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| Jane Grigson's Fruit Book (Penguin Cookery Library) | 
enlarge | Author: Jane Grigson Publisher: Penguin Category: Book
List Price: £10.99 Buy Used: £4.23 You Save: £6.76 (62%)
New (20) from £5.52
Avg. Customer Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 17398
Media: Paperback Edition: New Ed Pages: 528 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5 x 1.5
ISBN: 0140469982 Dewey Decimal Number: 641 EAN: 9780140469981 ASIN: 0140469982
Publication Date: April 27, 2000 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: **UK SHIPPED**SWIFT RELIABLE SERVICE** With friendly customer care! "Buy with confidence, Buy Book EcoLOGICal" Book in good condition
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Simply the best book on FRUIT - Jane Grigson! September 1, 2006 38 out of 39 found this review helpful
Jane Grigson was one of the leading cookery writers of her generation with some similarity to the writing talents of the great Elizabeth David, in that her books combine superb writing with impeccable research. In fact in this book she acknowledges Elizabeth David (ED), 'whose taste in the matter of fruit is unequalled' and other cute references such as in the article about 'pickled cherries', followed by a recipe for 'Cherry Brandy', `ED's Black Fruit Fool' - `a recipe for devotees of prunes and dried fruit and `ED`s Sweet Flan Pastry` - `easy to remember and efficient in practice'.
`It is from a love of fruit that Jane wrote her book, the much awaited companion volume to the enormously popular and successful `Jane Grigson Vegetable Book' . The author deals with both the homely and the less familiar fruits of our orchards with known and recently imported tropical fruits.'
`Jane Grigson's Fruit Book' is a 508 high quality, matt page alphabetical guide to selecting and using fruit, with practically *everything from apple to water melon, including the less popular `medlar` and `sapodilla`. *'Fruit that is eaten principally as a vegetable - e.g. `the tomato`, came into an earlier book. `Olives' seemed out of the scheme of this book and there was no room to deal properly with `nuts`.`
This invaluable reference includes delicious dishes and useful appendices, entitled:-
Fruit Preserves Pastry Biscuits, Bread etc Creams, Sugars etc:- including useful recipes for `Custard Sauce', `Coeur a la Creme' (soft and hard versions) and Vanilla Ice Cream Preserving Fruit `Edward Bunyard's Marriages of Fruit & Wine', which leads on to a section on, mixed fruit recipes Notes on Quantities and finishes with a concise index.
Interspersed with useful hints such as one for an `Emergency Cream`, 'without the need of a special machine for turning butter and milk into a form of cream that is acceptable in an emergency' and poetic references, e.g. POMEGRANATE - with the poem `Ronde de la Grenade' by Andre Gide.
Favourite Recipes:- Pomegranate Soup Orange Halva Cake Redcurrant Water Lazy Wild Duck with Orange Pineapple Upside-Down Pudding Cake Old Fashioned Apple Tart Kiwi Meringue Pudding Ossi Buchi with Gooseberries Pheasant Grenadine Grouse with Wild Raspberries
A useful note:- when preparing fruit, always use stainless steel knives.
one of my favourite books of all times July 24, 2001 77 out of 82 found this review helpful
Confession time - I don't read cookery books just for the recipes. I read them because food and cookery is important to me, and all sorts of related issues like culture, history and science are involved. I don't really want to know how to feed 4 for 2.50 or 58 interesting things to do with chicken, I want to enjoy the seductive qualities of good writing and delicious food. I read this book again and again til it fell apart. It was for a long time the book I kept by the side of my bed so when I couldn't sleep I could open it and read about oranges or guavas or persimmons. And there are some great recipes too, like orange syrup cake, my family's all time favourite cake. She's a great, intelligent writer, and I really recommend this book.
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