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The Free Range Cook
Annabel Langbein is a name new to many of us in
the
UK but that will likely change with the publication of this her latest
book and
the airing of a TV series. Annabel is a celebrity cook from New Zealand
and she
founded the International Culinary Institute of New Zealand. She has
presented
many television and radio shows and written a shelf of cookbooks.
Annabel and her family have a home
beside Lake
Wanaka in New Zealand's Southern Alps. She has studied horticulture in
New
Zealand and attended the Culinary Institute of America, so she is well
placed
to present a book that revels in food that’s fresh and seasonal. OK, so
the
seasons might fall at a different time of year in New Zealand, but we
all know
when spring starts wherever we are, and in the UK that often seems like
June.
The Free Range Cook is an apt title.
The food might
not all be free-range but the cook is. Perhaps Annabel could be
described a
giving free range to her talents. A free-style cook she definitely is.
Nothing
fussy or over-fingered amongst these dishes. She has a real sense of
how we
want to cook and eat – not just those food lovers on the other side of
the
globe but we in the northern climes as well.
There are some classic recipes in The
Free Range
Cook as well as contemporary and unique dishes that combine to make
this a
well-rounded and practical volume. No complicated cooking methods, no
exotic
cooking gadgets, and the ingredient lists are pleasingly short in most
cases.
Lots of pages with two recipes: that always makes my heart skip a beat
of lazy culinary
joy. A few ingredients well-chosen, with the prospect of a meal in a
timely
fashion, has got to be good news for all but a fanatic.
Cheese-making can be quick.
Admittedly you won’t
get strikingly tangy year-old Cheddar... unless you want to wait a
year, but Annabel
talks us through the easy steps of making delicious soft cheese while
you
sleep. The creamy preparation can be flavoured with fresh herbs or
sweetened
with honey and cinnamon for a light taste of the Med.
Lemon Curd is a traditional favourite
and this book
offers the recipe for the curd as well as for mini Lemon Curd Tarts,
which are
ideal to present as part of a dessert platter. Another item on that
grand plate
would possibly be a slice of Strawberry Cloud Cake. An ideal dessert
for making
ahead of time, a frozen airy mousse that will add a dash of Barbie pink
to your
sweet selection. This would be a stunning summer celebration cake.
Cypriot Shepherd’s Pie is my pick of
the book. Twenty
minutes of preparation then an hour in the oven will result in a very
stylish
yet comforting mid-week dinner. Do the prep the night before to save
time. Garlic,
cumin and cinnamon are the spices which elevate this pie to something
far above
the remembered school-dinner boring norm. Economic and delicious.
The Free Range Cook is a sensible and
attractive
book to cook from. I couldn’t find a single recipe that I would
discard. It has
a noble natural feel to it but it’s not a preachy over-worthy tome.
Annabel
Langbein has a passion for good food and she is trying to start an
epidemic. It’s
a joy of culinary enthusiasm and a whole heap of mouthwatering and
moreish
food.
Cookbook review: The Free Range Cook
Author: Annabel Langbein
Published by: Mitchell Beazley
Price: £20.00
ISBN 798-1-84533-645-5
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