Book ReviewVegetables by 40 Great French Chefs(11 May 2006 00:00)Take one market gardener, 40 French chefs, a couple of food journos and a London-based translator writing for the US market; garnish with extravagant photography of parsnips. The result? Death by over-design, a coffee-table cookbook of supreme pretentiousness - at least, that's how it presents itself. Article continues below
The recipes themselves are post-Arpège. Alain Passard's vegetarian menus made vegetables sexy. Chefs, and not only those across the Channel, are captivated by technique; here, it is applied with a spade and fork to give interesting textures or shapes or mouthfeel. Trimoline, lecithin and gels flit in and out of processes. Several dishes should be credited "in the style of Heston". A Swiss chard tart with an olive oil dough, by Catherine Guerraz, looks and reads as though it should be scrumptious rather than a mere style statement. A miniature pizza with goats' milk cheese and cantaloupe melon sprinkled with black pepper, from Charlotte Christiansson, might almost have come from the latest Jamie Oliver. As for the recipe by Passard: it's a soufflé fitted inside a hollowed-out celeriac bulb - nice filling, silly concept. A bit like the book. Michael Raffael, food writer Vegetables by 40 Great French Chefs Source: Caterer & Hotelkeeper |
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