7. THE MODERN KITCHEN (Quadrille, 2017, 2018, 208 pages, $41.99 hardbound)   is by Tim Hayward, also author of "Knife". It's a guide to the house kitchen.   Every item in the kitchen has a story: he's got 70 of them, and tries to answer   questions such as: has the accumulation of electrical appliances led us to cook   and eat differently?  The home kitchen is a snapshot of modern life with   its notions about class, gender, wealth and health, design, set-up and contents.   These are the objects that changed the way we cook, eat and live.  He   begins with the basics (potato peeler, kitchen knife, meat mallet, et al) moving   through the non-stick frying pan, the wok, the timer, the kitchen appliances,   and on through the environment. A really great read!
  8.THE FLAVOR MATRIX (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2018, 310 pages, $42   hardbound) is by James Briscione with Brooke Parkhurst. It's a tome detailing   the art and science of pairing common ingredients to create upscale dishes. He   got turned on to taste profiling by working on the IBM Watson supercomputer to   make inventive dishes using big data. Here he reduces about 150 of the most   common ingredients to their local chemistry with infographics (the new   millennial visuality). This promotes the compatibility among various foods to   suggest new pairings such as "Garlic Honey" or "Lemon Curd with Crunchy Olives".   A good tool for the adventuresome, although it  only covers food pairing   and not wine and food pairing. Maybe that's the sequel...A fab too for the jaded   or bored cook looking for new thrills!
  9.THE ULTIMATE KETOGENIC COOKBOOK (Castle Point Books; St. Martin's Press,   2018, 160 pages, $25.99 paperbound) is by cookbook author Ella Sanders, who   manages here to give us the ketogenic diet in a nutshell. She's got some "easy   to read" primer pages which describe what the diet is all about, including   advice on seeking out a doctor first. This is the important part in which you   trick your liver to burning  ketones in fat instead of glucose. It's not   for everyone as it is basically a paleo diet on "speed". But it does work   effectively if you are trying to lose weight but not eventually change your   lifestyle. Its one drawback is that you must stick to it or else the body   reverts back to glucose burning – and you must start all over again. She's got   100 low-carb high-fat Paleo recipes to get you started. As her work is just   about a process, then you can go on to other related recipes in the same mode   from other sources.
  10.APPRECIATING OYSTERS (The Countryman Press, 2018, 272 pages, $33.95   hardbound) is by Dana Deskiewicz, creator of "Oystour", an oyster guide and   appreciation app. This is just what we need now: with the continuing emphasis on   fresh seafood, the oyster's time has come. The handbook part tells you how to   shuck (and how not to shuck), drink pairings, and tasting notes to about 85   types of oysters (there are some visual references here). As the subtitle says,   It is an eater's guide to craft oysters from tide to table. So for the   ubiquitous "Malpeque", the one most often seen in Eastern Canada, there is a   tasting note with profile, some classification of texture, and a note about how   the PEI cold waters give these oysters their wonderful flavour. Plus, an   infographic on shell size and meat-to-shell ratio (very high). The recommended   mignonette here is a pear and pickled ginger one, and the drink is a   molasses-rich Caribbean rum. 
  11.HOW TO TASTE (Sasquatch Books, 2018, 223 pages, $22.95 hardbound) is by   Seattle-based food writer-chef Becky Selengut. It has been subtitled as "the   curious cook's handbook to seasoning and balance, from umami to acid and beyond   -- with recipes". The preps illustrates the tastes. The text is a balance of   hard science and wit as she explores the basic principles behind tasting, noting   sweet, salt, bitter, acid, fat, umami, bite (heat), aromatics and texture in   separate chapters. The most important thing about the work -- after   understanding what taste and balance is all about – is how to determine and then   identify when something might be missing and how to adjust for it, such as   correcting a dish that may be too acidic or too salty or too sweet. Each chapter   concludes with a section "Experiment Time" and this is where the recipes are   kept. Great little reference tool.
  12.SHARP (Chronicle Books, 2018, 256 pages, $37.50 hardbound) is by Josh   Donald, who owns Bernal Cutlery in Frisco.  It is a carefully crafted   reference work that appears to be a definitive guide to knives, knife care, and   cutting techniques, with some recipes from chefs. He tells us which knives to   buy, how to care, how to sharpen, and the dozens of precise cuts. Chefs are   mainly local and include Armando Maes, Melissa Perello, Jesse Kolde, and Tim   Ferron – 15 in all with one recipe apiece. The world of knives seems to be   evenly split between Europe (46 pages) and Japan (38 pages). Just pay attention   to the differences in angle degrees. An excellent reference tool. 
  For the more literate person, there are the histories, "memoirs",   polemics  and humour of writers, chefs, and wine people. Some have called   these memoirs "creative non-fiction", some with embellishments and gilding. And   many of them may 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  this year's run, and any of them would make great gifts for the   reader. Here we go, in no particular order…
  13.IN THE RESTAURANT (Pushkin Press, 2018, 220 pages, $33.95 hardbound) is   by Christoph Ribbat,an academic specializing in American studies. It was   originally published in German in 2016, He addresses the issue: what does eating   out tell us about who we are? This is a cultural history exploring celebrations   and dining pleasures. He begins with the 18th century Paris establishments   offering "restorative" food right through to modern day Nordic cuisine. Covered   are Viennese cafes,  obsessive chefs, lunch counters, fast food diners. The   style is eclectic with page glosses of real stories. There are extensive end   notes for sources and for further reading, plus an index. 
  14.THE ETHICAL CARNIVORE (Bloomsbury,  2017, 320 pages, $24   paperbound) is by Louise Gray, who decided to be an ethical carnivore for more   than a year and learn to stalk, shoot, and fish. She begins with shucking   oysters, catching trout, shooting pigeons, rabbits, and then deer. She looks at   meat processing, including burgers, cheap chicken, supermarket bacon, and farmed   fish. She goes to abattoirs and also looks into halal slaughter. She sources   road kill (squirrel stir-fry), in vitro meat, insects, and plant foods. This is   a well-researched tome, a Guild of Food Writers Award winner in 2017, a Guardian   Book of the Year, a BBC Book of the Year, and has appeared on shortlists of   other awards.
  15.BEST BEFORE (Bloomsbury Sigma, 2018, 272 pages, $36 hardbound) is by   Nicola Temple, who was raised on a farm in Ontario but now lives in Bristol UK.   She's the co-author of Sorting the Beef from the Bull, which is about the   forensics of food fraud.  Here she continues in that vein by   exploring  food processing...as Francis Percival says, "from fresh cut   vegetables to nanotechnology". It is all about the influence of convenience on   today's modern eating habits. The ability to process food, to save it for future   consumption, is the mark of an intelligent group that can overcome its   environment. But it is one thing to leap ahead in civilization by preserving by   fire or fermentation; it is another to exploit weak people by using chemicals   and other science to extend a shelf life for a couple of months or years.    Her work explores how processing methods have evolved in many foods, but at the   hands of big business, consumer demand, health concerns, waste and war. Large   type makes it easy to read, and there are selected references and even an   index.
  16.EATING WITH PETER (Arcade Publishing, 2018, 201 pages, $35.99 hardbound)   is a gastronomic journey by Susan Buckley, a US young-adult and children's   author. She was married to writer-photographer-gourmand Peter Buckley until his   passing. This is her tribute to him: a series of wonderful memories and recalls   of  adventurous dining in Michelin-starred French restaurants, the souks of   Morocco and the Middle East, plus the Caribbean and NYC. They looked at farmers'   markets, French farms and Italian cheese makers. She's got 28 recipes of Peter's   fave food. It's a good-looking and funny memoir of a life with food. An   entertaining personal narrative gift. 
  17.MILK! (Bloomsbury, 2018 , 385 pages, $39 hardbound) is by Mark Kurlansky   who has written a ton of books over the past decades (20 non-fiction). Here he   returns to the topic of food (his previous books were on Salt, Cod, WPA food,   Oysters). I could joke that the topics salt and cod are related (salted cod) to   milk in that milk is used to soften the cod as in "brandade de morue", thus   continuing the food theme perhaps for a fourth title – but I won't.  This   is a culinary, cultural, and economic history of all things dairy, with some 100   or so recipes from all time periods. "Milk became the first food to be tested in   laboratories, and is now the world's most regulated food. Today milk is at the   centre of food politics, raising questions about everything from industrial   farming and animal rights to GMOs, the locavore movement, and advocates for raw   milk. He's got a bibliography, and index, plus a recipe index.
  18.BUTTERMILK GRAFFITI (Artisan, 2018, 311 pages, $39.95 hardbound) is by   Edward Lee, author of Smoke & Pickles, and an Emmy winner for The Mind of a   Chef. He owns several restaurants. He's  a Korean-born, Brooklyn-bred chef   who found his soul in Kentucky. Here in 16 chapters and 40 recipes he's   travelled around the USA over a period of two years, exploring the cultural   differences of the American foodways.  This is a record of his journey to   find the new melting-pot cuisine. Exceedingly well-written, covering recent   migration food from Cambodia or Lebanon or Morocco, the inherent heritage Creole   cuisine, and foods such as slaw dogs, kibbeh, pastrami, shrimp, cornbread, and   more.
  19.THE WANDERING VINE (Bloomsbury, 2018, 333 pages, $34 hardbound) is by   Nina Caplan, a multiple Roederer winner in the UK. She's written on wine and   travel for New Statesman, Times, decanter, Guardian, Time Out, and others. Here   she follows the vine backwards into the past, back to the Romans via England,   Champagne, Burgundy, Rhone, Catalonia, Andalusia, Sicily, Campania and thence to   Rome. There are some black and white photos but no index. A full bibliography   and more can be found at www.thewanderingvine.co.uk (although I am not sure why   it was not printed in the book  since there are 9 blank pages at the   end).
  20.TASTING THE PAST (Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2018, 277 pages,   $38.95 hardbound) is by Kevin Begos, formerly science writer for AP,  It   comes with eight log rollers, including Alice Feiring. Begos spent a decade   seeing the origins of wine: the whole world of forgotten grapes, each with its   own distinctive taste, Along the way he converses with a variety of    archaeologists, geneticists, paleobotantist, and chemists. One of them is   decoding the DNA of every single wine grape in the world, including clones.   Another tries to pinpoint ancient vineyards. A third one is looking into what   wines great historical figures drank. Begos explores the original wine routes,   beginning with the Caucasus Mountains of 8,000 years ago, down to Israel, across   the Mediterranean to Greece, Italy, France and Spain, and then to America. He's   got end notes and a bibliography, plus a resources list, but no index.
  21.A LITERARY TEA PARTY (Skyhorse Publishing, 2018, 146 pages,    $29.99  hardbound) is by Alison Walsh who writes at   www.wonderlandrecipes.com which is a food blog dedicated to book-inspired   recipes. Tea and books are an apparently perfect pairing: sitting down to a good   too on a great afternoon with a cuppa beside you. So here are 55 portioned   inspired preps for teas, including customized tea blends and beverages to set up   an elaborate tea party. You'll get Turkish delight while sipping on the White   Witch's hot chocolate from "The Chronicles of Narnia", or Hannah's sweet potato   bacon pastries and Jo's gingerbread from "Little Women". Walsh also has many   photos and literary glosses from books such as "Vita Merlini", "The Hobbit",   'Wizard of Oz", "The Secret Garden", "The Phantom of the Opera", and more.   
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  Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

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