Pages: 320 (Paperback) ISBN: 1841151440 Pub: Fourth Estate Pub date: 2000-04-06 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 2560
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Editorial Review:Observer columnist Nigel Slater has chosen his eight favourite foods and sculpted a sensational cookbook around them. And what are they? Potatoes, chicken, sausages, garlic, bread, cheese, ice-cream and chocolate. For each of the eight he offers a selection of recipes, some from friends and colleagues, including Alastair Little, Rowley Leigh, Peter Gordon and Nigella Lawson. As he explains in the introduction, "By Real Food I mean big-flavoured, unpretentious cooking. Good ingredients made into something worth eating. Nothing fancy. Nothing extravagant. Nothing careless or slapdash. Just nice, uncomplicated food--be it chicken roasted with olive oil, lemon and basil or simply a big, fat mushroom baked in garlic butter and stuffed inside a soft bap." And that's pretty much what he's achieved, though he does let himself go on occasion with recipes like Deep-fried Ice Cream and Mincemeat Parcels. The book is peppered with short essays on ingredients that bear Slater's trademark dry wit. He is definitely one of Britain's best food writers and his collaboration with photographer Jonathan Lovekin marks this book out from the crowd. Reader Reviews:I Love It (0/0 people found this helpful)I love the fact that once again Nigel Slater has delivered a book easy to read, entertaining and useful! (I already own his "30 minute Cook" book - though I prefer "Real Food" layout and content!)
Great book let down by poor quality manufacture (0/0 people found this helpful)The book contents is excellent. I can cook a bit but decided to start cooking more and bought a load of new books, this is my favorite. It is nicely laid out into sections on chicken, potatoes, sausage, garlic, bread etc and some good pictures in places to let you see what it should come out like. There is a clear nicely written intro to each section to get you enthused and very easy to follow recipes. I jumped straight in with the Thai green curry that turned out really nice.
An inspirational cookbook (3/3 people found this helpful)Nigel Slater was writing about how to make basic family food taste wonderful long before it was fashionable. Luckily, good food cooked well does not go out of style. This book is as useful to me now as when I bought it nine years ago.
The Con Mans Cook Book (5/20 people found this helpful)There is a lot to be said for any cook whose idea of creating the perfect dish revolves around phrases like "just throw in a bit of that" and "chuck in a bit of this". It all sounds so easy. It isn't. This type of imprecise language might sound a bit cool, but the fact is, given the "who cares how much approach" of Slater's ingredients the inexperienced cook is guaranteed to fail. His "traditional" fish cakes turn to mush - primarily because he fails to see the need for a binding agent like egg or milk. His baked fish is rubbish - tasting of little more than melted butter and his salads, well, actually they're great. But, hey, only a complete idiot could mess up a salad, right?
A Real Man Writes For Real People about Real Food (4/5 people found this helpful)My copy of this book is in need of replacing with a new copy. The broken hardback spine and sauce splashed pages are the very best testament to the years of joy it has given me. In addition to which Nigel Slater writes with such real passion, in a very no nonsense way, and yet with a sensual tone that sometimes gets me feeling food is sexy in a way that Nine and a Half Weeks manifestly did not. Stars for me are the Cardamom Mousse, the Sausage, Mustard and Basil Pasta, and any of the guest Peter Gordon recipes (what he does with sugar in savoury dishes is genius). If you don't want all the faffing that so many others involve you in, but you want food that is classy in a 'Never Mind the B*ll*cks' kind of way, then buy it. Heck, buy it anyway. Similar ProductsAppetite: So What Do You Want to Eat Today? The Kitchen Diaries: A Year in the Kitchen CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Food & Drink -> Food Writers -> Nigel Slater
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