...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"...
   
   
   
  19.BRONTE AT HOME; baking from the Scandi Kitchen (Ryland Peters &   Small, 2019, 176 pages, $19.95 USD hardbound) is a foodbook by Bronte Aurell,   Danish author and TV chef,  and restaurateur at ScandiKitchen Cafe in   London UK. This is her seventh eponymous cookbook for Ryland Peters & Small.   There are 70 recipes here, many from her earlier books. These are traditional   recipes from Scandinavia. The themes of the ScandiKitchen centre around baking,   and this is her home baking of comforting cakes and bakes. After introducing us   to her pantry, the arrangement is by form: biscuits and cookies; buns; traybakes   and no bakes; little fancy fika cakes; celebration cakes; breads and batters.   Spices used include caraway, cardamom, cinnamon, cloves, fennel seeds, ginger,   saffron, orange peel. Grains are mostly oats and rye, with spelt and potato   flour. Try custard tarts, blueberry stud muffins, honey cake, or hazelnut and   mocha square. Preparations have their ingredients listed in both metric and   avoirdupois measurements, although this is inconsistent and conversion charts   could have been useful. Quality/price rating: 87.
   
   
   
   
  20.THE RED HOT CHILE COOKBOOK; fabulously fiery recipes for chile fans.   Rev. ed. (Ryland, Peters and Small, 2012, 2019, 160 pages, ISBN   978-1-84975-788-1, $19.95 USD hard covers) is by Dan May, who began growing   chiles in the North Pennines in 2005. He now has the world's most northerly   chile farm, called Trees Can't Dance. He began producing chile sauces. Here he   has about 70 preps loaded with heat at various Scoville unit levels. There's   primer stuff on history, how to grow at home, how to identify the varieties, and   their strength levels. It's all arranged by course, from apps to desserts (chile   jam ice cream, chile pecan brownies) and drinks. Smoked peppers are also   included, such as chipotle (five recipes). Each prep has a chile meter to   indicate heat levels. At the back, there's a listing of both US and UK chile   suppliers. Preparations have their ingredients listed, but mixed in both metric   and avoirdupois measurements; there is no separate table of metric equivalents.   Some interesting or unusual recipes: tropical fruit salad with chile and lime   syrup; green chile bhajis; fruity African bean stew; roast pork chops with spicy   lentils; Moroccan-spiced lamb burgers. Quality/Price Rating: 85.
   
   
   
   
  21.GARLIC Rev. ed. (Ryland Peters & Small, 2016, 2019, 160 pages, ISBN   978-1-78879-153-3, $19.95 USD hard covers)is by Jenny Linford, a UK freelance   food writer and multiple cookbook author. It was originally published in 2016;   this is the revised edition. Garlic adds immense flavour to dishes; some do not   like it, but many do. It's a member of the lilies: leeks, onions, chives, and is   used internationally. Here are over 65 preps that use garlic extensively as a   main component, either for flavour or for textures. It is a full range, divided   into areas from "mellow" through to "go wild", and including "comfort" and   "fiery" along the way. There is also material about types and use, garlic   festivals around the world (Gilroy comes to mind), medicinal and folklore use,   and home cultivation. In general, preparations have their ingredients listed in   both avoirdupois and metric measurements (with some inconsistency in treatment),   but there is no table of metric equivalents. Some interesting or unusual   recipes: kimchi pancake with black garlic crème fraiche; toast garlic herbed   labneh; Spanish garlic soup; wild garlic cheese scones; tzatziki; ajo   blanco.  Quality/Price Rating: 85.
   
   
   
   
   
   
  22.HOME BREW BEER (DK Publishing, 2013, 2019, 224 pages, ISBN   978-1-4654-8737-7, $22 US hard covers) is by Greg Hughes, co-owner of BrewUK, an   online brewing website. He also organizes beer competitions. It is a fun book –   anyone can make their own beer, from a simple kit or from an elaborate setup   with friends. There are 100 recipes here from around the world, in different   styles, with colour photos of techniques and the finished beers. The range   includes lagers and ales, wheat beers, herb-spice-fruit beers, all with   different levels of strength and concentration of flavours. I used to make beer   for seven years, but had to switch to ciders for my weight problems. So it is a   treat to revisit a basic home brew book. There is the usual DK treatment of   pictures and graphs illustrating timelines, geography, ingredients and   techniques. There are many
  complications involving yeast treatment, hops, adjuncts, and even waters. A   simple recipe is all you need to get started – the rest are for the big boys'   club, which you can join after experience. The first rule is to never, ever use   sucrose (table sugar) because the resulting brew will taste too apple-y. Of   course, you may like that style, so do go ahead – it's a shandygaff. Equipment   can be basic or extensive, but will always involve transfer hoses, air locks,   and carboys. More than a third of the book covers all this material. The recipes   are the remainder. Preparations have their ingredients listed 
  in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is also a table of   metric equivalents. He has a glossary, a trouble-shooting FAQ, and some online   forums for  further help and assistance and recipes. Quality/Price Rating:   90.
   
   
   
  23.STARTING AND RUNNING A COFFEE SHOP (DK Books, 2019, 324 page, ISBN   978-1-4654-8379-9 $21.99 USD paperbound) is by Linda Formichelli and Melissa   Villanueva. It was originally published in 2005 as "The Idiot's Guide to   Starting and Running a Coffee Bar." It has now been upgraded (from bar to shop)   with recent material and a second author (Melissa). In the business world 15   years is a long time. The publisher promises that you will brew success with   proven strategies for every aspect of your espresso startup – which presumes   that you only run an espresso coffee shop. There are a bunch of questions that   need to be answered by the reader: are you a self-starter? Do you have money in   the bank? Do you have your family's support? Plus the pros and cons of being   your own boss. Melissa gives us a "day in the life", from opening to closing.   Business plans are also discussed, as well as partnering and branding, and   finding a good location that hasn't already been taken by the big boys. It is   all fairly comprehensive, except that dealing with the landlord comes in on only   4 pages. Really? There's décor, equipment, layout and design, hiring a crew,   baristas, what to sell, and the like. The appendices cover a glossary and forms,   plus checklists and resources. There are even a few recipes. Quality/price   rating: 87.
   
   
   
   
   
  24.BISTRO: classic French comfort food (Rizzoli, 2015, 2018, 260 pages,   ISBN 978-0-78933698-9 $19.98 USD hardbound) is by Alain Ducasse. It was   originally published in French in 2015; this is the English translation.    These are classic foods served at his restaurants Allard, Benoit, and Aux   Lyonnais – all are older bisros but now managed by Ducasse. Preps are sourced as   noted from one of the three. The arrangement is by course, with appetizers   followed by mains (fish, organ meats, meats, poultry, game, veggies) and   desserts and some basic preps, along with a glossary. Typical are civet of wild   boar with chestnuts, porcini and crabapples; pheasant with cabbage and   chestnuts; traditional calf's head with ravigot sauce; pate en croute; tournedos   of beef; veal kidneys with Madeira sauce. Recipes are detailed, and accompanying   wines (all French) are noted. Given its price and many photographs and   provenance, the book is a bargain. Preparations have their ingredients listed in   both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric   equivalents. Indexes are by course and by restaurant. Quality/price rating:   90
   
   
   
  25.THE SOUP BOOK: season by season (DK Books, 2009, 2019, 352 pages, ISBN   978-1-4654-8613-4 $19.99 USD paperbound) has been edited by Sophie Grigson. It   was originally published in the UK as "Soup". It's a good database of some 200   soups, arranged by season, with an opening chapter on techniques and a finishing   chapter on bread. In between we have Spring (with soups based on asparagus, wild   garlic, nettles), Summer (edamame, crab, beef, chicken, pork), Fall (pumpkin,   pears, sweet potatoes, mussels, chicken) and Winter (kidney beans, parsnips,   leeks, kale, duck, pheasant, smoked haddock). Each recipe has indications of   service, prep times, cooking times, and freezer life (minus cream). Preps have   been sourced as to author, and of course there is a comprehensive index.   Contributors are advocates of organic growing (such as Alice Waters). Soup –   easy enough to do! Proceeds from the book will support the work of the UK Soil   Association, a non-profit that deals with sustainable and organic growing. The   book could have been improved if it also used more metric in the recipes, or at   least had a metric conversion chart. Quality/price rating: 90.
   
   
   
  26.HOW TO COOK EVERYTHING; simple recipes for great food. Third ed.   (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2019, 951 pages, ISBN 978-1-328-54543-59, $37 USD   hard covers) is by Mark Bittman, PBS host of a similarly named show and the   weekly New York Times writer called "The Minimalist". He is mainly responsible   for simplifying the cooking process; some others would say "dumbing down". This   book was originally published in 1998 (updated in 2008), and since then he has   been a dynamo in the word and kitchen factories with such books as "How to Cook   Everything Vegetarian", a book on the basics, a quick and easy book, and books   associated with his PBS and other television shows. But this book is the   motherbook (2 million copies sold by 2008, and both IACP and Beard awards   winner). It first appeared in 1998, with 2000 recipes, and this is its second   revision as a "twentieth anniversary edition". There was a tenth anniversary   edition in 2008. He begins "Much has changed…since 1998…" And so his book has   expanded to include more international and spicy preps. Gone is the attempt at   recreating haute cuisine at home: this is wholesome everyday cooking. These are   the recipes that people cook every day at home on every continent and region.   Many recipes here can be made ahead or prepared in under 30 minutes. He has   plenty of cook notes and sidebars for explanations of techniques and unusual   ingredients. There is material from some of other books. He has instructional   drawings, but his stress is that many techniques are the same the world over,   such as pies, food wrapped in pastry, soups. The main differences are in the   seasonings and the local ingredients. The book has also been reorganized, to   include new symbols for fast, make-ahead, and vegetarian recipes. He opens each   chapter with an "Essential Recipes" section. He has more detail in chapters on   vegetables and fruits, grains and beans. There are newer charts and   illustrations. There are lists such as "22 Picnic-Perfect Salads". Recipes use   avoirdupois weights and measures but there are conversion charts. There's a   section on menus, complete with page references, and his top choices for   make-ahead, essential, fast, and vegetarian recipes (about 100 each). The price   of the book has gone up in 10 years – by two bucks. Other changes include new   recipes and new features. Information has been updated, and photos are in   colour. It is unbeatable for the price. Quality/Price Rating: 92.
   
   
   
  27.TARTINE; a classic revisited (Chronicle Books, 2019, 328 pages, ISBN   978-1-4531-7873-8 $40 USD hardbound) is by Elisabeth Prueitt and Chad Robertson,   co-founders of Tartine in San Francisco. It opened in 2002, and this book was   originally published in 2006 with 224 pages (and $5 cheaper). Liz does the   pastries, Chad does the breads. They are both Beard winners and they have both   authored other baking books with the word Tartine in the title. The book was an   instant classic, and now it is been updated and revised, with 68 all-new recipes   and 55 updated "faves". Modern flavours and ingredients are here: matcha,   einkorn, teff, rye, buckwheat. Variations include natural sweeteners such as   coconut sugar and maple syrup, More than two dozen recipes are gluten-free.   Gentil + Hyers did the photography this time around. The arrangement is   traditional, with breakfast (and their popular Tartine morning buns of croissant   dough and cinnamon pinwheels), tarts and pies, cakes, cookies, pastries, holiday   treats, and the basics. 
  The book could have been improved if it also used more metric in the   recipes as equivalent to American volume measurements, or at least had a metric   conversion chart. Scaling is used but "tsp" and "Tbsp" remain unscaled.   Quality/price rating: 91. 
   
   
  28.DINING AT DUSK; evening eats – tapas, antipasti, mezze, ceviche and   aperitifs from around the world (Whitecap, 2018, 2019, 240 pages, ISBN   978-1-77050-338-0 $34.95 CAD papercovers) is by Stevan Paul. It was originally   published in Vienna in 2018, and then translated to English by Murdoch books.   This is a co-publication. The range covers today's cuisine for the twilight   time: comfort foods and relaxation. The preps are simple and easy to prepare,   and  )in addition to the subtitle indications) include the Italian   cicchetti, Mexican tacos, Japanese yakitori, and items from Samoa, Australia,   India, Morocco, Brazil – wherever good food is to be found. It is all arranged   by  country with background data. From China, expect wonton soup or spring   onion pancakes; from Denamrk, a herring platter; from Hungary, sauerkraut puff   pastry pockets; from Turkey, imam bayildi (of course); from Austria, the   Heuriger platter; roll mops from Germany; Swiss raclette; Swedish smorgasbord;   even haggis meatballs from the UK...A great idea for a cookbook. For the most   part, preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois and matching   metric measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents. Quality/price   rating: 90
   
   
   
  29.THE FLEXITARIAN COOKBOOK; adaptable recipes for part-time vegetarians   and vegans (Ryland Peters & Small, 2019, 144 pages ISBN 978-1-78879-146-5   $19.95 USD hardbound) is a publisher's book based on prior recipes that RPS have   published. Julia Charles is the compiler; recipe credits (all sourced) come from   Ross Dobson, Mat Follas, Liz Franlin, Vicky Jones, Jenny Linford and seven   others. The Introduction tells you how to do it, especially for dinner with   mixed philosophies, and then the arrangement is by course such as   breakfast/brunch, snacks, salads, sides, soups, stews, pasta, sheet pans, and   others. Expect such dishes as Mexican tortilla wraps of black-eyed beans, or   pink pancakes with goat's cheese, or halloumi and veggie kebabs, or veggie   jambalaya, curried veggie paneer, cheese beetroot and feta risotto, even   pan-fried salmon Caesar salad. Try the awesome Syrian eggplant and chickpea   ragout. The book could have been improved if it also used more metric in the   recipes, or at least had a metric conversion chart. Quality/price rating:   88.
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