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Hardcover Vegetable Harvest: Vegetables at the Center of the Plate Book

ISBN: 0060752440

ISBN13: 9780060752446

Vegetable Harvest: Vegetables at the Center of the Plate

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

The potager , or French vegetable garden, represents the very best of French cuisine: fresh, flavorful, and easily accessible for home cooks everywhere. In Vegetable Harvest , Patricia Wells presents... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great veggies and more

You can't go wrong with Patricia Wells' books on food. "Vegetable Harvest" is no exception. This not a vegetarian cookbook, but the emphasis is on the use of fresh vegetables, fruits, etc. in a decidely French context. If you don't have a cookbook with this focus, give "Vegetable Harvest" a try. It's also a good companion for Wells' "Italian 101" or "Italian Trattoria Cooking," which are both superb.

sane and savory: Wells is Julia Child for the new millennium

Timing is everything. Patricia Wells, an American living in Paris, started her cookbook series in the traditional way --- with a book about bistro cookery. She moved up the food chain to fine Paris restaurants, then wandered south to Provence and the Trattoria cooking of Italy. And now this book on vegetables. Perfect timing. American cooks ---and eaters --- have come to understand what the French always knew: The way to slimness is portion size. That is, smaller helpings of fatty protein, larger servings of vegetables. This is also the way to health. If you've read "The Omnivore's Dilemma"--- or any recent headline about food inspection and food safety --- you know you're taking a chance every time you shop at the supermarket. They say you'd never eat sausage if you saw how it's made; ditto for most beef, chicken or pork. The secret --- saieth my wife, the one-time food professional --- is to spend more money to buy smaller quantities of the highest-quality meat and poultry. How do you fill your plate and satisfy your hunger? With vegetables, which are, at their worst, much less toxic than run-of-the-mill supermarket meat and poultry. "Vegetable Harvest" establishes Patricia Wells as Julia Child for the new millennium. She's not a frothing New Ager, telling you to heap your plate with vegetables because meat is sinful --- she's just a close observer of traditional French cooking. That is, meat/fish/poultry prominent on the plate, just cooked with vegetables or surrounded by them. To that good sense, she's added some welcome information: nutritional data about the dish: Tomato and Strawberry Gazpacho, for example, is 27 calories per serving, with 1 gram of protein and 6 grams of carbohydrates. And she's not above serving up the odd fact about her subjects (did you know that, in the 16th century, Europeans considered the tomato as an aphrodisiac?). "Vegetable Harvest" is an encyclopedia of recipes --- it's 300 pages, with almost no commentary. Most are simple, requiring few exotic ingredients or advanced techniques. I'm particularly excited about the soups, but judging from the recipes I've tried and the pages I've turned down, there's a lot here to love in every category. And I certainly look forward to loving the healthier, trimmer me.

A Great Buy!

I pre-ordered this book on a whim, and am so glad I did! The recipes are easy and accessible; the ingredient lists are short and often include what I already have kicking around the kitchen, the prep and cooking times tend to be on the short side, and the cooking techniques used are basic, but fun. The nutritional information given for each recipe is very helpful, and Ms. Wells' comments on French culture and "things she's learned" from her past experience are both useful and diverting. In a culture that perceives a balanced meal as a giant hunk of meat and a blob of potatoes on a plate with a smattering of vegetables on the side, it's a challenge to make a shift to eating more vegetables. This cookbook makes it easy to start planning a meal with the vegetables. Many of the recipes have a short enough prep time that I cook them on weeknights after work, where in the past I would get take-out or eat cereal, because real cooking didn't fit into my schedule. I have been cooking much more since I got this book, and have easily doubled my vegetable intake. I feel lighter, more energetic, and generally better about what I'm eating, and everything tastes so good that I can't wait to dig in! I haven't tried any of the breads yet, but just purchased a KitchenAid mixer with a dough hook so that I can begin to tackle them too! This cookbook will almost certainly be a Christmas gift to several of my friends!

A wonderful cookbook

Patricia Wells has outdone herself. The recipes are easy, the directions are clear and the calorie count and other nutritional information is very helpful. Every recipe I have tried so far is delicious. Don't miss the deceptively simple corn and lemon zest recipe.

Another great foodie treat from Madame Wells. Buy It.

`Vegetable Harvest' by the prolific culinary expatriate journalist and leading contemporary chronicler of the French `cuisine bourgeoisie' Patricia Wells is anticipated by foodies with about as much glee as the fans awaiting the next Harry Potter installation. At least at my house, that is true. So, imagine my surprise when I discover I am not immediately impressed by the book's realization of the premise promised by the title and subtitle. In the end, I find this a typically rewarding Patricia Wells cookbook. It's just that Ms. Wells happened to hide her best light under a basket this time. This is NOT a book all about vegetable recipes! Rather, it is a book which, like all her other books, celebrates everyday French cooking, and in doing so, underlining the fact that vegetables are central to much of what is great about French cooking, and shows us how this is so. Overall, the book covers all the bases that any typical cookbook does. It has some recipes with no vegetables in it at all, and some where the only vegetable is an herb or some garlic. But what Madame Wells does with vegetables is really a joy. The book is something like a movie where a traditionally great supporting actor such as Harvey Keitel or Joe Panteleone (Joe Pants!) steps into the leading role, with Jack Nicholson or John Travolta playing the supporting role. The part about hiding her virtues under a basket refer to the fact that there are two facts given for almost every recipe which are enormously useful for using the recipes for good nutrition or entertaining. The amazing thing is that these features show up with no fanfare in the introduction. The first is a nutritional analysis of each dish by serving. For example, the Roasted Chickpeas, Mushrooms, Artichokes, and Tomatoes on page 146 has 235 calories, 3 g fat, 12 g protein and 47 g carbohydrates. Thus, if you are limiting your intake of total calories, fats, or carbs, you know where you stand! This eminently useful feature did not appear in her previous book, `The Provence Cookbook' or in any earlier work. The second feature is a wine suggestion for each of the more substantial dishes (Some appetizers and some desserts have no suggestion.) This feature does appear in Ms. Wells' earlier books, and like her earlier books, it is aimed at the dedicated wine connoisseur. The recommendations are extremely specific, citing particular vintners such as the Mas de la Dame from Les Baux de Provence for Guy Savoy's Tomato Coulis with Asparagus and Mint. These wine choices are consistent with the tone of the entire book, which is clearly written for the foodie, especially the dedicated Francophile foodie. A second symptom of this targeting is the fact that Ms. Wells does an excellent job of specifying the kinds of special equipment one will need to prepare a dish, and a survey across all recipes reveals that one will be limited if you do not have a food processor, a blender, a 12 inch saute pan with lid, a good sized pasta pot wi
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