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beautiful book Oct 23, 2009 This is a cookbook you can read. Informative and entertaining stories from the author's cooking and life experience begin each new section. I don't eat meat but there are plenty of veggie recipes here, and good ones at that. Lots of tips on how to cook/prepare food that can carry over into different recipes. The book is beautifully designed, nice typography, simple, great photos.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
for the intrepid Oct 19, 2009 This cookbook is part memoir, part travelogue, completely beautiful to read. For some of the recipes you have to be a serious foodie AND have money to burn on exotic ingredients. Like morel mushrooms, saffron, rabbit, lobster, etc. Not on our budget, nor in our local stores. Some recipes, but not all. Most only require a decent deli counter, a good produce section or farmers' market, and a sense of adventure. I had to try, even if it seemed dubious, and he was right: fresh sliced figs sprinkled with good salt and a drizzle of olive oil are delicious. Add a nice frosty beer and that's a good snack for grown-ups. And that's just in the introduction. The desserts are especially delightful, we loved almost all of them.
Evan Goodman Sep 28, 2009 Book is fantastic though the actual quality of the manufacture is very average. Approximately 20-30 pages were glued together with what appears to be binding glue. When separating the pages were damaged - not avoidable. I bought it for a gift but will now have to retain for myself.
2 of 3 found the following review helpful:
Great writer, unappealing recipes for me Sep 02, 2009 If you enjoy reading cookbooks, David Tanis is a very enjoyable writer. The book is well put together and has great photos. I was looking for recipes, and, call me boring, but I will probably never in my life ever want to cook a rabbit, buy veal in any form, or eat an octopus salad, I'm not that adventurous. To tell you the truth, I'm not ever going to do lamb or duck either, and the only two vegetables I don't like are turnips and parsnips. It's as if he found every food that doesn't appeal to me, mussels, squid, pigs ear and put them into his book! So while I can appreciate the beauty of his book, we have very different tastes, so for me, I came away with very little inspiration.
4 of 22 found the following review helpful:
a platter of figs and other recipes Jul 15, 2009 Want to learn about figs ? Want recipes, pairings, how to choose good ones, where to find them etc.? DON'T BUY THIS BOOK !!!! I purchased this book as a gift for a friend who's a great cook and adores figs. I imagined that there would be around 25 recipes using figs in all manner. Okay even 12. How many are there ? TWO !!!! One is putting sliced figs on a platter with prosciuotto, and the other is simply baking them. Oooh that was really unique and inventive. NOT !!! This IS a beautifully done book, and though it is far from copious, the recipes are simple but undoubtedly epicurean.
David Tanis, I'm sure you're a good chef, but you shouldn't misrepresent the content of your cookbook. Its very misleading, and a cheat. A better title ? "From Panisse to Paris", "Countryside Cooking ", " The Savory Table", "Cal-Francais Cuisine". No figs in the title because they ain't in the book.
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