Books

  1. A Passion for Provence
    A Passion for Provence

  2. The Bold Vegetarian
    The Bold Vegetarian

  3. Full of Beans
    Full of Beans

  4. Tonics
    Tonics

  5. Yesterday's Bread: 101 Creative Recipes for Not-quite-fresh Bread
    Yesterday's Bread: 101 Creative Recipes for Not-quite-fresh Bread

  6. Soy Desserts
    Soy Desserts

  7. Bubble Bubble Toil and Trouble
    Bubble Bubble Toil and Trouble

  8. Shaken Not Stirred
    Shaken Not Stirred

  9. California Wine Country (Access Guides)
    California Wine Country (Access Guides)

  10. The Last-minute Party Girl: Fashionable, Fearless and Foolishly Simple Entertaining
    The Last-minute Party Girl: Fashionable, Fearless and Foolishly Simple Entertaining

  11. The Complete "Fat Flush" Program: Three-Book Bundle
    The Complete "Fat Flush" Program: Three-Book Bundle

  12. "Good Housekeeping" Microwave Hints (Good Housekeeping Cookery Club)
    "Good Housekeeping" Microwave Hints (Good Housekeeping Cookery Club)

  13. "Good Housekeeping" New Step-by-step Cook Book (Good Housekeeping Cookery Club)
    "Good Housekeeping" New Step-by-step Cook Book (Good Housekeeping Cookery Club)

  14. Annabel Karmel's Baby and Toddler Cookbook
    Annabel Karmel's Baby and Toddler Cookbook

  15. Vegetarian ("Good Housekeeping" Cookery Club S.)
    Vegetarian ("Good Housekeeping" Cookery Club S.)

  16. Raw Energy Recipes (Dynamic Health Collection)
    Raw Energy Recipes (Dynamic Health Collection)

  17. Raw Energy: The Revolutionary Bestseller (Classic Collections)
    Raw Energy: The Revolutionary Bestseller (Classic Collections)

  18. The Whole Earth Cookbook: Over 170 Imaginative and Easy-to-prepare Vegan and Vegetarian Recipes
    The Whole Earth Cookbook: Over 170 Imaginative and Easy-to-prepare Vegan and Vegetarian Recipes

  19. Quick Cooking ("Good Housekeeping" Cookery Club S.)
    Quick Cooking ("Good Housekeeping" Cookery Club S.)

  20. The Noodle Cookbook: Quick and Easy Recipes from Around the World
    The Noodle Cookbook: Quick and Easy Recipes from Around the World

  21. More Taste Than Time
    More Taste Than Time

  22. The Family Heart Association Low-fat Diet Book: Includes Over 130 Low Fat, Low Cholesterol Recipes
    The Family Heart Association Low-fat Diet Book: Includes Over 130 Low Fat, Low Cholesterol Recipes

  23. "Good Housekeeping" New Basic Cookery (Good Housekeeping Cookery Club)
    "Good Housekeeping" New Basic Cookery (Good Housekeeping Cookery Club)

  24. Roast Chicken and Other Stories
    Roast Chicken and Other Stories

  25. "Good Housekeeping" Essential Food Processor Handbook (Good Housekeeping Cookery Club)
    "Good Housekeeping" Essential Food Processor Handbook (Good Housekeeping Cookery Club)

A Passion for My Provence: Home Cooking from the South of France
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Another Excellent Culinary Evocation of Provence
  • Delicious and home cook friendly
  • Great Recipes, wonderful anecdotes
A Passion for My Provence: Home Cooking from the South of France
Lydie Marshall
Manufacturer: Morrow Cookbooks
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

GeneralGeneral | Baking | Cooking, Food & Wine | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Cooking, Food & Wine | Subjects | Books
FrenchFrench | European | Regional & International | Cooking, Food & Wine | Subjects | Books
Look Inside CookbooksLook Inside Cookbooks | Trip | Specialty Stores | Books
Similar Items:
  1. Chez Nous: Home Cooking from the South of France
  2. Slow-Cooked Comfort: Soul-Satisfying Stews, Casseroles, and Braises for Every Season
  3. The Provence Cookbook
  4. Passion for Potatoes
  5. Soup of the Day: 150 Sustaining Recipes for Soup and Accompaniments to Make a Meal

ASIN: 0060931647

Book Description

With charm and enthusiasm, Lydie Marshall invites readers to explore the savory splendor of her native France. In A Passion for My Provence (previously published as Chez Nous), Lydie combines anecdotes of her time spent in Provence--the land of olive oil and garlic--with recipes she has acquired from three generations of French friends and family. The book begins with a tour of Lydie's restored château in the olive capital, Nyons, ending at the birthplace of many fabulous meals--her inviting kitchen. But Lydie's inspirations come from beyond her copper-potted enclave; she gathers wild herbs in the surrounding hills, buys fresh produce and meats from the village market, and collects the traditional country recipes of her neighbors. These recipes, cleverly adapted for American kitchens, reflect the joyous bounty of France. With relaxed guidance and eminent authority, Lydie Marshall combines French flair, style, thrift, and taste with American efficiency and concern for diet. Sample Lydie's recipes, and you will taste the honest, satisfying, and delicious cooking of rural France.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Another Excellent Culinary Evocation of Provence.......2004-04-06

On the shelves of most libraries and bookstores today, Italian themed cookbooks outnumber French themed cookbooks by about three (3) to one (1), as they do on my bookshelf. Of these Italian cookbooks, over half deal explicitly with a regional Italian cuisine, with Tuscany, Rome, and Emilia-Romagna leading the pack. Yet, the most common culinary region as book subject is Provence, in Southern France along the Rhone river. To many minds this is foodie central for the Mediterranean cuisine, being a location with a uniquely strong junction of olive, grape, and vegetable culture with the seafood of the Mediterranean. Not only are many books written specifically about Provence, but it is the spiritual center of inspiration for practically every major culinary writer in English, most prominently Julia Child, Richard Olney and James Beard, all of whom either maintained homes in Provence or visited the area on a regular basis.

Not only does Provence lead in pure numbers, I think it also leads in the quality of the writing and in the diversity of the cuisine. As evidence, I submit a book I reviewed earlier, `Patricia Wells At Home in Provence' and my current subject `A Passion for My Provence' by Lydie Marshall. The two books have very similar chapter headings and both deal with tarts, daubes, vegetable stews, and fish stews aplenty. Aioli and tapenade flows over their pages like water. Still, it was very surprising to me to find virtually no duplication in recipes in the two books. This is doubly surprising because when I reviewed two books on Roman cuisine, I easily found five different entree (not condiment) recipes occurring in the two books with identical Italian names and similar recipes.

Both authors conduct cooking classes in their homes in Provence. Ms. Marshall lives in an old chateau in Nyons, a small town on a small tributary of the Rhone in central Provence. Ms. Marshall is a native of France. Ms. Wells, a native American, spends most of her time in Paris, but she summers in northern Provence, where she and her husband have had a farmhouse for over twenty years.

All of this makes choosing between these two books very difficult, especially since I believe the sizes of each book is almost perfectly proportional to the list prices and the presence of color photos in the more expensive (Wells) but not in the less expensive. The absence of common recipes in these books can probably be explained by the fact that both books specifically advertise themselves as collections of home recipes. As the two homes are separated by quite a distance in a very provincial land, it is no surprise that the two writers have little but a general style of cooking in common.

Certain ingredients share the starring roles in both books. It would not be Provencal cooking without eggplant, onions, asparagus, tomatoes, cepes (porcini), monkfish, and chicken. Ms. Marshall has a great section on fowl of various types, but all recipes can be made with chicken if pheasant or guinea hen is not available. Ms. Marshall also surprises us by covering ingredients such as pumpkin that Ms. Wells does not even mention. Ms. Marshall also devotes a considerable amount of space to pissaladiere, `the Provencal version of pizza' which has its origins in Nice. The classic topping for pissaladiere is an anchovy and onion marmalade. The crust is quite thick, more like a Sicilian than a Neapolitan thin crust pizza. Ms. Marshall in fact makes her pissaladiere with potato dough. She devotes over twenty pages to pissaladiere and other recipes one can base on this dough. In contrast, Ms. Wells has recipes for pizza and fougasse (French foccacia), but nothing on pissaladiere.

On average, I find Ms. Marshall's instructions less detailed than Ms. Wells, but I find no resulting deficiency in the quality of her dishes. Ms. Wells, being a professional journalist who hobnobs with the likes of Joel Robuchon will certainly have more to say about ingredients and technique. But, Ms. Marshall even has her own Robuchon story in describing the great chef's solution to doing a salt baked fish where the salt coat comes off without excessive salt in the fish itself. Ms. Wells includes wines to match each dish and Ms. Marshall does not.

As both books are in paperback with a total list price below $40, I would buy both, especially if you are fond of French cooking. If your budget is tight, get the work by Ms. Marshall and wait for Ms. Wells soon to be published new book on Provencal cooking.

Highly recommended, especially for those on a budget.

5 out of 5 stars Delicious and home cook friendly.......2004-01-30

This book is a gem. I feel this book more approachable than, say, "Mastering the Art of French Cooking" to today's health-conscious home cooks. I have tried breads (fougasse, pissaladiere) to vegetables to chicken dishes to desserts with excellent results. Try her tartes (pies) for a change from your usual pies; they are truely eye-opening. Besides, it is a joy to read.

5 out of 5 stars Great Recipes, wonderful anecdotes.......1999-08-07

An absolutely delightful addition to the important segment of books regarding Provence and cooking. Easy to follow, delicious recipes are accompanied by entertaining anecdotes.
La passion selon Don Juan: Exposition, Musee Granet, Musee des tapisseries, Pavillon de Vendome : Ville d'Aix-en-Provence, 12 juillet-30 septembre 1991
Average customer rating: Not rated
    La passion selon Don Juan: Exposition, Musee Granet, Musee des tapisseries, Pavillon de Vendome : Ville d'Aix-en-Provence, 12 juillet-30 septembre 1991

    Manufacturer: La Ville
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Unknown Binding

    GeneralGeneral | Arts & Photography | Subjects | Books
    FrenchFrench | Foreign Language Nonfiction | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
    Arts & PhotographyArts & Photography | French | Foreign Language Books | Specialty Stores | Books
    NonfictionNonfiction | French | Foreign Language Books | Specialty Stores | Books
    All French BooksAll French Books | French | Foreign Language Books | Specialty Stores | Books
    ASIN: 2902410050

    Books:

    1. A Passion for Provence
    2. Alastair Little's Italian Kitchen
    3. Cafe Spice Namaste: New-wave Indian Cooking with Over 100 Recipes
    4. West and Woods Introduction to Foodservice: Introduction to Foodservice
    5. The Pocket Soup Cookbook (Australian Pocket Penguins)
    6. Summer Cooking (Penguin Cookery Library)
    7. Choice Cuts
    8. Your Cookery Questions Answered: An Illustrated A-Z Guide to the Hows, Whys and Whens of Cooking
    9. Last Dinner on the "Titanic": Menus and Recipes from the Great Liner
    10. Country Ales and Breweries (Country S.)

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