Showing posts with label Book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book review. Show all posts

Book Review: A Life of Spice: Stories of Food, Culture & Life

>> Monday, 8 June 2015

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I became enamored with the writing of Monica Bhide when I first encountered her article, A Question of Taste, in Best Food Writing 2005. Given my own interest in food culture and heritage, and how the subject informs identity, and life itself, I am always drawn to food stories that go way beyond a recipe, and in Monica's latest work, A Life of Spice: Stories of Food, Culture & Life, she offers up a platter full of rich life stories through the lens of food. Even though the book is a quick-read, I found myself moving through the pages slowly, as many of the stories gave me pause - to ponder, laugh out loud or wait for the mist in my eyes to clear.

This book is not her food memoir, (that is coming soon, and if the taste - the traveling bread - is anything to go by, we are in for a treat) rather, this publication is a collection of stories the author has penned over the years that have been published in various publications, in print and online. Like a skillful cook, that carefully selects ingredients and assembles them along with flavour enhancers, such as spices and herbs, Monica selected stories and grouped them under six (6) different themes - culture, family, love, identity, faith and writing. In each theme, we read about how food intersects and interacts with life.

When you are a creator of works that are subjective and open to interpretation, it means that everything you do is open to criticism (constructive or not). You are held to a higher standard and fallibility is never an option, regardless of how unrealistic that may be. In this book, Monica bares herself in such a way that makes it easy to identify with her, and lets those who are unsure of themselves, in and out of the kitchen, know that life is not about perfection, rather, it is about the lessons we learn, especially when things don't turn out the way we want or expect them to. Her failed attempt at making Pad Thai, frozen mousse and rock-hard bread makes you want to root for her to give it another try. As a reader you realize that she is human, just like you! However, it's in her story, A Day In Paris, that I found her most endearing. Here, we find Monica vulnerable and nervous in a city she describes as the gastronomique capital of the world, filled with self doubt - about her lack of knowledge of French food and her own ability to make anything that the French might find appealing. This story more than any puts a human face on the trials and tribulations of being a food writer. If you're looking for something to inspire confidence, read this story, first, and heed the lessons of removing limitations we place on ourselves and testing our assumptions.

For a good laugh, read Fasting for Love Pt. 1, where, as a young bride, Monica sets out to observe Karva Chauth - a day of fasting in the Hindu religion where a wife prays for her husband to have a long life.

Food and Family was my favorite section of the book, and within this section is a story, Counting Peas. Movingly told, this story is about bonding and bridging. Engrossed in a task that is not so much about the food being prepared, but about the time shared in each others company, the author creates memories with her son while recalling and sharing her own childhood memories when she (Monica) and her distant relative (Bahenjee) made sev (noodles) while summering at her grandparents home, back in India.

The following is the story of A Familiar Taste.

A mother, chronically ill with lost taste buds.
A daughter, feeling defeated and wanting to feed her mother.
A bowl of cumin-spiced potatoes.

Mother to daughter: Do you remember when I first taught you how to make these? You would cut the potatoes in all different sizes and they never cooked right! You used so much oil that you practically drowned the cumin.

Mother picks up a small piece of potato and puts it in her mouth. "This tastes so good, just like I remember," says the mother, and she eats two more pieces.

A Life of Spice: Stories of Food, Culture & Life is a good read.

Cumin Potatoes photo cpotatoes6_zpszsssb19w.png

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Tablemanners: Book Review

>> Saturday, 30 June 2012

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Image reproduced from Tablemanners Cookbook © www.foodanddrink-caribbean.com

Antigua & Barbuda beat out front runners Italy, France & Germany to cop first place and the title of Best Design in the recently concluded prestigious Gourmand World Cookbook Awards in their nominated category! Writing that sentence and reading it aloud is such sweet pleasure!

Tablemanners: A Culinary Review of Hospitality in Antigua & Barbuda, by the husband and wife team of Gulliver Johnson & Janie Conley-Johnson, is a stunning book. Weighing a little over 7 1/2 pounds with an open breath of 34 inches, it is easy to see why this book won best design. The cover reeks of sophistication with the grey title delicately but emphatically placed halfway down the predominantly white cover. A pair of shiny-silver fork and knife placed to one side with words: Antigua Barbuda, separately, engraved on each handle, begs for you to turn the cover. A bold band of orange colour guides you where to turn.

On the inside of the book, the font and size of the text used makes for easy reading. The colour scheme of white, orange and grey is used deftly to border the pages, highlight the titles and emphasize the copy. The large areas of white background on each page give each photograph the room necessary to breathe. The whiteness also allows the bold, vibrant colours for which Caribbean cuisine is known, to really come through.

The outstanding design of the book is equally matched by the contents - the number of recipes, the features and overall scope of the food landscape in Antigua and Barbuda. The Conley & Johnson team along with their collaborators have put together a body of work that each country in the region should produce for itself. Granted that in several cases, one such book would not suffice, but rather a series of volumes. Tablemanners successfully offers itself as a guide, as a cookbook, and more importantly, it shows how the old meet the new (the food, the ingredients, the people). The authors point out that it is not a traditional cookbook and truth be told that not all cookbooks need to be traditional. Tablemanners elevates and celebrates what's local and seasonal. It embraces the influences of other worldly cuisines and it take us where no other Caribbean cookbook has before (at least none that I've read), into the world of pairing our food with wine! The straightforward and down-to-earth advice from the experts at Quin Farara & Co. Ltd., along with the wine suggestion for each recipe (appetizer, main course and dessert) takes the guesswork out of the hands of wine neophytes like myself.

Tablemanners contains 24 full-length articles that encompass profiles of chefs, like the one of Chef Verman Banhan, a Jamaica of African, Chinese and Indian heritage, a mix of heritages that is representative of many in this region. Chef Banhan or "Dezi" as he is known says, "I admire the culture of my grandmother and mother, but I don't hang on to their birthright which isn't mine; I'm Jamaican! I have a lot of Jamaican culture in me and I am every part a product of our country's motto (Jamaica) - out of many, one people." How telling is that comment and of the food we make and eat in the Caribbean.

While Chef Banhan's profile represents the new, there are profiles of those who have stood as the pillars of Caribbean cuisine, like Dame Gwendolyn Tonge (Auntie Gwen). For over 50 years, Auntie Gwen, as she is fondly known has been teaching people how to cook through her local cooking show on the national television station - Antigua Broadcasting Service (ABS). Bridging the gap, and with a nod to the future are the works of graduates and current students of the Antigua & Barbuda Hospitality Training Institute, all featured in Tablemanners.

Articles on the Spiny lobster, Susie's Hot Sauce and the twin-islands' famous Black Fruit Cake all find a place of honour in Tablemanners.

The book has 2 recipe sections with a total of 150 recipes. The first section features recipes from their annual Mango Pineapple Festival - a competition and festival organized annually since 2005 to showcase the bounty, beauty and diversity of the variety of mangoes grown in Antigua & Barbuda. They have varieties such as Edward, Irwin, Julie & Tommy Atkins. This festival is a true celebration of what's local and seasonal. It shows the many ways in which one can use mangoes - sauces, salads, salsas, vinaigrettes, cold soups, butters, desserts and of course drinks and cocktails.

The Tablemanners recipes are divided into 5 categories: appetizers and canapés, fish and seafood, poultry and meat, desserts and cocktails. The West Indian Scrambled Eggs with Smoked Herring and Tomatoes, Cassava-crusted Shrimp and the Soy Ginger Pork Sirloin with Tomato-raisin Chutney are among my favorites.


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Image reproduced from Tablemanners Cookbook © www.foodanddrink-caribbean.com


The beverages in both recipe sections are sure to delight and please - the alcoholic and non-alcoholic ones. I particularly like Hurricane Julie - a blend of Julie mango puree, ginger, lime juice and syrup poured into a chilled glass drizzled with steaks of white and dark chocolate.


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Image reproduced from Tablemanners Cookbook © www.foodanddrink-caribbean.com


The other main section of Tablemanners, simply titled: Information, features the profiles and a directory of the islands' restaurants and bars complete with contact information and web addresses. Profiles and directories of purveyors and specialist providers as well as agro processors are all in Tablemanners. The book truly lives up to its stated purpose of being a review and culinary guide of the food landscape of Antigua & Barbuda over the past several years.

Tablemanners is a coffee-table cookbook and guide that you and guests will enjoy over and over again. Mangoes are now in season so it's a perfect time to pick up a copy of this book and get cooking and drinking! It's a job well done! Congratulations Gulliver Johnson & Janie Conley-Johnson!


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Julie Mango Cheesecake w/Cinnamon Roasted Pineapple & Mango Chutney
Image reproduced from Tablemanners Cookbook © www.foodanddrink-caribbean.com


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Coconut-Steamed Red Snapper w/Mango Pineapple & local Provisions in Coconut Milk
Image reproduced from Tablemanners Cookbook © www.foodanddrink-caribbean.com


Title: Tablemanners: A Culinary Review of Hospitality in Antigua & Barbuda
Authors: Gulliver Johnson & Janie Conley-Johnson
Publishers: Leeward Consultants & Associates Ltd.
ISBN: 978-976-8212-69-6
Cost: US$120 (includes postage and packaging)
Order online: www.fooddrinkcaribbean.bigcartel.com or www.facebook.com/FoodandDrink.Antigua
In Antigua & Barbuda: Best of Books, Royal Palm Court and EM Grimes Greame.


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Authors, Design Artists, Photographers: Gulliver Johnson & Janie Conley-Johnson
© 2012 TIBORFOTO.COM

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