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Books > Food & Drink > General cookery
From James Beard Book Award finalist Rebekah Peppler: The definitive guide to the food, drink, and lifestyle of southeastern Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur, featuring recipes that reflect the Provençal table from a modern perspective.
The charms of le sud are many. The food culture is vibrant and season-focused; the tables are welcoming and convivial. In Le Sud, Rebekah Peppler distills these flavors, techniques, and spirit of the South of France into a never-before-seen collection of recipes, photographs, and stories.
The region—and its many culinary viewpoints—spans from the snowcapped Southern Alps in the north to the French Mediterranean in the south, the Rhône River to the west, and Italy along its eastern border. And like many regions where landscapes and people happily crash into each other, the food is dynamic and exciting. Here are recipes—from drinks to savory to sweet—that capture the modern tables and life lived around them in the south of France today.
Le Sud’s transporting photography expands our visual understanding of Provence outside solely lavender fields and endless summer holidays to showcase the geographically and culturally diverse region and its tables. As in À Table—her inspiring cookbook about dining the French way—Peppler’s recipes drip in home cook equity.
Interwoven alongside the recipes and photography are fun, informative sidebars that reflect this perspective of eating and drinking in Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur and provide an inspiring, approachable guide to the south of France. Sidebars elevate a reader’s knowledge of southeastern French cooking and eating, from the wines of the region to after-dinner drinking to the (modern) Provençal cheese plate.
Le Sud is more than a recipe book; it is a dive into and a celebration of this abundant, enchanting region that has long captured the imaginations of many.
Now in trade paperback, A Homemade Life is a memoir composed of
recipes and stories from acclaimed blogger, Molly Wizenberg.
Molly's fresh and modern recipes--sometimes decedent, sometimes
healthful-- appeal to the growing number of people tired of the
processed foods who have become passionate about the art of cooking
and the joy of eating meals lovingly prepared with the best
ingredients. But the book's appeal comes as much from the recipes
as its truly remarkable writing. Wizenberg's food descriptions are
luscious: Double Chocolate Cupcakes with Ricotta, Bourbon, and
Orange Zest will always sound enticing, but when Molly describes
how "the soft dairy richness of the fresh cheese gains depth from
dark chocolate, and the chocolate's sincere, not-too-sweetness
borrows intrigue from the boozy ricotta" you can't help but head
straight to the kitchen to make them yourself. And unlike some
excellent food-bloggers, Molly writes elegant but accessible prose
that goes beyond the gustatory to access emotion. Her writing is
poignant without feeling cloying or obvious, and her novelist's
sense for pacing keeps you turning pages.
Known as the guru of no-dig, Charles Dowding has updated his
definitive book on salad-growing in this beautifully illustrated
new edition: how to have tasty salad leaves all year round in a
garden, balcony or windowsill; how to grow micro leaves and how to
serve them in delicious recipes, all using organic or permaculture
principles. Great for food lovers keen to eat tasty food with a low
carbon footprint. This compendium of practical methods for growing
a wide variety of salads throughout the year, will inspire you to
grow your own, whether on a windowsill, in your garden or on the
allotment. Here is all the information you need for productive,
healthy and tasty salads. Learn the subtleties of salad seasons and
virtues of different leaves throughout the year. And when your
table is groaning with the abundance of your harvests, there are
delicious and imaginative recipes by Stephanie Hafferty, exploiting
the fantastic flavours, colour and vitality of home grown salad
leaves.
Your pasta sucks, but it doesn't have to. Let celebrated comedian and
totally legit author Matteo Lane show you how through 30 delicious
recipes and laugh-out-loud stories.
Organized by the most important places and people in his life―from
Chicago and New York to Rome and Sicily―comedian, actor, and YouTube
sensation Matteo Lane’s first cookbook features recipes rooted in
serious pasta knowledge but presented with his signature snarky and
sassy wit. Turn these pages to find:
- A conversational recipe (definitely not an argument) with his
bestie Nick Smith on their versions of Mac and Cheese.
- A short rant over the validity of “alfredo” that turns into a
delicious recipe for Penna alla Vodka.
- Matteo’s foolproof Homemade Pasta recipe.
- Lots of hardworking, handy tips―like a treatise on how to not
f*ck up your pasta―so you can learn while you laugh.
For fans of Matteo Lane, readers looking for a humorous take on Italian
culture, or anyone who simply wants to learn “how to cook pasta like an
Italian, Irish, Mexican homosexual,” Your Pasta Sucks will satisfy all.
Perfect for:
- Fans of Matteo Lane and his standup comedy
- People looking for books that celebrate Italian and Italian
American culture
- Supporters of LGBTQIA+ content creators
- Fans of Italian cooking and food-centric entertainers like The
Pasta Queen
- Foodies looking for a unique present for a housewarming,
birthday, holiday, or host/hostess gift
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