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Used
Paperback
2008
$3.26
Now available for the first time in paperback this is a really exciting collection of recipes which captures the present pride and interest in our own cooking and our locally sourced ingredients perfectly. There can be no mistaking therefore the home of Baked Trout with Horseradish and Cream, Beetroot and Tomato Soup with Gin, Leek and Derby Sage Tart, Peter Gott's Roast Gloucester Old Spot with Rhubarb and Apple Cheese, Scrag-end of Neck of Herdwick Mutton Stewed with Shiraz or Rhubarb and Walnut Crumble with Ginger.Sarah Freeman - a cook proud rather than ashamed to be British - skillfully collected together in her book, recipes culled from the new wave of Modern British chefs as well as creating a range of her own recipes in the same spirit.This work is a bible of contemporary British cooking and is now destined for recognition as a classic.
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Used
Paperback
1997
$4.20
For the past ten or 15 years, British cookery has been out of fashion. Food writers have passed it over in favour of Eastern of Mediterranean cooking and chefs and critics have condemned it as boring or bad. Now, however, it is enjoying a revival and a new generation of Modern British chefs, whose cooking is both inventive and eclectic, is turning to Britain's culinary heritage for inspiration. This cookery book contains over 200 recipes including classic favourites such as pea soup with smoked ham and mint; smoked haddock kedgeree; steak, kidney and oyster pie; and roast duckling stuffed with prunes. For those who like to experiment with taste and texture, there are dishes such as Arbroath smokie pate with smoked garlic and whisky; fish salad with rocket and anchovy sauce; braised pheasant with pistachio; and walnut crumble laced with Armagnac.
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Used
Hardcover
2006
$3.26
British food is going through something of a renaissance. At last we are taking a pride and an interest in our own cooking and our locally sourced ingredients. Much of the credit for this must go to Henrietta Green and her now famous Food Lovers' Fairs as a result a legion of chefs are now championing British dishes with a modern twist. Chefs such as Fergus Henderson, Heston Blumenthal, Paul Heathcote, Martin Lam, Nigel Howarth and Rick Stein all make use of well sourced seasonal local produce and as a result of the quality of these ingredients have created dishes show case them to full advantage, plundering our culinary heritage as inspiration. Sarah Freeman - a cook who is proud rather than ashamed to be British - has skillfully collected together in her book, recipes culled from the new wave of Modern British chefs as well as creating a range of her own recipes in the same spirit. This is a really exciting collection of recipes which captures the present mood perfectly. The basis of the philosophy behind this style of cooking starts with the French word terroir. It means 'soil' but in the context of food means more than just that, it means regionality and culture.
So food from a particular area is an expression of the land because it is produced from local ingredients which are suited to the soil and climate of that region and are then transformed into an amazing array of culturally distinctive dishes. There can be no mistaking therefore the home of Baked Trout with Horseradish and Cream, Beetroot and Tomato Soup with Gin, Leek and Derby Sage Tart, Peter Gott's Roast Gloucester Old Spot with Rhubarb and Apple Cheese, Scrag-end of Neck of Herdwick Mutton Stewed with Shiraz or Rhubarb and Walnut Crumble with Ginger. This work is a bible of contemporary British cooking which was first published ten years ago, way ahead of its time then, but it has been revised and updated and is now destined for recognition as a classic.