Picture of author.

Jenny Linford

Autor(a) de A Pocket Guide to Herbs

43 Works 680 Membros 9 Críticas

Obras por Jenny Linford

A Pocket Guide to Herbs (2007) 107 exemplares
Trees (Pocket Guide) (2006) 81 exemplares
Lighthouses (2006) 43 exemplares
Food Lovers' London (1991) — Autor — 41 exemplares
Great British Cheeses (2008) 27 exemplares
The London Cookbook (2008) 17 exemplares
The Creamery Kitchen (2014) 15 exemplares
The Tate Cookbook (1996) 9 exemplares
The Ultimate Guide to Trees (2012) 9 exemplares
Cheeses (Collins Gem) (2000) 5 exemplares
Dog Names (2006) 4 exemplares
Les phares d'ici et d'ailleurs (2007) 4 exemplares
A Taste of London (1997) 2 exemplares
Guide to Herbs (2012) 2 exemplares
Writing About Food 2 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Data de nascimento
20th Century
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
UK
Local de nascimento
London, England, UK
Locais de residência
Italy
Singapore

Membros

Críticas

There are some good recipes but there are others that require trips to specialty stores. I found only one recipe I want to try. Still pretty to look at, though.
 
Assinalado
pacbox | Jul 9, 2022 |
My biggest complaint is that some of the photos used (in the version I have) were out-of-focus or at least partially blurry. A close-up is fine, but sometimes a shot further away would be nice too (and vice versa.)
 
Assinalado
bookwyrmqueen | Oct 25, 2021 |
An interesting angle on an old subject. She's talking about food in general, and looking at it in terms of the time involved in turning ingredients into food - it starts with seconds, discussing things like timing for eggs and seafood and caramels. Few foods actually cook in seconds, but (for instance) the difference between golden-brown caramel and burnt black caramel is a matter of seconds in the timing of removing it from the heat. She progresses through minutes, hours, days, months, years, centuries - rapidly moving from cooking food to creating it (aging cheese, for instance) to preserving it (making true balsamic vinegar, or aging fine wine) and ending with more of concepts of cooking, and preserving a way of life. Part of this is maintaining traditional breeds of animals (and plants, though she focuses more on animals) in order to create unique foods from them - from a much leaner variety of pig, to cows that give rich milk but not as much as modern dairy breeds. There are no recipes as such in here, but there's detailed descriptions of how to make various foods (the aforementioned caramel, for instance) - you'll still need a recipe for amounts, but if you have one the information here might make it easier to get it right. I found it reasonably interesting - not fascinating, but definitely worth reading.… (mais)
½
 
Assinalado
jjmcgaffey | 1 outra crítica | Jan 22, 2019 |
Pretty book, covers quite a bit of information, best as an introduction to the subject. No real rational given for the particular food items chosen other than we now take them for granted. The science included seems quite simplistic, not what I expect from Smithsonian Books. It does make one appreciate how many food items from The Americas went on to become global staples.
 
Assinalado
MM_Jones | 1 outra crítica | Jan 7, 2019 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
43
Membros
680
Popularidade
#37,181
Avaliação
½ 3.6
Críticas
9
ISBN
80
Línguas
6

Tabelas & Gráficos