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The much-requested second collection of best-loved and requested recipes from the stellar Good Food team. More than 100 classic recipes are given a fresh, extra delicious twist by eight ​of Australia’s ​best-loved chefs.​ Katrina Meynink adds toasted seeds and pomegranate to her sweet potato, carrot and cumin soup. Kylie Kwong shares her heavenly Vegetarian special fried rice. Adam Liaw infuses slow cooked lamb with Tunisian flavours. The schnitty goes meat-free with Jill Dupleix’s inspired eggplant schnitzel with leek pickles and labna. Neil Perry gives us a chicken Kiev with garlic butter that is baked instead of fried. Danielle Alvarez has updated the salad Lyonainasie with shredded cabbage and mustard greens. Andrew McConnell’s addictive spiced hot cross buns have some sour dried cherries added to the mix. And Helen Goh’s Irish coffee cake has Bailey’s Irish Cream in the filling! Created for home cooks, these are inspirational, easy weeknight dinners, along with plenty of delicious dishes to impress your guests.​
Take a culinary adventure to 'the land down under' with Good Food From Australia! From the famous Vegemite sandwich to grilling on the barbecue, the authors provide a generous collection of over 150 genuine Australian favourites. Start off with Egg and Bacon Pie (what real Australian men eat), then sample some hearty Pocket Steak Melbourne or Dandenong Rabbit Pie, with a slice of Victorian Salad, and top it all off with a slice of Maisie's Chocolate Peppermint Cake. You can even learn to drink a 'cuppa tea' and a beer like a real Aussie! If you enjoy cooking, and like to experiment in the kitchen then this is the book for you.
In this eagerly awaited new book, Neil Perry share
'It deserves a place in every Australian kitchen' - Delicious Magazine Features a foreword from the bestselling author of DARK EMU, Bruce Pascoe. This gorgeous illustrated, informative and contemporary cookbook and compendium of native foods will show you how to create truly Australian food and drinks at home. With a few small adjustments and a little experimentation you can prepare delicious food that is better for the Australian environment, is more sustainable and celebrates the amazing ingredients that are truly local. Warndu Mai (Good Food) contains information about seasonal availability, hints, tips and over 80 illustrated and accessible recipes showcasing Australian native foods, using ingredients such as Kakadu plum, native currants, finger lime and pepperberry to create unique dishes and treats - from wattleseed brownies, emu egg sponge cake and bunya nut pesto to native berry, cherry and lime cordial, strawberry gum pavlova and kangaroo carpaccio. It's a must-have for every kitchen.
Over 100 recipes chosen by Good Food editor Ardyn Bernoth from the outstanding professional cooks she charges every week to bring us recipes for the seasonal food they are passionate about. Here are inspiring, delicious, easy weeknight dishes along with plenty to make your guests gasp such at Danielle Alvarez’s Chocolate, butterscotch and raspberry trifle and Neil Perry’s Spicy braised lamb with apricots, pistachios and roast pumpkin. The recipes have been clearly labelled for those looking for gluten-free, vegetarian and vegan options and every recipe has an accompanying photograph. The chapters include: Soups Veggies, Sides and Salads Pasta, Grains, Eggs and Tarts Fish and Seafood Chicken, Duck and Meat Desserts and Treats
In the 20 years since Bill Granger published his first book of recipes, Sydney Food, the world has fallen in love with the joyfully casual Australian way of eating. As a self-taught cook, straight out of art school, Bill furnished his first street-corner eatery in minimalist style, serving a small but perfectly formed menu of domestic dishes around a central communal table. He captured the hearts of Sydneysiders and visitors alike, while setting an exciting new standard for cafe dining. Since then, Bill has been crowned the 'egg master of Sydney' (New York Times 2002), the 'king of breakfast' (The Telegraph Magazine 2016), the 'creator of avocado toast' (Washington Post 2016) and 'the restaurateur most responsible for the Australian cafe's global reach' (The New Yorker 2018). Nowadays, from Sydney to Tokyo, and London to Seoul, queues form to enjoy ricotta hotcakes ('Sydney's most iconic dish' Good Food 2019), fluffy scrambled eggs, lively salads and punchy curries. It is a bright picture of Australian food that has travelled across the globe, packed with fresh flavours and local produce, healthy but never preachy, whose main ingredient seems to be sunshine itself. The plates at any of Bill's restaurants are more sophisticated today, reflecting decades of global experience and culinary creativity - but the warmth of atmosphere and joy of eating remain the same.
Following the outstanding success of Good Food, Anneka Manning has created another wonderful cookbook. More Good Food is an abundant collection of simple recipes that deliver impressive results. These recipes, drawn from around the world, are organised into menus for every sort of meal and every kind of function: inexpensive family meals, dinners for fussy eaters and those with allergies, low-fat meals, vegetarian lunches, formal dinners and weddings. Whatever the occasion, More Good Food has the perfect menu. This is a must for every kitchen.
The most prestigious food guide in Australia, now brought to you by Simon & Schuster Australia. The 2020 edition of this acclaimed national guide – the home of the hats – reviews 500 restaurants around Australia and awards the best eateries from Darwin to Hobart, Melbourne to Perth, and Sydney to Brisbane. The Age Good Food Guide was launched in 1979 and The Sydney Morning Herald Good Food Guide followed five years later. With the addition of The Brisbane Times, The Canberra Times and WA Today, the Good Food Guide is Australia’s most trusted restaurant guide, compiled and edited by respected, independent critics. Reviewers arrive unannounced, pay for their own meals and are stringent judges, looking at service, ambiance, the X factor and, of course, the food. Hats are awarded to the best of the best. To achieve a hat is a pinnacle of a chef’s career and a restaurant’s history, and the term ‘hatted’ has become part of the Australian lexicon.
Spanning 65,000 years, this book provides a history of food in Australia from its beginnings, with the arrival of the first peoples and their stewardship of the land, to a present where the production and consumption of food is fraught with anxieties and competing priorities. It describes how food production in Australia is subject to the constraints of climate, water, and soil, leading to centuries of unsustainable agricultural practices post-colonization. Australian food history is also the story of its xenophobia and the immigration policies pursued, which continue to undermine the image of Australia as a model multicultural society. This history of Australian food ends on a positive note, however, as Indigenous peoples take increasing control of how their food is interpreted and marketed.