Product Details
The Momo Cookbook

The Momo Cookbook
By Momo Mazouz

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Product Description

What is undeniable is the beauty with thich nature has endowed the countries of North Africa, the wealth of their cuisine and the boundless hospitality of their people. In these countries the cuisine resembles the landscapes: it is warm, colourful, aromatic, subtle and mysterious.

Among the many new restaurants of recent years, Momo is quite simply unique, Mourad Mazouz (otherwise known as Momo) has drawn upon his Algerian background and his extensive knowledge of Nor Aftican food and culture to create and extraordinary place - a little fragment of a North African souk dropped into central London.

Now Mourad Mazouz has applied his talents and experience to producing an equally inventive and original cookbook. his ambition is to open the door to North Africa, to introduce readers to its cuisine and customs.

Cooking in North Africa is an art beyond the simple process of preparing food. IT is the art of taking time to live, the art of taking time to do what needs to be done. The Momo Cookbook contains ninety authentic recipes from Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria, including some of the region's most characteristic and delicious dishes: tagines, couscous, briks and briouats, gazelle hornes (delicately shaped almond pastries) and refreshing mint tea.
As well as recipes, stunning photography evokes the romance and mystery of the region - its colours, images, traditions and rituals, while award-winning writer, Janine di Giovanni, contributes prose portraits of the land, the people, their customs and their legendary hospitality.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #120272 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-04-03
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 224 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Roasted meats seasoned with precious saffron underlaid with the pungent notes of cumin, cinnamon, and turmeric, marinated fish snuggled in a bed of almonds, pickled lemon and couscous, simultaneously sweet and piquant salads, delicate and sugary pastries flavoured with fragrant orange-blossom water, dripping with honey and served with a fresh rinse of mint tea. What more proof could there be that food for the body should be food for the soul? Small wonder that the worshippers of sensual culinary delights have anointed Momo one of the most successful new restaurants in recent years, for vibrantly conjuring up the atmosphere of a North African souk right in the heart of London.

The Momo Cookbook is much more than a recipe collection. Prose portraits of the land of the Maghreb (Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria) connect its rich history to the development of a distinctive cuisine which, over the centuries, has been influenced by Jewish, Arabic, Italian and Spanish culture. Stunning location photographs bring the colourful landscape, its traditions and people to life.

But the meat of the book is, of course, the food. The 90 recipes open a door to North Africa and fortunately the ingredients do not cost the price of a return flight: lots of vegetables, fruits, cereals, meats, fish and poultry which, with the artful use of spices, herbs and fragrant waters, are transformed into marvels. Momo himself identifies traditional recipes (such as mechouia, a roasted pepper and tomato salad, harira, a rich and thick soup made with cereal, and briouats stuffed and fried pastry parcels) as well as modern dishes created in the restaurant (such as fillet of John Dory with confit aubergines and polenta, dried fruit salad with aromatic spices, and boureks of crispy vegetables) yet easily prepared in a home kitchen, such as the one dish tagines. Although some of the more exotic ingredients such as orange-blossom water may need searching out if you don't live in a large multi-cultural city, there are helpful and surprisingly easy methods to prepare such ingredients as pickled lemons and almond milk, as well as a full glossary and meal plans. A doorway to a land where sugar and salt, spice and honey ride together happily will always serve up pleasure, whether on the coffee table or the kitchen counter.--Fiona Buckland

Synopsis
This cookbook contains 88 authentic North African recipes which allow the reader to make these spicy and aromatic dishes at home. Each chapter concentrates on the food of a particular region and the text relates the recipes to the rich history and culture of these regions.

About the Author
Mourad Mazouz (Momo) left his native country of Algeria at the age of eighteen. after years spent travelling the globe, he settled in Paris where his restaurants, Au Bascou and 404 were among the most successful in the city. In 1997 he opened Momo in London. He spared no effort in creating the perfect setting for his particular style of north African cooking, and he scoured North Africa, Turkey, Syria and Egypt for lamps and furnishings. Momo is now known as 'London's hippest Moroccan eatery'.


Customer Reviews

Magnificent!5
How can I begin to describe the pleasure of this book? Not only is the design and layout breathtaking - the recipes, though challenging at times, are a delight to make and consume!

Although my partner doesn't usually enjoy North African dishes - a trick of leaving the beautifully illustrated book open on the kitchen counter usually results in a 'that looks good - when are we having that then?'!

I would definitely recommend this book to anyone with a passion for intense, seductive flavours and a love of cooking!

A travelogue with recipes4
If you enjoy travelbooks as well as cook books, this is one for you. The writer provides an introduction to the countries of the Mahgreb - Tunisia,Algeria & Morocco - well illustrated with photographs and stories of trafvels and encounters (of the gastronomic kind). For recipes,Moro probably has the edge. But if you have ever enjoyed a visit to North Africa, or would like to,this book provides insights that you won't find in the travel guides. It manages to get inside the culture, and the cooking, without being too precious, yet still maintaining a great sense of love and enthusiasm for the area and its traditions. A book to come back to, and to explore. And if your'e lucky, it will also inspire some good cooking!

Inspiring images of Morrocco but uninspiring recipes.2
I bought this book having loved the restaurant and was disappointed. Although not expecting to recapture the heady ambience of dining with rock stars I was hoping for photographic temptation and passionate food writing, I felt let down on both counts. The book seems to concentrate more on encouraging trips to North Africa than cooking its dishes. The recipes not only fail to culinarily inspire but use many extraordinary and inaccessable ingredients. I did cook a Morroccan meal for 12 from this book, and it was enthusiastically consumed, although due to the absurdity of the suggested components the finished feast bore little semblance to the original.