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The River Cottage Cookbook | 
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| Author: Hugh Fearnley-whittingstall Creator: Simon Wheeler Brand: Books Category: Book
List Price: £20.00 Buy New: £7.80 You Save: £12.20 (61%)
New (29) Used (13) Collectible (1) from £7.80
Rating: 29 reviews Sales Rank: 316
Format: Illustrated Media: Paperback Edition: New Ed Pages: 448 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.8 Dimensions (in): 9.6 x 7.4 x 1.7
ISBN: 0007164092 Dewey Decimal Number: 641 EAN: 9780007164097 ASIN: 0007164092
Publication Date: October 6, 2003 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: NEW
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Product Description This is a practical guide to the River Cottage lifestyle from Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall. It includes tips on how best to buy organic produce and, for the more adventurous, advice on rearing your own meat, growing your own vegetables and tapping into the
Amazon.co.uk Review Ordinarily the word "lifestyle" is more likely to be applied to slender magazine articles puffing lofts full of Eames furniture rather than books about smallholdings in Dorset. The River Cottage Cookbook, however, is a hefty 450 pages of pure, gumbooted rural lifestyle; and one could not wish it shorter. Cook, broadcaster and food-writer-at-large Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall has been ensconced at River Cottage for a number of years, cultivating his vegetable garden, raising chickens, pigs and even cattle for his table and taking occasional potshots at the local wildlife. His achievements have been chronicled on television; now they appear between hard covers. Although it calls itself a cookbook and does contain a large number of fine recipes, the book's scope is much broader. Really, this is more like one of those "Enquire Within on Everything" volumes 19th-century settlers used to take to the outback with them, full of instructions for mixing whitewash, worming dogs and making a bag pudding. Starting with vegetables, proceeding to livestock and fish (River Cottage does indeed have a river and is only five miles from the sea) and concluding with the wild food, floral and faunal, of the hedgerow, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall explains how he grows, gathers, kills and cooks his own food. There is a lot of information here, and a lot of hard reality, too: he is very clear and forthright about the place of death in this kind of life. But then this is a very clear and forthright book overall, a very engaging and really quite inspirational manual of how to live the country life so many of us dream about. It's well-illustrated, too, with Simon Wheeler's fine photographs of Hugh at work chasing chickens, skinning eels, carrying piglets and so on. The food in the River Cottage kitchen looks wonderful, too, though the photo of a cod-head glaring resentfully from under a beehive of parsley in a stock pot carries many more resonances than it is possible to summarise here. --Robin Davidson
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| Customer Reviews: Read 10 more reviews...
superb down-to-earth guide to your food life December 29, 2001 Ben "Keep Britain Farming" Owens (ben_owenz@hotmail.com) (Northumberland, England) 27 out of 27 found this review helpful
a fantastic book describing all the best (and some of the worst) parts of natural food production. hugh's passion for natural food flies from every page of this book. hugh does a magnificent job of explaining why people hunt,shoot and fish, and gives great recipes for how to deal with the products of these sports. a truly great cookbook, and a highly practical guide to most things!!
Replace your hostas with cabages! January 27, 2001 r.c.kirk@durham.ac.uk (Durham) 25 out of 25 found this review helpful
Having loved the television series this book was a great read. It's not just a cook book but full of advice on how to be more selective about the quality of food you put on your table. After the introduction I was ready to dig up my hostas and plant cabages and maybe even invest in a chicken or two. The book doesn't preach about organic foods and vegetarianism but instead offers advice to those who object to the way farm animals are reared and tells them to get their own or buy from reputable butchers or farmers markets. The stories are amusing, he admits his faliures as well as sucesses. It's enough to make you want to move to Dorset, if it weren't for the fact that he and Harbour Lights have caused it to become a desirable county for more than just the retired, and house prices have rocketed. I think that we can all, with the help of this book, aim for a slightly better way of living. Oh and the recipies are excellent, if sometimes a little strange.
Honest, inspiring, totally unpretentious May 10, 2002 m.riceknight@btinternet.com (London) 82 out of 85 found this review helpful
As a supermarket-shopping, restaurant loving, born and bred Londoner, I did not buy this book out of any mis-placed romantic notions about self-sufficiency and country living, but because of Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall who is the best TV presenter on the subjects of food and people I've ever seen, and who turns out to be just as good a writer. His complete lack of pretension,his intelligence, his personal passion for his subject and his immunity to crowd-pleasing or 'style' make him inspiring, trustworthy and hugely likeable. This book will not persuade me to abandon urban life, but it has made me think deeply about the food chain, and motivated me to shop better, cook more and relish real food. This is a practical and sensual treat, and an absorbing and rewarding read.
An essential read for the gardening gastronome March 15, 2001 16 out of 16 found this review helpful
This book is set to become a classic.Only two other books, in my opinion, rank in the same catogry. John Seymour`s "complete book of self suffciency" and Monty Don`s "Fork to Fork". Hugh Fernly Whittingstall provides the often overlooked conection between the food on our plates and its origins and process. His opinions reflect the reality of the production process, casting aside the blinkered view of the average supermarket shopper. He also opens up and explores the endless possibilities that lie, freely avialable, on our own doorstep. From cultivation to cookery Hugh`s enthusiasim leaps from the page. So, when is the sequel ?
Top marks for a top book October 7, 2002 16 out of 16 found this review helpful
A wonderfully funny chronicle from River Cottage - a cross between a cookery book, a gardening book and a novel. Lots of brilliant tips and hints for everyone and written in a very easy to read way. Good book with loads of traditional and unusual recipes together with ideas for gardening, this book is packed with ideas and personal observations. Thoroughly enjoyed this read.
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