The Larousse Treasure of Country Cooking is four hundred pages of international recipes supposedly from country, provincial kitchens. And these recipes do pass the simplicity test: Most all of them fit on a single small page. It includes a lot of recipes and only a few pictures. Fine by me, but the pictures arent labeled, so you have to wander through the book to figure out what goes where. Makes for a nice evening by the fire, unless you actually wanted to cook something tonight.
The writers are also arrogant: over half of the recipes are French, because France has admittedly been headquarters for brilliant provincial cooking for centuries. The rest of the world fights over the remaining pages. Still, it covers a wide variety. Opening at random I see Basque Brown Sugar Custard from France and Penang Coconut Custard from Malaysia on facing pages. The Appetizers section has recipes from Mexico, USSR, Israel, Lebanon, France, France, France, France, Lebanon, Italy, Syria, Cuba, France, France, France, Italy, Hungary, Italy, India, Netherlands, France, France, USSR, France, China, China, France, Greece, Denmark, Finland, Mexico, Sweden, Sweden, Great Britain, France, Italy, France, France, Italy, Great Britain, Japan, China, China, France, USSR, France, and Canada.
The arrogance is obvious, but hardly something to complain about. The recipes we do get range from baba ghanoúj, töltött zöldpaprika Gyor, and taramasalata to Frances tapénade and anchoïade. Thats eggplant dip, green pepper Gabor, smoked fish roe dip, Niçoise Caviar, and Anchovy Canapés if you only speak English.
Yes, they do have frogs legs: with garlic and herbs, under fish. The sections are:
It includes a standard index and an index by country of origin. One of my biggest pet peeves with international cookbooks is that they organize the book by country, rather than by recipe. So if you want to find a good cake, or a salad, you have to wander through every country. When Im looking for a specific kind of recipe, I need to see the ingredients and cooking times; the Larousse works for me there. But if Im making a dinner based on a certain locale, I still can look for recipes in the back--and generally, ingredients and cooking time are less important if Im trying to recreate a regional meal.
I have yet to be disappointed by a recipe from this book. My current favorite is Fish Curry with Rice (machi pulao), which calls for all my favorite spices in the curry mixture: ginger, cumin, coriander, fenugreek, and chili. My friends prefer when I bring Irish Soda Bread over to get-togethers.
I can strongly recommend the Treasury. If Im looking for a unique international recipe, it is my first choice; and if you are looking for a single book to widen your cooking horizons, youll not likely find a better one than this.
Sample: Eggplant Fareed (Batinjan)2 small eggplants, salt, 6 tblsp olive oil, 1 clove minced garlic, 1/4 minced medium onion, juice of 1 lemon, 2 tblsp fresh chopped parsley, 1/2 pint yoghurt; accompany with chopped fresh mint and thinly sliced black bread. Peel and cube the eggplants. Put the eggplant in a non-metallic colander, salt lightly, cover with a cloth, rest over a plat for 30 minutes. Drain thoroughly and dry on paper towels. Heat half the oil in a frying pan. Sauté the eggplant over moderate heat until tender (about 6 minutes). In a mixing bowl, toss the eggplant, garlic, onion, lemon juice and remaining olive oil until well mixed. Stir in the parsley and yoghurt, adjust seasonings, and transfer the eggplant to a serving bowl. Cover and refrigerate at least 3 hours. Serve at room temperature, garnished with mint and accompanied by black bread. | ||
| I Paid: $8.95 | Rating: Well worth it. | Publisher: Crown Publishers, Inc. |
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In 1993, the day after the bombing of the World Trade Center, the serial killer known only as the Quiet Man began his reign of terror in the Washington, DC area. |
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