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This personal selection of 300 dishes reflects the rich variety of cooking that is enjoyed in the cafes and restaurants and at the family tables of provincial France, from Brittany to Provence and from Burgundy to Languedoc. Easy-to-follow, how-to diagrams. Color photos of the finished dishes.
Originally published in 1981, Keith Floyd's first book was heralded the beginning of an era in British cookery. The book launched Keith as one of the top chefs of the era and still has a massive influence for chefs worldwide. It contains a host of honest, simple and timeless recipes, food that Keith loved to cook, and is a goldmine of simple and effective classics - a must have for any Floyd fans and foodies alike.
The sheer variety of fish and shellfish - freshwater and seawater, round and flat, smoked and salted, pre-cooked or still alive - available from the supermarket fish counter, let alone the fishmonger, is enough to give the most experienced cook pause.
Landis, the American cyclist whose hard-earned 2006 Tour de France victory was stripped due to doping allegations, provides irrefutable evidence to clear his name and details the fascinating ups and downs of his life and career.
Originally published in 1995 by Michael Joseph, this is a collection of Keith Floyd's top 100 recipes taken from his previous publications.
A book for all who love cooking outdoors but are bored with barbecued sausages! Keith Floyd shows how to set about building your own garden grill, and opens up a new world of deliciously simple and exciting recipes.
He was the first celebrity chef, the swashbuckling cook who crossed the high seas, on a BBC budget, communicating his love of food to millions of viewers. Make a wonderful dish and have a bloody good time: that was the criteria of Keith Floyd's mission (a mission that lasted several decades). Along the way he inspired a generation of men to get into the kitchen. After starting out in a hotel kitchen in Bristol, he made and lost fortunes, was married four times, and dealt with a level of fame that bemused him. Now, in his honest and revealing memoir, completed just before he died, Keith reflects on the ups and downs of his career. Above all, the much loved, often copied, Keith Floyd whooshes the reader through his adventures, from the hilarious to the downright lunatic. As irrepressible, funny and charming as Keith himself, Stirred But Not Shaken is a must-read for anyone who loves life, food, women . . . and a quick slurp.
Accompanying the Channel 5 television series, this guide to wine follows Floyd on a regional wine tour. Meeting characters who reflect the lifestyle of the area, Floyd shares a joke, a meal and a few bottles of the locally produced wine.
Transplanted Canadian, New Yorker writer and author of Paris to the Moon, Gopnik is publishing this major new work of narrative non-fiction alongside his 2011 Massey Lecture. An illuminating, beguiling tour of the morals and manners of our present food manias, in search of eating's deeper truths, asking "Where do we go from here?" Never before have so many North Americans cared so much about food. But much of our attention to it tends towards grim calculation (what protein is best? how much?); social preening ("I can always score the last reservation at xxxxx"); or graphic machismo ("watch me eat this now"). Gopnik shows we are not the first food fetishists but we are losing sight of a timeless truth, "the table comes first": what goes on around the table matters as much to life as what we put on the table: families come together (or break apart) over the table, conversations across the simplest or grandest board can change the world, pain and romance unfold around it--all this is more essential to our lives than the provenance of any zucchini or the road it travelled to reach us. Whatever dilemmas we may face as omnivores, how not what we eat ultimately defines our society. Gathering people and places drawn from a quarter century's reporting in North America and France, The Table Comes First marks the beginning a new conversation about the way we eat now.