Everybody knows at least one — a pretentious foodie who insists on froo-froo ingredients, laborious techniques and over-the-top dishes.
Well, this year they’re out of luck. Because 2011 was a year when cookbooks — even those by high-end and celebrity chefs — went all homey and nostalgic. Which is good news for those of us who don’t want to garnish a Wednesday night dinner with hand harvested truffle-salmon roe foam.
There were meatball books, tomes of rustic dishes, and reminiscences on cooking your way back to childhood. The result? There are plenty of choices for those of us who must blend the joy of cooking with the sometimes crushing need to feed.
And that will make gift shopping for the food lovers in your life much easier. Here are our suggestions:
FOR THE HURRIED AND HARRIED
For the busy cook who hates the post-dinner cleanup, EatingWell One-Pot Meals (Countryman Press, 2011) offers more than 100 recipes for healthy, comforting food done in a single vessel. From classics such as skillet-roasted chicken and gravy to inventive dishes like fennel-spiked barley risotto from the slow cooker and sweet-and-spicy pork in the wok, the book helps families spend more time at the table than at the sink.
In many places around the world, a pressure cooker may be the only pot a family owns. And it’s not such a bad idea. The Easy Pressure Cooker Cookbook (Chronicle Books, 2011) serves up more than 300 ready-in-minutes recipes, from bacon and potato soup to barbecued brisket and veal stew with 40 cloves of garlic. It even makes dessert — think chocolate marble cheesecake and tasty bread puddings.
Cook This Now (Hyperion, 2011) by James Beard award-winning food writer Melissa Clark features hearty, easy meals with pairings just unusual enough to keep things interesting. Rosemary-scented white beans meet farro, grilled sausages huddle with celery root and hazelnuts, and in the spring curry and coconut make their way into tomato soup. More than 120 inventive recipes take you from season to season.
FOR THE GROUPIES
Glitz and glamour come home this year as celebrity chefs take to nesting. In his remarkably easy-to-follow Cooking in Everyday English (Oxmoor House, 2011), Todd English serves up red snapper and melon ceviche, wild mushroom couscous, tequila-braised short ribs, and, yes, chili. An entire chapter on family cooking offers kid-pleasers, such as butternut mac-and-cheese and classic pizza.
Crab cakes with gingered grapefruit might not sound much like your home cooking, but this is Tuesday night food for Jean-Georges Vongerichten. In Home cooking with Jean-Georges (Clarkson Potter, 2011), gorgeous photos illustrate recipes for dishes such as veal scaloppini with broccoli rabe and lavender, and almond caramelized duck breasts with amaretto jus. Maybe not weeknight stuff, but a nice book for leisurely cooking.
And what gift season would be complete without Jamie Oliver? The peripatetic British chef’s Meals in Minutes (Hyperion, 2011) offers recipes for 50 full meals designed to take no more than a half-hour. Spinach feta pie with two salads and dessert, mustard chicken with scalloped potatoes, greens and a black forest affogato, and roast beef with baby popovers are all engineered to please busy, hungry families.
For the real chef groupies on your list — the ones who don’t even care about the recipes — there’s My Last Supper: The Next Course (Rodale, 2011). In this sequel to the 2007 book, fifty chefs including Joel Robuchon, Marco Pierre White, Heston Blumenthal and David Chang reveal what they would eat for their last meal on earth. (Spoiler alert: Tom Colicchio wants a clam bake.)
FOR WEEKEND WARRIORS
It’s cold. It’s damp. Maybe it’s even snowing. Sunday Roasts: A Year’s Worth of Mouthwatering Roasts (Chronicle Books, 2011) conjures images of the perfect winter Sunday, with dishes like orange-scented pork roast with fennel and potatoes, and lamb shanks with dates and olives. A standing rib roast with porcini mushroom sauce might even impress the in-laws.
The Apple Lover’s Cookbook (Norton, 2011) may be the best celebration of fall’s fruit that we’ve ever seen. Savory dishes such as pork and apple pie with cheddar sage crust pull together all the flavors of the season, and desserts go from classics like oatmeal-topped apple crisp to spiced apple cupcakes with cinnamon cream cheese frosting. A primer on 59 varieties of apples and how to use them makes this a must-have for apple lovers.
FOR ARMCHAIR TRAVELERS
For the carb lover on your list, you can’t do better than The Glorious Pasta of Italy (Chronicle, 2011), a comprehensive guide to hearty, handmade spaghetti, ravioli, gnocchi and the richly diverse sauces that go with them. Try the ragu all’Abruzzese (a simple meat sauce) and you will never go back to the stuff in the jar.
A New Turn in the South (Clarkson Potter, 2011) presents chef Hugh Acheson’s inventive take on Southern cuisine. For the cook who’s mastered hoppin’ John and collards, Acheson offers pea, ham hock and mustard green soup with cornbread croutons, butter-braised cabbage with caraway, and short ribs with hominy.
Allegra McEvedy’s Bought, Borrowed and Stolen (Conran Octopus, 2011) takes cooks on a world tour with recipes like Portuguese caldo verde, Filipino chili noodles and Venison biltong (jerky) from South Africa. Beautiful photos and a scrapbook feel make the book a nice read.
FOR THE KIDS
OMG Pancakes! (Avery, 2011) pretty much says it all. Little mouths will gobble up green alligators, bees in their hive, puppy dog faces and unicorns, all captured in pancakes and brought to life by the magic of natural food coloring and squeeze bottles. Perfect for snow days and sleepovers.
And if there’s no other way to get your kids into the kitchen, SpongeBob’s Kitchen Mission Cookbook (Wiley, 2011) offers a primer on vegetable parfaits, healthy egg dishes and whole wheat pizzas.
FOR THE SPECIALISTS
Artisan Pizza and Flatbread in Five Minutes a Day (St. Martin’s Press, 2011) will get the baker on your list jumping with glee. Thin crust, thick crust, dipping breads and desserts — think good old pizza margherita, Turkish pita boats, and banana cream hand pies — all in the time it takes to heat up the oven.
Food-loving rockers can get the best of both worlds in The Recipe Project (Black Balloon Publishing, 2011), a collection of recipes by top chefs set to music. Rock out with Mario Batali’s spaghetti with Sweet 100 Tomatoes or Michael Symon’s octopus salad with Black-Eyed Peas. Comes with the CD, of course.
In the mainstream view, the Philippines should be worried that a conflict over Taiwan between the superpowers will drag in Manila. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr observed in an interview in The Wall Street Journal last year, “I learned an African saying: When elephants fight, the only one that loses is the grass. We are the grass in this situation. We don’t want to get trampled.” Such sentiments are widespread. Few seem to have imagined the opposite: that a gray zone incursion of People’s Republic of China (PRC) ships into the Philippines’ waters could trigger a conflict that drags in Taiwan. Fewer
March 18 to March 24 Yasushi Noro knew that it was not the right time to scale Hehuan Mountain (合歡). It was March 1913 and the weather was still bitingly cold at high altitudes. But he knew he couldn’t afford to wait, either. Launched in 1910, the Japanese colonial government’s “five year plan to govern the savages” was going well. After numerous bloody battles, they had subdued almost all of the indigenous peoples in northeastern Taiwan, save for the Truku who held strong to their territory around the Liwu River (立霧溪) and Mugua River (木瓜溪) basins in today’s Hualien County (花蓮). The Japanese
Pei-Ru Ko (柯沛如) says her Taipei upbringing was a little different from her peers. “We lived near the National Palace Museum [north of Taipei] and our neighbors had rice paddies. They were growing food right next to us. There was a mountain and a river so people would say, ‘you live in the mountains,’ and my friends wouldn’t want to come and visit.” While her school friends remained a bus ride away, Ko’s semi-rural upbringing schooled her in other things, including where food comes from. “Most people living in Taipei wouldn’t have a neighbor that was growing food,” she says. “So
Whether you’re interested in the history of ceramics, the production process itself, creating your own pottery, shopping for ceramic vessels, or simply admiring beautiful handmade items, the Zhunan Snake Kiln (竹南蛇窯) in Jhunan Township (竹南), Miaoli County, is definitely worth a visit. For centuries, kiln products were an integral part of daily life in Taiwan: bricks for walls, tiles for roofs, pottery for the kitchen, jugs for fermenting alcoholic drinks, as well as decorative elements on temples, all came from kilns, and Miaoli was a major hub for the production of these items. The Zhunan Snake Kiln has a large area dedicated