Pages: 336 (Paperback) ISBN: 0224077961 Pub: Jonathan Cape Pub date: 2008-02-14 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 990
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Reader Reviews:almost as good as eating (0/0 people found this helpful)what a lovely book, I enjoyed it from the first page to the last. Michael booth is obviously very pasionate about food and he makes you want to leave everything and go to France to learn all you can. funny, entertaining and inspirational Make sure your lobster doesn't escape! (0/0 people found this helpful)From the first page of this book I was hooked. Imagine giving up everything including your cookery book collection and taking your family to live in France whilst you learn to cook at the best cookery school in the world - Le Cordon Bleu. Michael Booth spoke very little French when he moved to Paris but he wanted to learn to cook from the best in the world. Read about his fellow students from all over the world, the eccentric chefs and the escaping lobsters. The sentence that sticks in my mind is a description of a lobster wriggling like 'a knight with ants in his armour'. If you're even vaguely interested in cooking or Paris - read this book. There are some recipes as well, but it's the tips you pick up which are useful - for example always let meat rest for half as long as you've cooked it for. If you love chocolate you'll drool over the short course he did in chocolate making. Brilliant 'Ratatouille' revisited (0/0 people found this helpful)Thoroughly enjoyable book that makes you immediately want to move to Paris. I don't know if burning your cook book collection is warranted, but Michael Booth certainly makes the case for good old fashioned french cuisine and trainng. Well written, entertaining, and manages to avoid the more nauseating traits of the 'I moved to france/paris/provence etc.' and he doesn't patronise the natives. The author manages to both engage your interest and remain likeable. Not sure whether on one book he can quite earn the Bill Bryson title, but he sure makes me wish for that small(ish) lottery win to follow in his footsteps. As an interesting follow on classic french cuisines try Jacques Pepin's 'The Apprentice' or as a complete contrast in style at the other end of the french food lover's spectrum, Anthony Bourdin's Les Halles Cookbook. Best book on food in years - highly recommendable! (1/1 people found this helpful)This is such a refreshing new take on the whole food genre, and the best book on food I've read since "Kitchen Confidential" - and far more entertaining at that. The writing is eloquent, captivating and so funny that I had to read parts of it in isolation (to provide my family with some peace and quiet).
A great read for all foodies! (1/1 people found this helpful)I heard this book being read out on the radio, as "Book of the week" on R4 and I was immediately turned on!! Mr. Booths way of describing this food fantasy is so funny and inspiring. I would love to do the same. Relevant questions about how to make proper food, is answered in a very good way.
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Books -> Subjects -> Food & Drink -> Entertaining & Special Occasions -> Gourmet
Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English Books -> Refinements -> Age (feature_two_browse-bin) Books -> Refinements -> Format (binding_browse-bin) -> Paperback Books -> Refinements -> Condition (condition-type)
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