Product Details
Sophie's Country Kitchen

Sophie's Country Kitchen
By Sophie Grigson

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Product Description

Sophie Grigson's modern and relaxed approach to cookery has appealed to her fans for over a decade. Here she has collected more than 120 colourful and delicious recipes that make the most of seasonal food.

Fresh food has always been the cornerstone of Sophie's cookery and country living ensures that she has fabulous produce all through the year. Her own garden, farm shops and local markets - to say nothing of what grows wild in the fields - all inspire her to create simple recipes for her friends and family. Full of enticing recipe photos to get your cookery cravings going and stunning shots of the countryside and its produce, SOPHIE GRIGSON'S COUNTRY KITCHEN will have you running for your nearest farmers' market, hunting for seasonal ingredients at your local supermarket, or getting your own hands dirty in no time.

Packed with fresh and delicious recipes, SOPHIE GRIGSON'S COUNTRY KITCHEN makes cooking an all-year-round pleasure.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #293548 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-07-04
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 256 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Sophie Grigson is the innovative writer of much-loved columns in the London Evening Standard, the Independent and The Sunday Times. She has published many successful cookery titles and presented their accompanying television series for the BBC and Channel 4.


Customer Reviews

Seasonal Food - 'Get ready to run to your nearest farmer's market.....'4
With over 120 delicious recipes, `Sophie Grigson's Country Kitchen' will have you running to your nearest farmer's market, hunting for seasonal ingredients............or getting your own hands dirty in no time.'

246 high quality, shiny pages split over 4 chapters:-

Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter

sandwiched between an introduction and a concise index.
Photography from William Shaw throughout including ingredients and a high percentage of recipe shots.

Useful one-page notes on seasonal items are littered throughout, from the more common such as `Sorrel' and `Asparagus`, to the least, such as `Samphire', `Tamarind`, or `How to Cook A Giant Puffball`.

Each recipe has a relevant informative narrative written in the typical SG style that is so endearing, e.g. from page 152,

`Apple and Bacon Mash`:-
`There's a magic moment in the early autumn when the first of the garden's main crop potatoes and the first of the apples coincide. The children disappear outside to gather produce and earthworms, and soon a basket of potatoes, topped with a few sour cooking apples, appears on the kitchen table. Occasionally the earthworms are included, but it is not something I encourage!..............'

e.g. from page 218:-
`A Very Good Cauliflower Cheese'
`The idea is simple and familiar - cauliflower baked in a cheese sauce - but it is the execution that counts. Casual inattention is the death knell. Vigilance and respect are the passwords to success. This is a fabulous dish, worthy of main course status when it is cooked well.......'

Favourite recipes:-

Grilled Trout with Horseradish, Mint & Lemon Cream
Rich & Sinful Baked Bay & Honey Custards
Daffodil Cake
Summer Lasagne with Goat's Cheese
Tagine of Chicken, Chickpeas & Apricots
Lemon Barley Water
Maple Roasted Carrot & Ginger Soup
Pheasant Pate
Spiced Venison & Chestnut Stew
Double Cheese Flatbreads
Daube of Beef with Parsnips & Red Wine
Rhubarb & Apple Crumble (`serves 6 unless you are all very greedy!')
Vanilla Pain Perdu with Quince Jelly
Christmas Tree Biscuits
Murrambridgee Cake - `I don't care for Christmas Cake. I don't hate it either, but I really wouldn't mind if I never tasted one again. As a result I have never cooked one, either. Instead, we make this Murrambridgee Cake, which is nothing more than a big mass of mixed whole glace fruits and nuts, glued together with the minimum of batter. Far nicer, if you ask me.'


wonderful reading.5
I took this book out of the library many times before finally buying my own copy. This is beatifully laid out and well written. Sophies way of writing persuades me every time that I just have to try new foods and recipes.
Last autumn I moved into a more rural area and was amazed by the abundance of damsons and elder berries and buckets full of windfall quince and cooking apples. Thanks to this book I will know what to do now when those things are set before me once more.

I am really looking forward to trying her elderflower cordial and have a long list of other must try recipes . A lovely book that doesn't try to baffle you with fancy ingredients or make you feel silly for not knowing how to do complicate manouvres. It simply reminds you of the beauty of the changing seasons and encourages you to get out and see what's out there.
Even if you live in the city there are many recipes that can still be made use of. A benefit of this book is that it is one of those recipe books that make good bedtime reading.

This is my first ever sophie grigson recipe book and I know it wont be the last.

great cookery book - well worth the time5
there's definitely something about this book.

the 120 recipes are very cookable, very comforting, and use ingredients that can easily be sourced from your local supermarket (if that's not an ASDA). they are mostly easy to prepare and taste great. it's split into the seasons of the year to facilitate seasonal buying. and there are some pages of grigson's familiar brand of homespun wisdom. as well as that, the book includes some of the most gorgeously photographed and reproduced prints i have seen in a recipe book.

(avoid the real baked beans recipe though. i didn't like them.)