* MORE FOOD AND DRINK BOOKS
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++
  3.VENETIAN REPUBLIC (Interlink Publishing Group, 2020, 256 pages, $49.95   hardbound) is by Nino Zoccali, chef-owner of some Italian restaurants in Sydney   Australia. He has written before on diverse cuisines of Italy. These recipes   here come from the days when Venice was a world power, the centre of the   spice/salt/silk  trade routes. The four key regions were: Venice and the   lagoon islands, the surrounding Veneto, the Croatian coast, and the Greek   Islands (Santorini, Cyprus, Crete, Corfu, et al). Hence, we have Venetian    Prosecco and snapper risotto, Croatian roast lamb shoulder with olive oil   potatoes, Cretan sweet and sour red mullet, Corfu's zabaglione, and Dubrovnik's   ricotta and rose liqueur crepes. It's all arranged by the regions, with   sub-arrangement by course (from antipasti to dolci). And it has a whack of   history/culture behind each prep. Loaded with mostly pictures of finished   plates, but there are also some maps and tourist attractions. Quality/Price   Rating: 90
  4.THE SICILY COOKBOOK (DK Publishing, 2020, 240 pages, $39 hardbound) is by   Cettina Vicenzino who was born in Sicily and grew up in Germany. She is a cook,   food photographer, and writer, and has written several books on Italian and   Sicilian cuisine. Three types of food  are here --cucina povera (peasant   food), cibo di strada (street food), and cucina dei monsù (sophisticated food).   It's part cookbook and part travel, with loads of her own photos  and   cultural/gastronomical notes emphasizing local chefs and food producers. The   arrangement is by course, primi (Sicilian cuisine doesn't include    antipasti) pasta, through secondi mains and piatto unico, intermezzi, and dolci.   She's got a few non-alcoholic drinks and some wine. In all, the vast majority of   her 70 preps use local spices, citrus,  cheeses, olives, tomatoes, eggplant   and seafood. This is a real treat for Sicilian food lovers, featuring ricotta   dumplings in an orange and tomato sauce, stuffed sardines, salt cod, and grilled   octopus with ricotta hummus.  
  Quality/Price Rating: 90
  5.ARAN (Hardie Grant Books, 2019, 240 pages, $42.50 hardbound) is by Flora   Sheddon, who became the youngest ever semi-finalist on The Great British Bake   Off Baking Show in 2015. She runs Aran bakery in Dunkeld, Highland Perthshire.   She has also written a weekly baking column for the Sunday Telegraph. These are   recipes and stories from a bakery in the heart of Scotland. Material includes   the origins of the bakery (aran is Scottish Gaelic for bread or loaf) and a day   in its life from dawn to dusk. There is location photography plus a slew of   recipes for breakfast, lunch and High Tea. Typical are a pork, apple and sage   sausage roll, and apricot and almond frangipani. Try also chocolate oat cookies,   pear, coffee and hazelnut cake, and pomegranate and raspberry financiers. An   impressive giftbook for the stay-home baker in your life. Quality/Price Rating:   90
  6.WINNER! WINNER! CHICKEN DINNER; 50 winning ways to cook it up (Storey   Publishing, 2020, 160 pages, ISBN 978-1-63586-156-3 $16.95 USD paperbound) is by   food editor Stacie Billis, who appears on Rachel Ray, TODAY, and the Washington   Post. Chicken, according to the USDA, is now more popular than beef in the USA.   So she's got 50 recipes plus variations for various forms: roast, grill (my   fave), slow cook, instant pot, braise, stew, and even sheet pan. Many can be   interchangeable, and of course can be made into leftovers (separate chapter   here). The book is full of ideas and kitchen hacks. The book could have been   improved if it had also used metric in the recipes, but at least it had a metric   conversion chart.
  Audience and level of use: beginners, those stuck at home.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: BBQ chicken pizza; grilled   chicken and mango salad; jerk chicken; peachy siracha sticky wings; guacamole   burgers; ten-minute tostadas.
  The downside to this book: I wanted more recipes.
  The upside to this book: there's a long section on how to cut up a chicken   and do most of the work yourself (saves money)
  Quality/Price Rating: 85.
  7.HEALTHY ONE PAN DINNERS (Alpha Books, 2020, 160 pages, ISBN   978-1-4656-9266-1 $19.99 USD paperbound) is by Dana Angelo White, a registered   dietitian and nutrition consultant who works with FoodNetwork.com and her own   website, developing and analyzing food for athletes. Here she gives us 100 preps   for one-pot dinners using a sheet pan, skillet, Dutch oven, baking dish,   multi-cooker or slow cooker. She describes each of these with regard to   benefits, cleaning up, proper sizing, and of course their best usage. Her basic   ten ingredients include boneless and skinless chicken thighs, salmon, lean   ground beef or turkey, eggs, and seasonal veggies – along with a kitchen pantry   of some 20 different staples. Each prep has both easy instructions and   nutritional data (the latter, as always, in metric, while the former is in   Imperial measurements). The book could have been improved if it also used metric   in the recipes, or at least had a metric conversion chart.
  Audience and level of use: beginners; those stuck at home during   lockdown.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: baked pasta primavera; sweet and   spicy lamb tagine; lemon-thyme Dutch baby with smoked salmon; hash brown quiche;   teriyaki shrimp stir fry; watermelon panzanella with fresh mint; sweet potato   coconut stew.
  The downside to this book:
  The upside to this book:
  Quality/Price Rating: 86.
  May we all have 2020 vision.
Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

No comments:
Post a Comment