods. It is   an all-in-one book. Arrangement is by food category: salads, dips, apps, soups,   pasta, through to mains, desserts, breakfasts, breads, and drinks. Most, if not   all, are classic dishes, suc has as mango salsa, lemon marinated haricot verts,   gomasio, tabbouleh, oat with apple and ginger, and zucchini pasta. Preparations   have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but   there are also tables of metric equivalents. Quality/price rating: 89.
  28.COOKING UP A STORM; recipes lost and found from the Times-Picayune of   New Orleans (Chronicle Books, 2008, 20157; distr. Raincoast, 368 pages, ISBN   978-1-4521-4400-9, $30 US hard covers) is edited by Marcelle Bienvenu and Judy   Walker. This is the 2015 HARD cover reprint of the original paperback release   from 2008. All the preps come out of the Times-Picayune newspaper. It is   interesting that the newspaper became a post-hurricane 
  swapping place for old recipes that were washed away by Katrina. There are   about 225 recipes here, along with the stories of how they came to be. They have   been collated from the newspaper archives, local readers and chefs, and local   restaurants. Both classic and contemporary are repped here, so you'll get a dose   of beignets, chicken with okra, red beans and rice, grits, and local drink   recipes. It is wide-ranging, and not all recipes are Creole or Cajun – it is   more like a community cookbook from New Orleans and the parishes. And it means   that there are many non-Creole dishes such as "Mexican lasagna" or "liver with   onions" or "beef kababs".  Arrangement is by course, from apps to desserts,   with, of course, a lagniappe chapter. The book concludes with a guide to local   descriptions of food, such as po-boy or gumbo. Recipes use avoirdupois   measurements, but there is a table of metric equivalents at the far back.   Anecdotes and pictures of a lost New Orleans complete the package. Some   interesting recipes include pain perdu, seafood gumbo, fresh corn and shrimp   chowder, banana bread, anise cookies, praline cookies, and muffuletta.   Quality/Price Rating: 88.
  29.BEST SALADS EVER; recipes for sensational salads all year long (Grub   Street, 2009, 2015, 174 pages, ISBN 978-1-909808-33-1, $29.95 CAN soft covers)   is by Sonja Bock and Tina Scheftelowitz; it was originally published in   Copenhagen in 2008. This is the English translation via a London UK publisher,   first released in 2009. The arrangement is by category: beetroot salads, cabbage   salads, root veggie salads, potato salads, and then noodles, pasta, grains,   beans, greens, and then fish, meats, and fruits. These are followed by a chapter   on dips and dressings. They conclude with lots of buffet ideas and recipes for   entertaining. Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and   avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of equivalents. Quality/price   rating: 87.
  30.THE BEST OF JANE GRIGSON; the enjoyment of food (Grub Street, 1992,   2015, 462 pages, ISBN 978-1-909808-28-7, $39.95 CAN hard covers) is material by   the late Jane Grigson as compiled by Roy Fullick. It was originally published in   1992 By Michael Joseph, and this is the 2015 reprint. "This book is intended   both as  tribute to Jane Grigson's culinary skills and scholarship and as a   practical cookery book." It's divided into chapters that reflected her   interests: England, France, Charcuteries, Mediterranean, Europeans, Americas,   India, and Celebration Treats. There is a bibliography of her writings at the   back. Preparations have their ingredients listed mainly in metric measurements,   but there is no table of equivalents. A good book to read, a great book for   gifting. Quality/price rating: 90. 
  31.GOOD AND CHEAP (Workman Publishing, 2015, 190 pages, ISBN   978-0-7611-8499-7, $16.95 US soft covers) is by Leanne Brown. It was her   master's paper in food studies and food policy from New York University. It   became a PDF with 700,000 downloads, morphed into a Kickstarter campaign to   self-publish the book (40,000 copies), and that self-published book won the 2015   IACP Judge's Choice Award. As every copy of the Workman edition is sold, there   will be a book donation to a family who needs it. The current book's premise is   to present recipes to nourish people on only $4 a day. 46 million Americans have   to survive on only $4 a day for food: students, grads seeking jobs, young   families, retirees. It has been revised from its original publication. She's got   a strategy and a flexible approach. Every prep is costed and there are   economical cooking methods. The page on leftovers gives suggestions which are   mainly for sandwiches or wraps, and soups. Nothing should be wasted. Typical   foods include green chile and cheddar quesadillas, teriyaki carrots, breakfast   quinoa, ramen-inspired deviled eggs, roast chicken, chana masala tomatoes. The   global scope emphasizes some of the poverty areas of the world. Preparations   have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there are tables   of metric equivalents. Quality/price rating: 90. 
  32.175 ESSENTIAL SLOW COOKER CLASSICS (Robert Rose, 2006, 2015, 320 pages,   ISBN 978-0-7788-0524-3, $27.95 CAN paper covers) is by Judith Finlayson, a   longtime food writer who the publisher claims has sold more than 750,000 slow   cooker books and close to 1 million cookbooks in all. If you have a slow cooker   and don't have any of her other cookbooks, then where were you? This current   book includes many preps from her first three books plus sixty new ones that   were developed for inclusion here. Slow cookers are a mature industry, and they   are one of the safest electric appliances. There's a wide range of meals plus   different levels of expertise and different situations, from family home cooking   (and kids' use of slow cookers) to entertaining. Useful are sweet potato   lasagna, leek risotto, and buttermilk lemon sponge. Most dishes can be prepared   ahead of time and refrigerated; not everything here is a soup or a stew.   Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois   measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents. Quality/price rating:   88.
  33.MR.WILKINSON'S WELL-DRESSED SALAD (Black Dog & Leventhal, 2015, 256   pages, ISBN 978-1-57912-993-4, $27.95 US hard covers) is by Matt Wilkinson, a   market owner and chef-owner  of many restaurants in Melbourne. He also   authored Mr. Wilkinson's Vegetables, a top seller and IACP Design award winner.   This current book was originally published by Hardie Grant in Australia as Mr.   Wilkinson's Simply Dressed Salads. I'm not sure why the title was changed, since   "simply dressed" and "well-dressed" are at opposite ends of the word spectrum.   Simply dressed implies lightness while well-dressed is more formal and heavy.   Nevertheless, this book is arranged by the seasons (spring through winter) with   a primer on growing your own leaves, creating your own dressings, and a   glossary. For autumn we have an old man's slaw, egg with green olive and dukkah   salad, and torn fresh figs & grapes with almonds and strawberry balsamic.   The book is well-presented and laid out, so it is sure to wine another book   design award somewhere. Preparations have their ingredients listed in both   metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric   equivalents. Quality/price rating: 88.
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com   
 
 

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