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…
  --AN IRISH CHRISTMAS FEAST (Skyhorse Publishing, 2015, 415 pages, $24 CAN)   is a collection of 50 tales by one of Ireland's most popular writers – John B.   Keane, a playwright, novelist, poet, songwriter, and short story person who died   in 2002. Every tale here celebrates an Irish Christmas with Gaelic humour,   principally from County Kerry characters such as Hiccups O'Reilly who disappears   one Christmas Eve and isn't seen again for seven years.  Food and drink   such as Christmas dinners and cider and beer are at the centre of many of the   stories.
  --EATING WORDS (W.W. Norton & Co., 2015, 471 pages, $45 CAN hard   covers) has been edited by Sandra M. Gilbert and Roger J. Porter. You know food   studies have made it in the world when it gets "Nortonized", that is, made into   a collection or anthology of  literate writings. This is a survey of   literary distinctive writings about food, from the classical world to the   present. The first section covers through to the beginnings of the 1900s,   followed by sections on family hearth, the delight and dread of eating, kitchen   practices of chefs, cultural tales, and food politics. Enough to accompany any   academic course dealing with food culture and history.  A great gift for   the student. 
  --BON APPETEMPT (Grand Central Publishing, 2015, 320 pages, $18 CAN paper   covers) is by food blogger Amelia Morris, MFA. These are whimsical observations   about family, food, and the extremes of modern living. It is billed as a   coming-of-age story with recipes. The recipes are scattered, and unlike some of   her experiences, they do work. Learn to profit from your mistakes by adjusting.   A good gift for the millennial in your life.
  --FOOD; a love story (Three Rivers Press, 2015, 340 pages, $20 paper   covers) is by humourist Jim Gaffigan. As he says, it is an entertaining but   ill-informed look at all foodie stuff – health food to junk food. He claims to   be an "eatie" rather than a "foodie". To him, shellfish are bugs while bacon is   candy. And that is becoming all too true, based on what I read in the   papers.
  --THE LANGUAGE OF FOOD (WW Norton, 2015, 246 pages, $32 CAN hard covers) is   by  Dan Jurafsky. His subtitle is "a linguist reads the menu": his work is   about what we say about food as analyzed by someone who specializes in food   studies and etymology. His chapters cover toast, ketchup, turkey, sushi rolls,   potato chips, salsa, sherbet, macaroni, and more. Good end notes and   bibliography.
  --THIS IS WHAT YOU JUST PUT IN YOUR MOUTH? (Three Rivers Press, 2015, 255   pages, $18 CAN paperback) is a listing by Patrick DiJusto of what is inside   everyday products. It's based on his Wired Magazine column, "What's Inside". So   he gives us the ingredients in Cool Whip, Spam, eggnog, Doritos, beef jerky,   coffee, and more. He's got some product histories and back-stories, as well as   label decoding. This tome is great fun: you may never eat again!
  --VORACIOUS  (Little Brown and Co., 2015, 285 pages, $31 CAN   hardcover) is by Cara Nicoletti, a butcher who is author of the literary recipe   blog Yummy Books. Here she has 50 "great books"  related to food; she does   essays on the books and the food scenes that give their characters depth. She   then adds her own inspired preps at the end of each chapter. So: soft-cooked   eggs from Emma, fava bean and chicken liver mousse from The Silence of the   Lambs, white garlic soup from Pride and Prejudice, pea and bacon soup from   Charlotte's Web. It is arranged by age, and includes childhood, adolescence, and   adulthood. She's got some good comments on the food and what that all means to   her.
  --YEAR  OF THE COW (Flatiron Books, 2015, 302 pages, $29.99 CAN hard   cover) is by award-winning TV producer Jared Stone. These are the interesting   experiences of cooking for his family; how 420 pounds of beef built a better   life for one American family. He learns the provenance of the cow, how to   correctly pack a freezer, cooking nose to tail, leftovers, plus contributes one   recipe per chapter.
  --THE BEST OF JANE GRIGSON (Grub Street, 2015, 360 pages, $36.95 CAN hard   covers)  was published to coincide with the 25th anniversary of Grigson's   death. It is arranged by regional cuisine, including the Americas,   Mediterranean, Europe, India, Far East, with special chapters on England and   France, her faves. These are some of her most-loved recipes, with anecdotes,   quotations and poems.
  --THE RELUCTANT SAVAGE (Thomas Dunne Books St. Martin's Press, 2015, 293   pages, $29.99 CAN hard covers) is by James McWilliams, a food writer (5 previous   books) dealing with agriculture and animals. It's a polemic on our unthinking   decision to eat animals, and raises the ethical and ecological problems of that   decision. It's an expose, with extensive end notes and index.
  --PICNIC IN PROVENCE (Little, Brown and Co., 2015, 336 pages, $29 CAN hard   covers) is by Elizabeth Bard, a US journalist based in Provence. She had   previously written "Lunch in Paris", and continues with this volume about   Provence. This is a memoir about love and marriage and family, moving from Paris   to Provence and setting up an artisanal ice cream shop. Local recipes are   included.
  --BECOMING SALMON (University of California Press, 2015, 214 pages, $34.95   US hard covers) is by Marianne Elisabeth Lien, and academic who teaches social   anthropology in Oslo. It is a first account of salmon farms, and covers farmed   Atlantic salmon which are bred to be hungry and mobile This is a story of   industrial food production and human-animal relations. Geographically, she   covers Tasmania, Canada, Chile, Peru, Alaska, but mostly Norway. Worth a read.   
  --THREE MANY COOKS (Ballantine Books, 2015, 316 pages, $31 CAN hard covers)   is by Pam Anderson, Maggy Keet, and Sharon Damelio. This is one mom and two   daughters, with shared stories if the highs and lows of food, faith and family.   Mom Anderson is a cookbook author and once helmed Cook's Illustrated. Recipes   are scattered throughout. 
  --STORIES FROM THE KITCHEN (Everyman's Pocket Classics Knopf, 2015,    410 pages, $21 CAN hard covers) has been edited by Diana Secker Tesdell. These   are classic tales showcasing the culinary arts globally and universally in time,   with food in the starring role. Check out Alice B. Toklas, Proust, Zola,   Dinesen, Woolf, Chekov, Dickens, and many more. It comes with a yellow bookmark   ribbon.
  --NEW YORK IN A DOZEN DISHES (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2015, 304 pages,   $29 CAN hard covers) is by Robert Sietsema, restaurant critic for the Village   Voice for two decades. Here he presents a dozen essays on dishes found in New   York city, such as pizza, clam chowder, pastrami, even scrambled brains. The   chapter on pambazo is enlightening: it reads like a history of Mexican   sandwiches, mentions three places to try pambazo, plus six more for tapas, and   then gives a recipe. His writing here is a good portrait of NYC food, with   appropriate log rolling by A Bourdain and R Reichl.
  --101 USES FOR A CELEBRITY CHEF (Century, 2015, unpaged, $21.99 CAN hard   covers) is by Andy Watt. These are cartoons on  how to make a celebrity   chef look much more useful. For example, there is the Jamie Oliver pinata, the   chaise Nigellongue, the Yotam fridge, and the Ken Hom doll. Hey, for the   insiders .... get with it!!
  --THE POCKET BUTLER (Appetite by Random House, $122 pages, $14.95 CAN hard   covers) is a follow-up to Charles MacPherson's THE BUTLER SPEAKS. It is a   compact guide to the two  modern manners of business etiquette and everyday   entertaining, crammed  (for the latter) with useful knowledge about table   settings, holding knife and fork, popping corks, foolproof menu plans, table   manners, and the like. Small enough to slip into your pocket for a quick review   from time-to-time. 
  --COGNITIVE COOKING WITH CHEF WATSON (Sourcebooks, 2015, 231 pages, ISBN   978-1-4926-2571-1, $29.99 US hard covers – comes from IBM and the Institute of   Culinary Education. These are recipes for innovation and culinary exploration,   thinking outside the box. With IBM Watson and the power of cognitive computing,   you no longer need to rely on experience/intuition to create new recipes. But it   is amazing in this day of the Internet, where most people find recipes online   rather than in print, that this book exists in print, and not as an ebook or   pdf. Italian roast duck is terrific.
  --SCONE WITH THE WIND (Virgin Books Ebury, 2015, 160 pages, $21.99 hard   covers) is by Miss Victoria Sponge who encourages you to make and bake 72 novel   recipes such as Banana Karenina, Flapjack and the Beanstalk, Nineteen-eighty   Petit Fours, and then some great Middlemarshmallows. These are puns on novels,   divided by genre (romance, comedy, thrillers, tragedy, historical, science   fiction, plays and more). Cherry Pie Orchard is, well, a cherry pie. Head notes   relate to the theme. An engaging gift book, affordable. 
  Chimo!   www.deantudor.com 
 
 

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