The Slow Mediterranean Kitchen

Author: Paula Wolfert

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General Fields

  • : 52.99 NZD
  • : 9780471262886
  • : wiley
  • : wiley
  • :
  • : 1.134
  • : 03 October 2003
  • : 245mm X 212mm X 25mm
  • : United States
  • : 52.99
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  • :
  • :
  • : books

Special Fields

  • :
  • :
  • : Paula Wolfert
  • :
  • : Hardback
  • :
  • :
  • :
  • : 641.5
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  • :
  • : 368
  • :
  • : bibliography
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Barcode 9780471262886
9780471262886

Description

This title features recipes that are Mediterranean in origin, ranging from North Africa and the Eastern Mediterranean to Italy, Spain and the south of France. Besides presenting more than 150 recipes with instructions, the author offers her colourful prose to those who love food.

Reviews

.,."slow down, try any of these...recipes, and recapture the special flavors of North Africa or Spain, Greece or Italy." ("Associated Press," July 9, 2004)

Mediterranean cooking expert Wolfert invites readers to sit back and relax, in this, her eighth book (the first has been in print for 30 years)--a charming paean to the kinds of foods that require time to prepare, but are worth the wait. That doesn't mean these are complicated recipes. In fact, most are paragons of the simplicity and highlighting of flavors that have made Mediterranean cooking so popular. Dishes such as a classic Cassoulet use long periods in the oven to produce meltingly soft meat. The dough for Turkish Flatbread Stuffed with Melted Cheese needs to rise overnight, but is produced in a food processor with little effort. A chapter on soups celebrates simmer-it-and-forget-it dishes such as Turkish Red Lentil Soup with Paprika and Mint Sizzle and Mediterranean Marinated Fish Soup, which calls first for soaking fish filets in a mixture of Pernod, wine, thyme and garlic, then covering them with hot broth to cook off any residual rawness. Other recipes simply need to sit for their flavors to meld, as is the case with Cypriot Fresh Fava Bean and Purslane Salad and El Churrasco's Gazpacho with Pine Nuts and Currants. Wolfert does her us ual practiced job of seeking out unusual flavors in all corners of the Mediterranean, such as a Butternut Squash and Potato Pie with Tomato, Mint, and Sheep's Milk Cheese from Crete, and providing interesting historical background, like the headnote for Seven-Hour Garlic Crowned Lamb, a recipe culled from a 1929 cookbook of the foods of France's Perigord region. (Sept.)
Forecast: Wolfert has become the brand name for Mediterranean cooking, and this polished effort should sell well on the basis of name recognition and general excellence. The only possible impediment is its title and subtitle, which may scare off potential buyers who fear overly complicated recipes or even give the impression that these recipes require a slow cooker. ("Publishers Weekly," August 4, 2003)

In her many previous books (e.g., the now classic Couscous and "Other Good Foods from Morocco"), Wolfert wrote about the Mediterranean lifestyle, and here she seeks to recapture that way of life whose "friendly but voluptuous eating experiences" are no longer so easy to find, regrettably. To that end, she offers recipes intended to be both satisfying to prepare and delicious to eat, homey and comforting dishes from all the countries of the region: "brodetto Pasquale" (Italian Easter Lamb Soup), Expatriate Roast Chicken with Lemon and Olives from Morocco, and Catalonian Fall-Apart Lamb Shanks. Although many recipes call for braising, stewing, and other techniques of long cooking, others are not limited to those techniques, for Wolfert's definition of slow cooking also encompasses marinating and similar technique - i.e., cooking that requires forethought but not necessarily hours at the stove: Overnight Gorgonzola with Saba Spread, for example, or Mediterranean Marinated Fish Soup, prepared in btwo stages. Slow-cooked food has become popular with home cooks and restaurant diners alike, and Wolfert's celebration of the pleasures of that approach with its dozens of delicious and unusual recipes, is highly recommended. ("Library Journal," September 15, 2003)

If you buy only one cookbook thisyear, make it this one. Written by one of the reigning queens of culinary craft, its subtitled "Recipes for the Passionate Cook." The dishes featured may take time in the oven, but they're refreshingly simple given the astoundingly flavorful results. ("Metropolitan Home," November 2003)

I defy a passionate cook (or a passionate cookbook collector) to resist "The Slow Mediterranean Kitchen," Paula Wolfert's newest (Wiley; $34.95). It looks almost edible: the cover with its spilled seeds of the pomegranate, the apple Eve probably passed on to Adam, the sensuous photographs. As all her pals know, the woman is a fanatic, a passionate pilgrim to faraway kitchens no matter how primitive, a champion of indigenous ingredients. But authenticity is never enough for Paula. If it isn't delicious, it isn't in her books. And she's there, too, urging you on, passing along little tricks, enticing you to the stove. I can't wait to taste salmon poached in olive oil with rhubarb, cucumber, and mint salad, or the sesame-studded tomato jam. Her slow-cooked duck with olives has the crisp skin and melting interior of a confit but needs no time to mellow. And word on the pastry circuit is that her classic caneles de Bordeaux-lush custard inside a burn-sugar shell-are a revelation. ("New York," October 27, 2003)

Quick and easy may rule the day even in Rome, but in "The Slow Mediterranean Kitchen," Paula Wolfert celebrates a more leisurely way of cooking. Her carefully written recipes do require patience, effort, and the occasional uncommon ingredient (Wolfert thoughtfully provides mail-order and Internet sources). But anyone craving the unparalleled flavors that slow cooking coaxes from ingredients willbe amply rewarded for his or her time. ("Fine Cooking," January 2004)

"Already a classic, this book is full of lusty Mediterranean dishes you can eat with abandon." ("New York Post," January 7, 2004)

Since the publication, 30 years ago, of "Couscous and Other Good Food from Morocco," Paula Wolfert has been a precise, ardent student of cooking from Toulouse to Tunisia, and it is in large part due to her steady efforts that American cooks have tagines in their cupboards and preserved lemons in their larders.
Here, however, in this delightful, wandery book, she relaxes. This time around, the cook's cook-who spelled out in the indispensable "Cooking of South-West France" labyrinthine methods of confit and cassoulet-proffers, among many other good things (a quick confit and a labor-intensive recipe for those glorious pastries the French call "caneles de Bordeaux"), toast: grilled, browned, homely, and sublime, made with bread left out to dry. For a simple starter, toast is rubbed hard with ripe tomato and drizzled with olive oil ("pure heaven") or spread with thin-sliced avocados and sardines (a recipe from the Canary Islands). It's the base for myriad soups, including kale and black pepper soup from Siena and Easter lamb soup with marjoram and lemon.
What is more basic than toasted bread dunked in soup? Ease reigns, erudition is taken for granted. To augment these offerings, on which one could dine happily for a month of Sundays, dishes include a splendid ragout of artichokes cooked in a wine sauce spiked with orange zest, diced pancetta, and thyme; pork stew with prunes and onions simmered in olive oil enlivened with cinnamon; and slow-roasted chicken with sausage and porcini dressing. Voila: supper for two, or four, or, as these recipes easily multiply, for ten.
"There are many slow recipes in my other books, but this is the first time I have fastened upon 'slow' as a theme," Wolfert writes. The word "slow" has lately become a catchword (I have on my desk three recent cookbooks that incorporate it). "Slow" dishes, she tells us, can be prepared in advance and are the opposite of fast food in that flavor is slowly coaxed from leeks and legumes or even fish (as in Wolfert's slow oven-steamed salmon).
Of course, pots have been left to simmer on the back of the stove since time immemorial. The difference between this particular book and a slew of others is Wolfert herself: decisive, imaginative, and well versed. She writes for home cooks who know their way around the kitchen and are ready to try something new, or at least newish: sesame-studded tomato jam or Sephardic oven-roasted eggs (baked for five hours). It's also for cooks who know, as she does, that cooking is really about having something good to eat when you're hungry, and, more often than not, that what's wanted is just a bit of something delicious. On toast. ("Gourmet," February 2004)

"It is not likely that anyone outside Morocco knows more about that country's cooking than Paula Wolfert," ("The New York Times," February 25, 2004)

Table of contents

The slow food movement; kitchen performance anxiety. Chapter One Appetizers - Bruschettas and Other Toasts Marinated Olives, Toasted Nuts and Cheese Dips and Spreads Stuffed Breads. Chapter Two - Mediterranean Salads and Cold Vegetable Dishes. Chapter Three Soups. Chapter Four Seafood - Fish, Shellfish, Squid, Cuttlefish and Octopus. Chapter Five Poultry & Game Birds. Chapter Six Meats - Pork, Beef, Veal, Lamb. Chapter Seven Vegetables. Chapter Eight Desserts. Chapter Nine The Mediterranean Larder. Appendixes: Specialty Ingredients; Mail Order Sources; Equipment.