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Is a blog of extraordinary destinations, food and wine,
spas, product and book reviews, travel topics, etc. etc.
This is a newsletter from Cooking Vacations. I would encourage you to sign up on their website.
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I hope you enjoyed this and sign up for your newsletter from Cooking Vacations.
Tags: Chicken Cacciatore, Cooking Vacations and Recipes, Formaggio Con Le Pere, maralyn d hill, The Epicurean Explorer, Tuscan Biscotti, Where and What in the World
Posted in Culinary Travel, Culinary Travel, Destinations, Events & Activities, Poultry Recipes, book reviews, books, chefs, cooking tips, culture, dessert recipes, recipes, travel | 3 Comments »
Honey has been a remedy I’ve known and used for years. But, Honey for Health & Beauty, part of the Cooking Well series, is a treasure.
It is a cooperative effort with the Introduction by Lauren Feder, M.D., Foreword by Marie-Annick Courtier and Recipes from The National Honey Board. This combined effort contains over 75 recipes, remedies and natural treatments, backed up by studies.
As Lauren Feder, M.D. said, “After reading Honey for Health & Beauty, I am now enthusiastic to increase the use of honey in some of my favorite dishes, as well as a healing agent.”
Chef Marie-Annick Courtier provides tremendous insight and says, “You need to educate yourself and your palate as you would with wine. Color, concentration, viscosity, aroma, taste, finish and complexity are the most important elements in defining the best honey.”
The book starts off telling the story of honey and provides all sorts of tips. Next, a fascinating chapter follows on how honey helps with health and healing. This is documented with medical studies.
How honey has been and currently is used for beauty is amazing, The book includes beauty recipes created by Christopher Watt, a licensed aesthetician. Christopher’s clients include
Rosemary Honey Hair Conditioner
Ingredients:
1/2 cup honey
1/4 cup warmed olive oil (2 Tbsp. for normal to oily hair)
4 drops essential oil of rosemary
1 tsp. xanthum gum (available in health food stores)
Directions:
Place all ingredients in a small bowl and mix thoroughly. Pour into a clean plastic bottle with a tight fitting stopper or lid. Apply a small amount at a time to slightly damped hair. Massage scalp and work mixture through hair until completely coated. Cover hair with a warm towel (towel can be heated in a microwave or dryer) or shower cap; leave on to nourish and condition for 30 minutes. Remove towel or shower cap; shampoo lightly and rinse with cool water. Dry as normal and enjoy shiner, softer and healthier hair the natural way.
This 150 page book is easy and interesting to read, a great reference, and packed full of recipes that are easy to prepare. I think you’ll enjoy it as much as I did.
Tags: book reviews, honey, honey health tips, honey recipes, maralyn d hill
Posted in book reviews, books, heathy recipes, recipe books, recipes | No Comments »
Absente, Images and Tastes of the Green Fairy
by David Carrier and Michel Roux
Much to my delight, I’m enamored with a book on Absente. During the past two years, quite a few authors have written about the magic of this famous liqueur. However, Carrier’s compilation brings everything to life in spectacular fashion. It combines history with over 130 photos of well known works of art with numerous artists’ biographies, accompanied by exceptional cocktail recipes featuring Absente – Absinthe Refined – Grande Absente and Absinthe Originale. The book is enhanced by delicious food recipes, featuring Grande Absente, by world renowned French Chef Jean-Stephane Poinard. This is a coffee table book that deserves showcasing anywhere.
Michel Roux, the man behind the liqueur and book, first set out in 1999 to bring Absente back to
Jim Nikota, Senior Vice President of Marketing for Crillon Importers, wrote the book’s introduction, Absinthe for Americans – Another Crazy Idea. Jim has the knack of combining Michel’s passion and creativity with the history of the famous liqueur known as The Green Fairy. He describes in detail how the original liqueur was banned in the
Jim says, “Absinthe, that notorious green-hued liqueur, had ingrained itself in Parisian culture and become the trademark drink of bohemian artists like Degas, Manet, Picasso, Van Gogh and Toulouse-Lautrec. Many of the world’s most celebrated painters devoted pieces – such as Manet’s The Absinthe Drinker and Degas’ L’Absinthe – to La Fee Verte, the Green Fairy.” He also goes on to quote writers like Oscar Wilde and Ernest Hemingway and describes how they used and viewed the very potent liqueur.
In the book, each original piece of artwork, with artists’ name, is accompanied by either a drink recipe or a food recipe using Absente. I was enthralled with the many familiar art selections, even though I never associated them with Absente’s history.
For a food writer who enjoys all aspects of the culinary arts, such as those displayed at Bocuse d’Or, this book is a treasure. I own several great books on the historical aspects of food and Roux’s book is now an added prize.
Chef Jean-Stephane Poinard was honored when Michel Roux asked him to contribute the 18 food recipes developed around one of the three variations, Grande Absente, for this prestigious book. Poinard is an appropriate choice, since he is a 5th generation chef from
A little over a year ago, Poinard and his wife Valerie, a winemaker from Domaine de la Fond Moiroux, opened the successful Bistro de Leon in the village-like atmosphere of
ABSENTE – Images and Tastes of the Green Fairy is available at www.ABSENTEbook.com for $49.95 plus shipping. The great aspect of this website is that you can look through the book before you purchase. As you go through page by page and see the beautiful representations, I imagine you will also become enamored and want one yourself.
“Success” was Finalist in the Writing and Publishing category of the 2009 Next Generation Indie Book Awards
Tags: book reviews, cocktails, drink recipes, liqueur history, maralyn d hill, Where and What in the World
Posted in Food history, book reviews, books, chefs, recipe books | No Comments »