|
Mostly
Food Journal has articles on and reviews of Cookbooks, Restaurants,
Chefs, Ingredients, Drinks, New Products, and the People behind them.
Use the buttons above to take a stroll through them all!
Veggiestan – a
vegetable lover’s
tour of the Middle East
Any self-respecting cookbook collector will already be
familiar with the work of Sally Butcher. She charmingly penned Persia
in Peckham, which was a worthy showcase for her wit and expert
wordsmithery. That book had its focus on amazing Middle Eastern food of
every dietary hue, set against the backdrop of Persepolis, the
Aladdin’s cave of an ethnic supermarket that she runs with her family.
‘Persepolis’ sounds like a good name for a restaurant but it’s a deli
and store for Middle Eastern ingredients and household goods. I have
visited and have been tempted to take up smoking. “Oh, no!” I hear you
cry, “Not our clean-living reviewer taking up a hitherto-untried vice?”
Well, yes, I have been lured by the coloured glass and nifty pipework
of a shisha. Much more stylish than a packet of Woodbines and a box of
Swan Vestas.
Sally is the lady behind the counter, but she manages to find time
between customers to write books reflecting her love of Middle Eastern
food. She does that in a convincing fashion as she is not just an
interested observer. It’s now part of her cosmopolitan culinary
heritage: she cooks these foods on a daily basis for a discerning Iranian
husband and extended family.
Veggiestan is a stunning cookbook but it’s also a paper version of
Sally herself – it’s stylish with hints of ethnic colour; full of
laugh-out-loud anecdotes and witty asides that are thoroughly engaging.
Sally knows her subject and presents it as a real gastronomic
page-turner. You’ll want this book even if you don’t ever intend to
darken the door of a kitchen. Sally isn’t a joke-teller, she is quiet
and unassuming with a whimsical smile. One can hear her voice as one
reads. This is no contrived literary formula, there is a real person
back there and one you wish lived next door: “I just happened to be
passing and wondered what’s for dinner tonight ...?”
The food is in reality as good as it sounds. I can highly recommend the
pumpkin kibbeh which are moist, tender and flavourful. Sally gives
credit for the recipe for Tabouleh to the talented and celebrated
Anissa Helou (these ladies should open a restaurant together), and it’s
a fresh herby salad that has, to be authentic, much more parsley than
one might expect. Parsley is a vibrant ingredient when used as the main
event rather than an apologetic garnish.
Burgers and bacon butties have enticed many a wannabe vegetarian off
the meatless wagon. There are plenty of burger vans in Veggiestan, it
seems, and they tempt both carnivore and vegetarian citizens with
Burghlers. These are veggie burgers that are far more flavourful and a
lot healthier than the traditional laden with animal bits. You will
find these will become a favourite with the whole family, and there are
few meals that can boast that.
The ingredients for the dishes are, unsurprisingly, very reasonable.
One can buy a big bag of fresh veggies for the price of a couple of
steaks. Many people think of them as bland and uninteresting and even
“yucky”. Well, that’s a word I would reserve only for Brussels sprouts,
but all other vegetables can be made into delicious meals that lack
nothing. One can feast on flavour and texture and colour. It is true
that one eats with one’s eyes, after all.
Sally Butcher has great literary flair. Serious food writing does not
have to be dry and academic. Sally is serious about her writing so that
makes her, I guess, a serious food writer but the fruits, or in this
case veggies, of her labours are humorous. Phrases that encourage a
chuckle or two will also persuade those chucklers to actually cook some
food. That’s what a good cookbook should do, isn’t it?
This is another cracker from a food writer who should be better known
and much more appreciated. An ideal Christmas gift, and one of my picks
of 2011.
Veggiestan – a vegetable lover’s tour of the Middle
East
Author: Sally Butcher
Published by: Pavilion
Price: £25.00
ISBN 978-1-86205-884-2
|
|