The Food Lovers' Cookbook Collection
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French Provincial Cooking by Elizabeth David
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She was a leader in the publication of modern food books with her first offering being in 1950!
But our favourite book was published ten years later in 1960 after
stints in Italy, Egypt and India.
She was a difficult woman. Many writers talk about her imperious nature
and capricious desires. However, all of the negatives pale into
insignificance once you start reading her alluring prose.
More than most she can transport you to the south of France and lead you to the smell of lavender and honey, to the taste of daube and tapenade and the sensual pleasure of the crisp, white wines and roses of Provence.
In her introductory chapter on "French Cooking in England" she starts with a premise that warms our hearts:
"The feeling of our time is for simpler food, simply presented… it is the kind of cooking which was meant by Curnonsky when he repeated over and over again, that good cooking was achieved when 'ingredients taste of what they are'".
And being aficionados of the Vaucluse region we can delight in the description of the food of the region:
"In the season, in the villages of the Vaucluse, asparagus or wonderful broad beans will be a few francs a kilo, a basket of cherries or strawberries the same. Perhaps you may arrange for the bus driver to bring you some brandade of salt cod out from Cavaillon or Apt for Friday lunch."
And so to the recipes! The first recipe chapter is devoted to sauces. And there are many recipes and all of them are interesting. Her sorrel sauce to accompany fish is based on cream that must first be boiled to ensure that the acid in the sorrel does not curdle the cream. She then describes a great sauce of walnut and horseradish to accompany cold salmon.
Her Nicoise salad follows the exhortations of Nice's former and disgraced mayor Jacques Medecin by only including hard-boiled eggs, anchovy fillets, black olives and tomatoes along with some lettuce leaves - although she does not follow his entreaties to salt the tomatoes three times! She also includes a version from Escudier, the author of La Veritable Cuisine Provencale et Nicoise, who includes sweet green pepper but eschews the lettuce!
The recipes continue through soups, meat dishes and onto sweet dishes that includes the wonderful sweet omelette dessert that has now almost disappeared from the restaurant repertoire.
This is not just a good cookbook - it is a great cookbook. It is an essential inclusion in all food lover's cookbook libraries.
Le Guide Culinaire by Auguste Escoffier
French Provincial Cooking by Elizabeth David
Science in the Kitchen and the Art of Eating Well by Pellegrino Artusi
La bonne cuisine de Madame E. Saint-Ange by Evelyn Sainte-Ange
Time Life 'The Good Cook' Series with Richard Olney (editor)
Thai Food by David Thompson
North African Cookery by Arto der Haroutunian
Grand Livre De Cuisine by Alain Ducasse
Mastering the Art of French Cooking by Julia Child
Simple French Food by Richard Olney
The Zuni Café Cookbook by Judy Rodgers
The Whole Beast: Nose to Tail Eating by Fergus Henderson
Cuisine Minceur by Michel Guérard
El Bulli 1998 - 2002 by Ferran Adria
The Book of Jewish Food by Claudia Roden
The Chez Panisse Menu Cookbook by Alice Waters
Catalan Cuisine by Colman Andrews
The Cook's Companion by Stephanie Alexander
Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management by Isabella Beeton
The Boston Cooking-School Cookbook by Fannie Farmer
Flavours of the Riviera by Colman Andrews
The Cookery Book of Lady Clark of Tillypronie by Charlotte Clark
The Legendary Cuisine of Persia by Margaret Shaida
Bouchon by Thomas Keller
South East Asian Food by Rosemary Brissenden
Joy of Cooking by Irma S. Rombauer
The French Laundry Cookbook by Thomas Keller
Good Things By Jane Grigson
The Provence Cookbook by Patricia Wells
Desserts by Pierre Hermé by Dorrie Greenspan and Pierre Hermé
Tetsuya by Tetsuya Wakuda
Chinese Gastronomy by Hsiang Ju Lin and Tsuifeng Lin
Classic Techniques of Italian Cooking by Giuliano Bugialli
Mediterranean Cookery by Claudia Roden
La Cuisine du Comté de Nice by Jacques Médecin
Indonesian Regional Cooking by Sri Owen
Land of Plenty: A Treasury of Authentic Sichuan Cooking by Fuchsia Dunlop
Traditional Recipes of the Provinces of France by Curnonsky
European Peasant Cookery by Elisabeth Luard
The Essential Cuisines of Mexico by Diana Kennedy
Authentic Vietnamese Cooking by Corinne Trang
American Cookery by James Beard
The Picayune Creole Cook Book
The Slow Mediterranean Kitchen by Paula Wolfert
Moosewood Cookbook by Mollie Katzen
River Café Italian Kitchen by Gray and Rogers
Chinese Cuisine by Huang Su Huei
The New York Times Cook Book by Craig Claiborne
L'Art Culinaire Moderne by Henri-Paul Pellaprat
Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art by Shizuo Tsuji