Seasonal Food: A guide to what’s in season when and why
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Unless you are a farmer, grower, or food expert, I bet your knowledge of what’s in season and when is pretty slim. Despite a renaissance in British home cooking, coupled with a rediscovery of local produce through farmers’ markets and enthusiastic celebrity chefs, many of us are missing some pretty crucial information. I mean, what’s the use of a fancy gooseberry recipe in November?You want to know what’s good to eat now? And why? Without pouring through stacks of recipe books? You need this book. Seasonal Food is organized into twelve chapters, one for each month of the year. Each chapter starts with a brief story about the month itself (what’s happening in the farming calendar, food-related customs and traditions), followed by narrative sections covering what’s in prime season – fruit and veg, meat, fish and other seasonally-influenced produce such as cheeses. There are recipes with information such as traditions, best regions etc and other basic suggestions about preparation. And new for this edition and in response to a growing sophistication in seasonal eating in the UK, it features gourmet foods that you can’t source locally. Discover when to get the finest nectarines or the best month to treat yourself to Vacherin cheese.
Additional information
| Weight | 0.178 kg | 
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 1.6 × 12.7 × 19.8 cm | 
| Format | Paperback  | 
		
| Language | |
| Pages | 256  | 
		
| Publisher | |
| Year Published | 2009-3-13  | 
		
| Imprint | |
| Publication City/Country | London, United Kingdom  | 
		
| ISBN 10 | 1905811365  | 
		
| About The Author | Paul Waddington is the author of Shades of Green and 21st-Century Smallholder: from windowboxes to allotments, how to go back to the land without leaving home. He is also a newspaper columnist and professional writer. He takes a deep interest in food and environmental issues, grows vegetables, and lives as sustainably as possible with his wife and sons in Yorkshire.  | 
		
| Review Quote | A must for the discriminatingly greedy  | 
		
| Other text | This guide to food and the seasons is not a preachy, finger-wagging tome. It is written with a real delight in food and produce… and tells you not just when things are in their natural seasons, but when and why certain foods taste better at certain times of the year – and how to cook them  | 
		
		    



