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Nina Planck - The Real Food Cookbook Traditional Dishes for Modern Cooks

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Nina Planck The Real Food Cookbook Traditional Dishes for Modern Cooks
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When Nina Planck was on tour to promote her two earlier books Real Food and Real Food for Mother and Baby, the number one question she was asked was, When are you going to write a cookbook? At long last, the Real Food Cookbook is here.
In a dietary landscape overfull of low-carb bread and triglycerides, Planck is revolutionary in her complete embrace of a more old-fashioned way of eating. Aptly described by the Washington Post as a cross between Alice Waters and Martha Stewart, Planck showcases our traditional, real foods produce, dairy, meat, fish whose nutritional virtues she explained in her earlier books, through recipes that are both exciting and accessible to the home cook. The Real Food Cookbook takes 100 classic dishes, from starters, soups and salads to the center of the plate, dessert and a cheese course, and makes them anew, transforming them with fresh herbs, butter, seasonal fruits and vegetables, and whole grains. With essays and tips throughout, sharing Ninas own real lifestyle with cheesemonger husband and children, The Real Food Cookbook will provide inspiration for those seeking the variety of the omnivores table. Complete with more than 100 full-color photographs throughout, these recipes will liven up a weeknight, family dinner or please the masses at a holiday meal.
Review:
Planck promotes her good and simple philosophy of eating (Real Food: What to Eat and Why) in a collection of 150 straightforward, trend-bucking recipes. In this green-market driven cookbook, the Virginia farm girl and creator of Londons first farmers market shows home cooks how to bring authenticate, traditional dishes to the table. Plancks recipes celebrate the thrifty, seasonal, local, and home-made approach to cooking. Simple, yet sophisticated dishes are the result: chicken (free range) dishes include Coq au Vin Poached Thai Chicken Curry and a White Chicken Stroganoff with Dill. Planck reveals the secrets of the pumpkin family, and features many dairy-based desserts as well as instructing cooks how to prepare stocks and demi-glaces and serving cheese as a main course. She also provides a chapter on the essential breads. Beverage recipes praise home-crafted fruit sodas, fermented teas, and kefirs. How to prepare Passover seder and a small farm barbecue gives readers a glimpse of Plancks family table on two special occasions. Recipe notes compare from-scratch versions of dishes with grocery versions, and Plancks personal narrative reflects her Virginia farm roots she also includes essays that inspired her viewpoint. Proper foodstuffs for the basic pantry, the glories of cooking with cast iron, and a shopping list sharing favorite purveyors and producers are included. Planck reminds cooks that traditional methods for producing meals from authenticate foodstuffs are, in fact, a truly modern culinary approach. (June) Publishers Weekly Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Synopsis:
When Nina Planck toured to promote her two earlier books, Real Food and Real Food for Mother and Baby, the question she heard most was, When are you going to write a cookbook? At long last, The Real Food Cookbook is here.
In a dietary landscape overfull with low-carb bread and dubious advice about triglycerides, Planck is revolutionary in her complete embrace of a more old-fashioned and diverse way of eating. Aptly described by the Washington Post as a cross between Alice Waters and Martha Stewart, Planck showcases traditional, real foods produce, dairy, meat, fish, eggs through tempting and straightforward recipes for the beginner or regular home cook.
The Real Food Cookbook takes 150 classic dishes, from starters, soups, and salads to the center of the plate, to sweets and the cheese course, and makes them anew, transforming them with Ninas signature approach: using fresh herbs, good butter, seasonal fruits and vegetables, grass-fed and pastured meats, and whole grains. With essays and tips throughout, sharing Ninas own real-food lifestyle, The Real Food Cookbook will provide inspiration for any omnivorous cook or eater. Find recipes for every occasion: a cheese plate with drinks, a family Seder, Easter egg salads, a summer barbeque. Learn how Nina stocks her pantry and where she buys real food. Whether youre preparing the meals or simply eating them, everyone will enjoy the stories, feast on one hundred gorgeous full-color photographs, and beg the family cook to make the meals Nina loves.
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About the Author
Nina Planck is a farmers daughter, food writer, farmers market entrepreneur, local foodist, and advocate for traditional foods. She will liberate you to eat red meat, butter, raw milk, and lard. After reading Ninas work, you will eat the foods of your ancestors with pleasure and with impunity. Men and women planning to be parents will find her prenatal advice bracing and life-changing. She is the author of The Farmers Market Cookbook, Real Food: What to Eat and Why, and Real Food for Mother and Baby, and the founder of the wildly popular London Farmers Markets. Nina is a gifted speaker, a home cook, and a mother of three. She lives in New York City.

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By the Same Author

The Farmers Market Cookbook

Real Food: What to Eat and Why

Real Food for Mother and Baby: The Fertility Diet, Eating for Two, and First Foods

Copyright 2014 by Nina Planck Photographs Katherine Wolkoff All rights - photo 1

Copyright 2014 by Nina Planck
Photographs Katherine Wolkoff

All rights reserved. You may not copy, distribute, transmit, reproduce, or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by any means (including without limitation electronic, digital, optical, mechanical, photocopying, printing, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages. For information address
Bloomsbury USA, 1385 Broadway, New York, NY 10018.

Published by Bloomsbury USA, New York
Bloomsbury is a trademark of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Planck, Nina, 1971
The real food cookbook : traditional dishes for modern cooks / Nina Planck.-First U.S. edition.
pages cm
eISBN978-1-62040-933-6
1. Cooking. I. Title.
TX714.P576 2014
641.5-dc23
2014004170

First U.S. edition 2014
This electronic edition published in June 2014

Visit www.bloomsbury.com to find out more about our authors and their books. You will find extracts, author interviews, and author events and you can sign up for newsletters to be the first to hear about our latest releases and special offers.

Contents introduction In my twenties I found myself living in London - photo 2

Contents introduction In my twenties I found myself living in London - photo 3

Contents

introduction

In my twenties, I found myself living in London, England, and sorely homesick for an inimitable and tactile experience of home. What I missed most was a weekly visit to a busy farmers market, brimming with fresh, seasonal produce sold by the people who grew it. Most of all, I missed the food, but I also longed for the banal but quite pleasant background chatter of the small sale. Yes, the beets are beautiful today... looks like its just under two pounds... thatll be $7.50... well have corn in two weeks... our chickens run free on grass... the red peppers are sweeter... Genovese is the best basil for pesto... let the melon ripen on the counter till tomorrow... the garlic scape pesto was delicious, thank you... see you next Saturday. This was the agreeable if repetitive city soundtrack back when my rural Virginia family sold homegrown produce and flowers at Washington, D.C., farmers markets.

As a girl, I had no idea that my parents were farming legends and market pioneers. Nor did they. I knew only that we were farmers and that every single dollar we earned, some person at some farmers market had handed to us in exchange for fresh vegetables, berries, herbs, flowers, or eggs. Long mornings spent standing barefoot on the blacktop at the farmers market marked me with a lifelong habit.

When I left the farm at eighteen years old, I found that life without a good market was dry, tasteless. And in the capital of Cool Britannia in 1999, there was no such thing.

Of course there were markets in London, some of them ancient. But they werent selling what I needed. The street markets sold Dutch tomatoes along with batteries, dustpans, and tube socks, and in the smaller organic shops and markets, the superior attitude, rubbery carrots, and high prices turned me off. My fantasy was to ship an entire market load from my parents Wheatland Vegetable Farmstwo trucks of gorgeous, ecological vegetables destined for one of our best markets, Takoma Park in Marylandon the Concorde. I would set up our stand, just like at home, next to the shabby imported produce. The fabulous display of fine vegetables would cause a riot and change the world.

Eventually I hit on the simpler idea of asking local farmers to bring their produce to London, and to my delight, a dozen farmers agreed. On June 6, 1999, I opened my first farmers marketand Londons first modern farmers marketin Islington, not far from my house. All I wished for was a place to buy fresh peas, strawberries, and apples from local farms. I knew that Londoners would love food straight from the farm, toobut I didnt realize how much. The markets were a sensation. In three months I opened two more. Today we organize about two dozen year-round markets. In a few short years, farmers markets in England, Scotland, and Wales blossomed. My fantasy had come true.

Yet the markets also proved humbling. It was soon clear that I knew very little about much of the food our farmers were selling. In those days, I still suffered under the impression that a low-fat, vegetarian diet, with perhaps a bit of fish, was the only healthy one. Meanwhile, alongside the lovely produce Id longed for, the fine farmers at London Farmers Markets were selling foods seldom seen at an American farmers market back then. Right from the start, we had grass-fed beef, heritage pork, fat Christmas goose, wild venison, raw-milk cheeses, high-fat butter, and thick cream. It did not escape my notice that these fine ingredients brought rosy cheeks and a great deal of pleasure to our loyal customers.

It was time for me to eat these traditional foods and (more intimidating) to learn to cook them. So I did, with happy results. My health was never better and my meals never more delicious. Soon I was gathering the research to support the case for traditional foods in Real Food: What to Eat and Why. But the path from a limited, anxiety-driven diet to conscientious omnivory and polymorphous delight in foodas a cook and an eaterwas long, and I made many mistakes. With this book, perhaps I can spare you a few wrong turns. For this is the cookbook I needed when I learned that traditional foods from land, sea, and sky are not only tasty but also good for you.

Its an idiosyncratic collection. The recipes here are those of a farmers daughter, former vegetarian, and home cook. They reflect the rhythms of my life with a cheesemonger husband and three small children. The ingredients are timeless, not trendy; the methods classic rather than rule-breaking. Above all, these are the dishes I love, made with real food.

drinks nibbles drinks My brother and I were raised by a water purist My - photo 4

drinks & nibbles

drinks My brother and I were raised by a water purist My mother drinks water - photo 5

drinks

My brother and I were raised by a water purist. My mother drinks water and water only. She might flirt with a glass of raw milk, and she indulges in coffee as often as she swears off it, but I suspect no commercial soft drink has ever passed her lips. Sweaty noonday farmhands must drink, however, so we carried jugs of well water in the green flatbed Ford on scratchy mulch runs all over Loudoun County, and we left water jugs in the shade while hoeing pumpkins far from the house. In those long, dusty pumpkin rows, I often fantasized about the real lemonade Laura and Mary Ingalls carried to Pa and the farmhands who were bringing in the hay. On family car trips in dead of winter, our feet dangled over half-frozen water jugs. There Id be, thirsty on the Pennsylvania turnpike in twenty-degree February. Holding the heavy, frozen bottom of the milk jug, I tipped the just-melting ice water over my shivering gums. I still hate ice cubes.

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