Claudia Roden's Mediterranean Treasured recipes from a lifetime of travel

Claudia Roden

Book - 2021

A cookbook author and food historian shares one hundred of her favorite recipes from the Mediterranean including chicken with apricots and pistachios, vegetable couscous, eggplant in spicy honey sauce with goat cheese, bean stew with chorizo and bacon, and almond pudding.

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Recipes
Published
California ; New York : Ten Speed Press [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Claudia Roden (author)
Edition
First US edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
319 pages : color illustrations, color photographs ; 27 cm
ISBN
9781984859747
  • Introduction
  • Where my tastes come from
  • Planning a meal
  • Appetizers
  • Soups
  • Salads and cold vegetable dishes
  • Vegetable sides and sharing dishes
  • With grain
  • Seafood and shellfish
  • Meat and poultry
  • Desserts and pastries
  • Index
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Booklist Review

Sharing 35 years' worth of observations (and recipes) summarizing tastes, flavors, and experiences, Roden, the UK-based, Egyptian-born, peripatetic globe wanderer and TV personality (The Book of Jewish Food, 1996; The New Book of Middle Eastern Food , 2000) reviews the cooking of the Mediterranean to uncover differences and similarities among countries while also dramatically distilling the essences of familiar dishes. The choice of cheese, for instance, spells native preferences: feta and Halloumi for Greece; goat cheese and Gruyère for France; and the usual suspects for Italy--Parmesan, pecorino, mozzarella, and ricotta. Specific dishes get the same treatment, such as the famous French bouillabaisse, the Catalan bullinada with its garlic mayonnaise, and Sicilian fish cuscusu. Simplicity reigns, like spaghetti with garlic, oil, and chili or chicken with grapes. Adorned with elegant food styling and photographic travel postcards, each of Roden's 100-plus recipes represents a medley of flavors, whether from Greece, France, Tunisia, or any other Mediterranean region. Among the standouts: roasted cheese polenta cubes, pumpkin soup with orzo and amaretti, bean stew with chorizo and bacon, sangria gelatin. A very personal love song to a region.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

Introduction An adventure that never ended When my three children left home all at the same time thirty-five years ago, I decided to leave, too, and travel around the Mediterranean. I went alone, à l'aventure--without plans or arrangements. A childhood memory lived inside me of the exhilarating moment we arrived in Alexandria by the desert road from our home in Cairo and suddenly saw the sea. To me, Alexandria was a different world, with other trees and flowers and new smells and villas painted yellow and pink. Compared to the serious and restrained Cairo, it was a city of freedom and pleasure. You felt the exuberant lighthearted mood in the cafés along the seafront. Italian, Greek, and French were spoken in the street. The city was part of another world, one to which Marseille and Barcelona, Genoa, Athens and Algiers, Beirut and Tangier also belonged. That world had a culture all of its own, so powerful that the whole country was influenced as though the sea was its center of gravity. I wanted to find that spirit again . Back in the 1980s, a woman traveling alone was strange and suspect, but researching food gave me a mission and a reason to be there. It allowed me to make contacts, to ask for help, and to spend time in restaurant kitchens. It allowed me to accost people and introduce myself on trains, in cafés, or in the sitting rooms of pensions, or small hotels. I would start a conversation with "I'm an English food writer researching your cuisine. Can you tell me what your favorite dishes are?" They didn't always buy the "English," but were always happy to talk about their food. My interest was in home cooking and regional food. I was invited into homes where people still cooked as their parents and grandparents did. Part of the pleasure of researching food was meeting people, sharing a moment of their lives, and discovering their worlds. There is a special conviviality and intimacy in the kitchen that you don't quite get in the living room. The Mediterranean has remained the focus of my work. This book is based on remembered dishes that I have encountered over decades. Working on it has kept me happy, thinking of people and places, magic moments, and glorious food. It might be cold and gray and raining outside, but in my kitchen and at my desk in London I am smiling under an azure sky. The smell of garlic sizzling with crushed coriander seeds takes me back to the Egypt of my childhood. The aroma of saffron and orange zest mingled with aniseed and garlic triggers memories of the French Riviera. I still cook the dishes in this collection for family and friends. They capture so well the special charm and spirit of a world that enthralls me. Excerpted from Claudia Roden's Mediterranean: Treasured Recipes from a Lifetime of Travel [a Cookbook] by Claudia Roden All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.