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Rick Stein's Far Eastern Odyssey

Rick Stein

$59.99

Hardback

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English
BBC
01 October 2009
Rick Stein's evocative cookbook captures the sensational flavours and vibrant atmosphere of the Far East.

Rick Stein's Far Eastern Odyssey is an ambitious journey, avoiding the beaten track and tourist hot-spots, in search of the authentic food of Southeast Asia. In this accompanying book to the major BBC series, Rick shares his favourite recipes and some well-known classic dishes inspired by the fragrant ingredients and recipes he sampled from local chefs, family-run restaurants, street vendors and market stalls.

In Cambodia, Rick learns how to make a national dish Samlor kako, a stir-fried pork and vegetable soup flavoured with an array of spices; in Vietnam he is shown the best recipe for Pho Bo, a Vietnamese beef noodle soup; and in Thailand, Rick tries Geng Leuong Sai Gung Lai Sai Bua, a yellow curry made with prawns and lotus shoots that you won't find outside the country.

Rick Stein's Far Eastern Odyssey includes over 150 new recipes from Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Malaysia and Bali each complemented by Rick's colourful anecdotes from the trip and beautiful on-location photography. This is a visually-stunning culinary tribute to Southeast Asian cooking that evokes the magic of bustling markets, the sizzle of oil and the aromatic steam from a Far Eastern kitchen.
By:  
Imprint:   BBC
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 255mm,  Width: 199mm,  Spine: 27mm
Weight:   1.186kg
ISBN:   9781846077166
ISBN 10:   1846077168
Pages:   320
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Rick Stein is a well-loved and respected chef, TV presenter and author who has produced an array of award-winning books and television series, including Rick Stein's Seafood, Seafood Lover's Guide, Taste of the Sea, Food Heroes, French Odyssey, Mediterranean Escapes and most recently Coast to Coast. All of his books and programmes show a commitment to good-quality produce, sustainable fishing and good husbandry. Rick owns four restaurants, a delicatessen, a patisserie, a seafood cookery school and forty guest bedrooms in the small fishing port of Padstow, Cornwall. In 2003, Rick was awarded an OBE for services to West Country Tourism. He divides his time between Padstow and Australia, which he regards as his second home.

Reviews for Rick Stein's Far Eastern Odyssey

As the title suggests, 15 stories with musical themes. Finely wrought, and ranging from the profound to the whimsical, they're more pianissimo than con brio. British writer Hamilton-Paterson, whose Gerontius (1991), a novel about the composer Edward Elgar, won the 1989 Whitbread Prize, here lyrically evokes the quirky and sometimes darker aspects of the muse. In Farts and Longings, a writer keeps meeting Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in various incarnations; in his most recent manifestation, Mozart is a conference-bound Nigerian doctor who discusses with the writer his use of the scatological language that shocked the music world when his letters were made public. It was, he asserts, intended as a reflection of the politics of the repressive times in which he was composing, rather than as a symptom of any personal pathology. In The Last Picnic, another celebration of the quirky, a madman believing himself to be Robert Schumann escapes from a nearby asylum and has a disquieting effect on a family gathered to mourn their mother as he gives a convincing interpretation of some Schumann pieces. In Records, the close friendship of two young men, a friendship ended by marriage, is represented by a shared collection of records; and in Frank's Fate, a man in Italy to clear up a minor writer's estate discovers an essay by his deceased friend on the fate of a now-forgotten 18th-century musician that is a surprisingly moving meditation on genius and fame. Two other notable stories add a political shading to the musical theme: In Jaro, a middle-aged Italian woman gives lodging to a young refugee from Yugoslavia, a talented guitarist in flight from the miseries of the Bosnian war; and in People's Disgrace, a composer in a totalitarian country who specializes in discovering the hidden messages in music unwittingly causes the death of his best friend. No wrong notes or hackneyed refrains, just intelligent stories deftly done but without much lingering resonance. (Kirkus Reviews)


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