Elfreda Pownall

Christmas cookery books

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Skye Gingell is a different type of cook. With her first book, A Year in my Kitchen (Quadrille, £25), she does not look back to an established tradition, but has made her own original style using a ‘toolbox’ of flavours and textures which balance sour and sweet, soft and crunchy. The intense tastes of her dishes and her earnest tone are captivating. These are not difficult recipes, but they do call for time and trouble. Her ‘toolbox’ ingredients (including lemon zest, infused oils and toasted sourdough crumbs), if used as she suggests, will transform your cooking.

Breadmaking has been greatly improved in our house by following the lengthy, but infallible, instructions in Andrew Whitley’s Bread Matters: The State of Modern Bread and a Definitive Guide to Baking Your Own (Fourth Estate, £20). Crusts are crunchier, crumb is lighter and, sadly, I am fatter.

In his first book, Tom Aikens Cooking (Ebury, £25) the golden boy chef du jour exemplifies the chasm between restaurant-style cooking and the home range. The recipes he marks ‘challenging’, though they look beautiful, would be a real task for the home cook; they are dishes from his eponymous, fine-dining restaurant. Those marked ‘easy’ — Fig Tart, Pork Knuckle with Braised Vegetables are from his new brasserie — I have been making. Not without difficulty though; the small, thin, pale grey type is definitely ‘challenging’.

I had expected to be able to make nothing at all from Grand Livre de Cuisine: Alain Ducasse’s Desserts and Pastries (Stewart Tabori and Chang, £110), but there is lots in here for the home cook. This most starry of Michelin chefs has produced a beautiful and huge book (don’t read it in bed or it might crush you to death), an encyclopedia of baking and confectionery. The recipes are as clear as the photographs, a real inspiration for dedicated, hobby cooks. Unlike its companion volume of his savoury recipes, all the ingredients are affordable — perhaps not a worry for those who have shelled out £110. This would be a good present from a fairy godfather to a cookery-struck teenager.

Other teenagers (and some adults) might prefer to read about food, rather than cooking it: Sound Bites by Alex Kapranos (Penguin/Fig Tree, £12.99), the singer and guitarist of Franz Ferdinand (formerly a chef, wine waiter and kitchen porter), writes engagingly about the extraordinary people he has met and the food the group ate on their 2005 world tour, from kimchi to haggis, pregnant smelt to the fugu fish in Japan. If its toxic liver really did kill one in every hundred of the people who ate the (allegedly) delectable fish, there would hardly be a male food writer left alive.

Fugu makes its inevitable appearance too in The Year of Eating Dangerously by Tom Parker Bowles (Ebury, £15.99), a self-imposed macho challenge, inspired no doubt by the exploits of Anthony Bourdain. Parker Bowles, far from being a vainglorious New York chef, is a funny, self-deprecating English toff and decidedly leery of the task of eating things that, though they are prized in other parts of the world, are disgusting to us — grubs, maggots and dog among them. Shuddering as I read, I thanked God women don’t need to prove themselves by drinking the contents of the gall bladder cut out of a live and understandably angry cobra, mixed with rice wine, or even by visiting a snake restaurant in China — or anywhere.

Rose Carrarini’s bravery was of a different order. She left her successful delicatessen in London in 2002 to bring traditional British tearoom fare to Paris, the city of soigné patisseries. And Parisians now flock to eat her muesli breakfasts, quiche and salad lunches and scone and carrot cake teas. In Breakfast, Lunch, Tea (Phaidon, £19.95) she gives recipes for her versions of these British classics. Her Rose Bakery in the rue des Martyrs has become groove-central in Paris. If Ducasse’s customers are clad in Chanel those at the Rose Bakery are to be seen in black, unstructured, designer clothes. There are lots of good, original salads and hearty soups to make for every day, but so tempting are the cake and pastry recipes that, after a year of cooking the Rose way, I would be ready for loose, unstructured clothes too.

Every keen cook who eats at Le Mignon Lebanese restaurant in Camden wants the recipe for its hummus or tabbouleh. The publisher Kyle Cathie, an enthusiastic luncher there, has pinned down its chef and with The Lebanese Cookbook by Hussein Dekmak (Kyle Cathie, £16.99) has answered their prayers. The surprise is that there are so few ingredients in his dishes. Moujarada, a dish of brown lentils with rice and crispy onions, is, like the rest of his savoury dishes, simple to make and simply delicious to eat.

One wonders that The Spectator feels the need to produce a book of Simon Courtauld’s food columns. Surely his enthusiastic readers cut out his words every time to paste into their scrapbooks? But for those who wish to revisit the columns, or want a stocking present for a fellow fan, here he is in Food for Thought: Fish and Feather (Think Books, £9.99) dealing with fish, poultry and feathered game.

This year I have been cooking a lot from Sunday Suppers at Lucques by Suzanne Goin (Borzoi/Knopf, $35). Lucques is the name of her restaurant in Los Angeles and also her favourite type of olive. She is a graduate of Chez Panisse, and as such typically precise in specifying a type of olive or variety of persimmon. She encourages readers to taste endlessly, to consider each ingredient carefully. The book has about 120 recipes arranged into seasonal menus. I haven’t found one yet that was not superb. In food terms she has perfect pitch. Despite the bore of US weights and measures, this is my book of the year.

Elfreda Pownall is Food and Interiors Editor of Stella/The Sunday Telegraph.

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