THREE   INGREDIENT BAKING (Michael Joseph, 2018, 208 pages, ISBN 978-0-718-18479-7   $27.99 CAN paperbound) is by Sarah Rainey, who spent a considerable amount of   effort trying to save us time in the baking kitchen. These are quick and easy   baking recipes using only three common ingredients. She's got a hundred simple   recipes for cakes, biscuits, breads, desserts, savoury bakes, and frozen treats.   
  Preparations have their ingredients listed in metric measurements, but   there is no table of equivalents for the American cousin.
  Audience and level of use: home cooks; those looking to save time.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: naan bread; bacon breakfast   cups; chewy granola cookies; very berry sorbet; cinnamon crispies; chocolate   pizza; baklava; magic scones; lemon posset.
  The downside to this book: some use of pre-made products such as phylo   sheets, but in many instances this is forgiveable.
  The upside to this book: handy hints given
  Quality/Price Rating: 87.
  4.FINDING MEZCAL (Ten Speed Press, 2018, 272 pages, ISBN 978-0-399-57900-4   $30 USD hardbound) is by Ron Cooper, founder of Del Maguey Single Vineyard   Mezcal and a Beard Award winner. With him is the travel-wine-food writer Chantal   Martineau, who previously had written "How the Gringos Stole Tequila". The   subtitle pretty well says it all: "a journey into the liquid soul of Mexico with   40 cocktails: you don't find mezcal, mezcal finds you." It's a memoir about his   love affair with the spirit, and his commitment to the cultural traditions of   Oaxaca, mezcal's spiritual home. Each chapter covers a new mezcal, its producer,   its place of origin, and the distillation process from the maguey plant. The 40   recipes come from chefs and bars around the world. The sharp photography also   makes it a great gift for the spirit traveller. Cocktails have their ingredients   listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric   equivalents.
  Quality/Price Rating: 89
  5.SECRETS OF THE SOUTHERN TABLE (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2018, 314   pages, ISBN 978-0-544-93254-8 $30 USD hardbound) is by Virginia Willis, a   southern US food authority and cookbook author. "Lighten Up, Y'all" won a Beard   Award. It comes with some advanced log rolling, including the ubiquitous   Nathalie Dupree. As Dupree says, the book "sings with the stories of the diverse   South". Southern comfort at its best, which now includes the Chinese Americans   living on the Delta, the Italians of New Orleans, and "Seoul of the South" in   Atlanta. There's a discussion on the African culinary influence, the Greek and   Hispanic influences in Alabama, and aquaculture as it affects catfish, crawfish,   oysters, and shrimp. The chapters are arranged by product, with veggies, grains,   seafood, meats, poultry, soups and stews – all followed by biscuits and breads   and desserts. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois   measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents (although there is   plenty of room to add it).
  Audience and level of use: lovers of southern food and cooking
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: peanut stew; black pepper   Cornish game ens with Alabama white sauce; apple and onion gravy; spicy Asian   Cajun BBQ shrimp with baguette; baked farro and mushrooms; almond jelly with   blueberry ginger compote; Cuban-style pork chops with mojo sauce.
  The downside to this book: I am still looking for my chess pie   recipe.
  The upside to this book: good selection
  Quality/Price Rating: 87
  6.EATING MY WAY THROUGH ITALY (St. Martin's Griffin, 2018, 290 pages,   $34.99 CAD paperbound) is by Elizabeth Minchilli, who has written many books   about Italian culture, including "Eating Rome". Here she takes on the rest of   the peninsula and islands. These are the back roads and Italian farmers.   Scattered throughout are regional recipes that incorporate scampi and vongole   from Venetian suburbs, balsamico from Emilia-Romagna, risotto and cassoeula from   Milan, farinata in Florence, truffles in rural Umbria, olive oil, pizza,   anchovies, capers in Pantelleria, and the Sardinian rusticity. Lots of photos,   lots of restaurants described, tourist attractions, and the like. This book is   jam-packed.
  7.THE WICKANINNISH COOKBOOK (Appetite by Random House, 2018, 290 pages, $45   CAD hardbound) is another sumptuous travel-cookbook from an Inn/Hotel/Lodge,   this time in Tofino, British Columbia. It's an award-winning Relais &   Chateaux property, known for its rustic elegance on nature's edge (between the   forest and the Pacific). The highlight, of course, is the Wick's sophisicated   The Pointe Restaurant, open since 1996. These preps come from a variety of chefs   over the years, and range from breakfasts, soups, breads, salads, grills,   seafood and meats, desserts and more casual fare. There are also some cocktails   plus a large selection of pantry items. Everything was created by opening Chef   Rod Butters and then at least seven other chefs. There's a history of the Inn   and gorgeous photography, mostly by Makito Inomara. As is common with all   Appetite by Random House  cookbooks (these are Canadian published), there   are dual metric and avoirdupois measurements for the ingredients. Good price for   a gift cookbook.
  8.MARGARITAVILLE; the cookbook (St. Martin's Press. 2018, 338 pages, $42.50   CAD hardbound) is compiled by Carlo Serbaglia and Julia Turshen. It's a paean to   Jimmy Buffet's "Margaritaville" [Buffet did a foreword here] and incorporates   relaxed recipes for a taste of paradise – a good state of well-being with many   illustrative photos of the seascape and beaches and food and drink. It's   arranged by course, from breakfast through apps, soups, salads, sandwiches,   mains,  sides, desserts, and, of course, drinks. The authors have 20 party   and menu suggestions plus 10 practical party tips. There is, in addition to a   general index,  an index to recipes organized by fun: food for the boat,   food for tailgating, food for the grill, food to make on the beach, food for   large crowds – all with page references so you don't have to look anything   up.
  9.COCKTAILS ACROSS AMERICA (The Countryman Press, 2018, 236 pages, $33.95   CAD hardbound) is by Diane Lapis and Anne Peck-Davis, the former being a local   history researcher and the latter being a collector of vintage bar artifacts.   It's a postcard view of US cocktail culture from the end of Prohibition to the   end of the 1950s. All the postcards come from Peck-Davis' collection. It is   arranged by region, from US East Coast through the South, the Midwest, the   Southwest, the West Coast, and even some from Alaska, Hawaii, Mexico and Cuba.   But not Canada, except for the Mart Pickford cocktail. Good looking postcards   can be found here (it also comes with four detachable retro postcards from this   time period, good to mail out to friends) to match the local cocktails   (Margarita, Brown Derby Cocktail, Santa Fe Cooler, Palm Beach Special, Red   Snapper, Salty Dog, Pink Squirrel, and others...
  10.THE CONNOISSEUR'S GUIDE TO WORLDWIDE SPIRITS (Skyhorse Publishing, 2018,   210 pages, $46.99 CAD hardbound) is by Richard Carleton Hacker, a prolific   writer and editor in spirits, wines, cigars, gourmet cuisine, and luxury   lifestyle. The range is wide, which makes it a perfect gift: aperitifs, vodka,   gin, single malt scotch, blended scotch, Irish, bourbon, Tennessee, rye, brandy,   cognac, rum, tequila, mezcal, port, armagnac, liqueurs, grappa, absinthe, pisco,   other spirits, and cocktails. Each gets a thumbnail sketch, photos, production   notes, and tasting notes. A nicely wrapped package.
  11.COCKTAIL ITALIANO (Skyhorse Publishing, 2018, 237 pages, $29.99 CAD   hardbound) is by Annette Joseph. It's a guide to aperitivo, drinks, nibbles, and   some stories and photos about the Italian Riviera. Here we are talking about   Liguria, from the French border through to Lerici, neatly divided into the   Riviera di Ponente (itself sub-divided into Riviera delle Palme and Riviera dei   Fiori) from east of Menton to Genoa, and the Riviera di Levante from east of   Genoa to Lerici. This is all Beach Club territory, and she goes on to describe   lifestyles with stories, recipes for food bites/snacks, and cocktails. More good   fun on the Riviera!
  12.THE BEER BUCKET LIST (Dog 'n' Bone, 2018, 224 pages, $26.95 CAD   hardbound) is by Mark Dredge, who is an international beer judge and   acclaimed/awarded beer writer. This is his fifth beer book. It is a collection   of over 150 "must try" beer experiences featuring the planet's best beers, bars,   breweries, and beer events. It is indeed a "beer bucket list" to try before you   die. He manages to combine city guides, travel, food and history via pubs, bars,   brauhauses, hop gardens, beer festivals, and others.  For the shorter   version, his top ten includes seeing the Burton Unions at Marston's Brewery in   UK, drinking in the Pilsner Urquell brewery cellars, visiting the brewing   Trappist monasteries in Belgium, Oktoberfest in Munich, drinking Guinness in   Dublin, et al. Each occurrence has photos, description "lowdown" directory-type   data, and visiting tips. A great book for travelers. 
  Chimo!   www.deantudor.com
 
 

No comments:
Post a Comment