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Books > Food & Drink > General cookery > General
Cook and eat your way to the good life with simple, seasonal recipes.
First-generation farmer and chef Julius Roberts shares honest tales of farming life and easy, thoughtful dishes to reconnect us to nature and the seasons. Making the most of simple ingredients, The Farm Table is unfussy home cooking at its very best. A few good things on a plate, assembled with joy and ease.
Recipes include:
- winter: an elegant, fuss-free dinner of roast pumpkin, mozzarella, hazelnuts and sage, and a hearty sausage stew
- spring: baked fish with herbs and asparagus, chicken roasted over lemon, fennel and potatoes, and a lamb stew with pearl barley
- summer: courgette pasta, a ratatouille galette, and a steamed apricot sponge
- autumn: arrives with smoked haddock and leek rarebit and pan-fried trout with mash and spinach sauce.
Passionate about seasonality, Julius shows us how to make the most of produce, from crisp, crunchy apples in autumn, pink rhubarb in winter, asparagus in spring and the first summer strawberries.
Retreat to the countryside with shepherdess Amanda Owens as she
recounts stories from her life on the farm, of raising nine
children and cooking beautiful, seasonal meals - complete with the
recipes for you to enjoy at home. This edition of Celebrating the
Seasons is updated with more heartwarming stories from the farm at
Ravenseat. In the Sunday Times bestseller Celebrating the Seasons,
the Yorkshire Shepherdess shares funny and charming stories about
life with her family and their many four-legged charges and
describes their activities at Ravenseat, from lambing and shearing
in spring to haymaking in summer and feeding the flock in
midwinter. She vividly evokes the famous Swaledale landscape, from
the sweeping moors to rare wildflowers and elusive hares glimpsed
in the field. Amanda lives in tune with nature, and her attitude to
food is the same. She believes in using good, seasonal ingredients
when it comes to feeding her family, and includes some of her
favourite recipes here, from wild garlic lamb with hasselback
potatoes to rhubarb and custard crumble cake and Yorkshire curd
tart. The book also includes her Dalesman columns, published in
book form for the first time and giving new insights into her life.
As charming as Amanda herself, this book will delight everyone who
has followed her adventures so far.
What to Cook and How to Cook It is the ultimate cookbook for
beginners, showing how to cook easy, delicious meals for every day
of the week. With a winning combination of clear step-by
step-photographs, and authoritative, foolproof recipes, it takes
100 favourite everyday dishes and guides the reader through every
step of the cooking process with recipes that absolutely anyone can
follow. Each ingredient and stage of the cooking process is
illustrated with a clear colour photograph, and the striking,
simple design will encourage anyone who lacks confidence at cooking
to have a go at producing nutritious, home-cooked food for their
family and friends. Every stage is clearly explained, with no prior
knowledge taken for granted. Even common terms such as 'finely
chopped' are explained in an illustrated glossary. The recipes are
written by a highly experienced food writer with years of expertise
in creating simple, foolproof recipes, and each one has been tested
several times to ensure that it is easy to follow. Additional hints
and tips are provided on how to choose ingredients, how to rescue a
recipe if things go wrong, and how to adapt the dish with different
ingredients. Unlike most beginners' cookbooks, this one does not
attempt to teach techniques, such as pastry and breadmaking: it
focuses purely on creating straightfoward, enjoyable meals that are
easy to cook. The recipes are extremely practical, using
ingredients available in any market or supermarket, do not require
specialist equipment, and are economical and nutritious. To make it
simple to decide what to cook, the recipes are divided into
chapters on breakfasts and brunches, light weekday meals and
lunches, dishes for sharing, quick and easy suppers, weekend main
meals that take longer to cook, and desserts and baking. What to
Cook will equip any novice cook with a repertoire of simple,
crowd-friendly dishes that they can cook to perfection with
confidence.
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