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The Paupers Cookbook | 
enlarge | Author: Jocasta Innes Publisher: Frances Lincoln Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy New: £3.56 You Save: £4.43 (55%)
New (4) Used (3) from £3.56
Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 3346
Media: Paperback Edition: New ed. Pages: 192 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5 x 0.9
ISBN: 0711222401 Dewey Decimal Number: 641 EAN: 9780711222403 ASIN: 0711222401
Publication Date: October 2, 2003 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
Amazing & Nourishing April 15, 2003 28 out of 29 found this review helpful
This book exemplifies the requriements of a non-cook and gives valuable advice on not only what to cook, how to cook it but with what to cook it and what is required to cook it in! A recent (ancient) review described it as the essential item for a 1st year Uni student, existing on minimal means, who needs to eat to survive. Stuff the 1st year Uni person - it's real life!! From my own experience I can reccomend the curried lentil soup and the most amazing 'padding' of toad in the hole et al. A must for all who need to survive on a shoestring although, sadly, there is no advice on how to cook that item!! Together with Hamlins All Colour Cook Book you need noting else to eat, give great dinner parties and live on a limited budget.
The Pauper's Cookbook January 6, 2006 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
This is the cookbook that my mother taught herself to cook with in the 1970s and that she gave to me when I left home. It is such a wonderful book--it teaches how to cook really good food without using any junk, tricky ingredients or waste. Everything I have ever made from it has been delicious and despite having a large collection of cookbooks, this is still my favourite. When I got my first Le Creuset pot its inaugural use was to make Flemish Beef Stew which was superb. And whilst the recipes are wonderful, the best thing about The Pauper's Cookbook is the way Jocasta Innes seems to talk directly to you as you cook. I often find myself chuckling as I read. Sheer delight!
Fab food for the frugal cook but bad indexing June 9, 2006 getoka (UK) 24 out of 26 found this review helpful
An excellent cookbook. Worth buying for the Onion, Bacon and Potato Hotpot alone which a previous reviewer mentioned. The dish of herring roes and peas is also delicious, as is Alsation Onion Tart and Keema Matar. It should be noted however, that this is not the original 1971 edition. Nor is it the 1992 edition The New Pauper's Cookbook. It is best described as an amalgam of the two books. I never saw the first book but I loved the second one and am even more delighted with this one, which seems to have all the recipes from the second book plus some wonderful offaly dishes from the original book. I couldn't find the recipe for Flemish beef mentioned by another reviewer. This may be because it was in the earlier edition or it may be due to the book's one flaw - the index. I have never come across such an unhelpful index. I turned to it to look up an apple recipe to find that there were no entries listed for 'a' at all. I had to trawl through 'puddings' instead, and that wasn't very helpful, only listing recipes alphabetically by title not ingredient as well. Good indexes are vital in cookbooks.
Who needs Delia? August 29, 2003 20 out of 22 found this review helpful
As a newly wed in the 70s this was my bible. My main entertaining dish was a beef casserole with wine vinegar (instead of wine)and olives that I served with pasta and green salad. My children loved sliced onions, potatoes and bacon cooked in a white sauce - was it with cheese? I lost my original,a very stained and battered copy, during life's upheavals and will certainly be ordering. Every recipe works!!
The best cookbook money can buy! October 28, 2008 ELKV (Cambridge, UK) 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
My mother in law has a very old copy of this book and my husband raved on and on and on and on...... about it. After finally finding our own copy I gave it a look and fell in love with it's simplicity. We are now the proud owners of three!!!! copies, and the newest is an amalgam of the previous two. However, there are some notable abscences eg Irish Tea Brack and Ginger Bread Men. It's the kind of book which although it gives you a recipe to follow gives you the confidence to alter the ingredients to fit what you have in the cupboards. Thank you Jocasta Innes.
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