CookWare
Baking
Bread
Cakes
Chocolate
Cookies
Desserts
General
Muffins
Pastry
Pies
Pizza
Meals
Appetizers
Breakfast
Brunch
Soups & Stews
Sweets
Outdoor Cooking
Barbecuing & Grilling
Camping & Hiking
General
Picnics
Tailgating
Special Diet
Diabetic & Sugar-Free
Dietary
Healthy
Kosher
Low Cholesterol
Low Fat
Low Salt
Vegetarian
Special Occasions
Brunch & Tea
Christmas & Hanukkah
General
Gourmet
Holidays
Party Planning
Seasonal
Tablesetting
Vegetarian
Fruit
General
Health
Potatoes
Salads
Vegan
Vegetables
International Cooking
African
Asian
Canadian
Caribbean & West Indian
Chinese
Indian
Japanese
Pacific Rim
Thai
Vietnamese
Wok Cookery
Latin American
Mexican
Middle Eastern
Native American
INFORMATION
Payment Methods
Shipping
Safe Shopping
Contact Us
Links
In association with
 
   

Learn to COOK - Flavors of Africa Cookbook : Spicy African Cooking - From Indigenous Recipes to Those Influenced by Asian and European Settlers

Flavors of Africa Cookbook : Spicy African Cooking - From Indigenous Recipes to Those Influenced by Asian and European Settlers

Manufacturer: Prima Lifestyles
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5



Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 641.596
EAN: 9780761505204
ISBN: 0761505202
Label: Prima Lifestyles
Manufacturer: Prima Lifestyles
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 262
Publication Date: 1998-01-05
Publisher: Prima Lifestyles
Release Date: 1998-01-05
Studio: Prima Lifestyles

Related Items

Editorial Reviews:

Journey to this most fascinating of continents and taste its delightfully unique and aromatic flavors. From spice-laden Arabic dishes of the north to the indigenous dishes of Africa's tropical center to the blended flavors of the "Old Cape Cookery" in the south, this book introduces you to a world of culinary wonders.

Enjoy such tantalizing cuisine as:

• Cape Town Curried Capsicum Prawns
• West African Banana and Chile Fritters
• Sweet-Hot Corn Cakes
• African Gumbo
• Ethiopian Chicken Stew
• Lamb Couscous with Onions and Raisins
• Peppered-Peanut Beef Kababs
• Curried Coconut Soup
• Papaya Ginger Beef with Piri Piris
• Sidi's Tamarind and Coconut Chicken
• Seafood Strudel with Sweet and Hot Pepper SauceIncludes glossary, mail-order sources, and more!

About the Authors

Dave DeWitt
and Melissa T. Stock are the editors of Fiery Foods Magazine and, along with Mary Jane Wilan, are the co-authors of the Hot & Spicy series of cookbooks (all from Prima). DeWitt is also the author of Hot Spots and the co-author of Just North of the Border.


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Hot Stuff
Comment: The title of this book and a look at the other books by the authors would lead one to think that this is a cookbook of spicy-hot recipes . . . and one would be right. Despite focusing on the hot chile pepper in Africa, the "Flavors of Africa Cookbook" does provide an overview of African cooking in about 160 recipes; from the North African tajine to the South African bobotie and all the sauces, soups, stews and curries in between. There are authentic traditional African recipes featuring such ingredients as plantains, yams, and groundnuts (peanuts) as well as African-inspired fusion cooking from in and out of Africa. But the African pili-pili, peri-peri, and piri-piri (all African words for chile peppers and dishes made with them) is the star here. The book's introduction is a history of the chile pepper in Africa. There is much related to spicy-hot African cookery throughout the book, including advice on exactly which hot chiles to use to obtain the most authentic results.

There are just a few things I noticed and wondered about:

The general consensus among scientists is that Capsicum (peppers) are native to America and were spread throughout the world in the early years of the age of European exploration. This book states that chile peppers first appeared in North Africa, but were spread to the rest of the continent by Europeans, but there is no further explanation. Perhaps there is some confusion of the Capsicum with the Aframomum melegueta (or grains of paradise, a pepper-like spice that is native to Africa) or other spices native to Africa.

Poulet (chicken) Gnemboue (or Nyembwe) is a chicken stew made with palm nuts, the fruit of the African oil palm. It is a dish made in equatorial West Africa, especially Gabon. People outside of Gabon sometimes substitute hazelnuts, pine nuts, almonds, or peanuts. In this book, this recipe (with almonds) is called a "North African tajine".

There are a few mistakes in Swahili: (and I am no expert there, but) I noticed that "Curried Chicken and Banana Soup" is parenthetically titled "Supa Ya N Dizi" which should be "Supa Ya Ndizi", meaning "Soup of Plantains".

Oftentimes the authors enthusiasm for chile peppers goes a bit too far, leading them to abandon the use of the African names for recipes. For example, a sort of black-eyed pea fritter popular in West Africa and known as "Akara" (along with other African names) is called "Blistering Bean Balls" in this book, with no mention the dish's African names. Also, "Poulet Yassa" (made by grilling chicken that has been marinated in an onion-lemon mixture) is sometimes made with hot peppers, but is just as likely to be flavored mostly by the onions and lemon with little or no hot pepper. Not all African cuisine is spicy-hot after all.

Finally, the "Zanzibar Duck" recipe seems to have been copied almost word for word from Laurens van der Post's "Recipes: African Cooking (Foods of the World)" (New York: Time-Life Books; 1970), but with no acknowledgement.

Overall, a good book for adventurous cook who likes it hot.



Buy it now at abc-fishing.com!

Cooking with ...
Cheese & Dairy
Fruits
Herbs, Spices & Condiments
Wild Game Cooking
Meats
Poultry
Seafood
Pasta
Rice & Grains
Sauces, Salsa & Garnishes
Drinks & Beverages
Bartending
Beer
Coffee & Tea
General
Juice
Smoothies
Spirits
Wine
Cooking in Europe
Eastern European
English & Welsh
French
German
Greek
Hungarian
Irish
Italian
Mediterranean
Polish
Portuguese
Russian
Scandinavian
Scottish
Spanish
Turkish
Cooking in USA
African American
Amish & Mennonite
Barbecue
Cajun & Creole
California
General
Hawaii
Middle Atlantic
Midwest
New England
Northwest
Soul Food
South
Southwest
West
More Cooking...


Get Chitika eMiniMalls
© 2006 Learn to Cook
Design by Learn to Cook   Powered by ASM2