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The Cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean: 215 Healthy, Vibrant, and Inspired Recipes

The Cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean: 215 Healthy, Vibrant, and Inspired RecipesAuthor: Paula Wolfert
Publisher: William Morrow Cookbooks
Category: Book

List Price: $40.00
Buy Used: $6.10
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Seller: BookJingle
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 15 reviews
Sales Rank: 434,901

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1
Pages: 448
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.4
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 8.4 x 1.7

ISBN: 0060166517
Dewey Decimal Number: 641.591822
EAN: 9780060166519
ASIN: 0060166517

Publication Date: June 1, 1994
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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  • Hardcover - The Cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean : 300 Healthy, Vibrant, and Inspired Recipes

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Paula Wolfert is one of the first food writers to acknowledge the importance of Mediterranean cuisine. During a five-year journey that encompassed parts of the Balkans, Turkey, Syria and Greece, she collected a myriad of recipes from native cooks that are easily adaptable to American kitchens. The diet of the region depends upon grains, legumes, vegetables and nuts--perfect for the health conscious--and lends itself to recipes such as pumpkin kibbeh stuffed with spinach, chick peas and walnuts and nettle cheese pie. Wolfert is careful to provide special advice to ensure smooth preparation. The book won both the 1995 Julia Child Cookbook Award in the International Category, and the 1995 James Beard Award in the International Category.

Product Description
The Cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean refers both Paula Wolfert's love of great food and the pioneering spirit that has inspired her to travel across the globe many times over in search of the world's best recipes. In all of her remarkable books, she delves with tireless enthusiasm into her research and writing, ensuring each recipe's authenticity and accessibility. In The Cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean, she brings readers and cooks into the kitchens that produce the healthy home cooking that is the trademark of such lands as Macedonian, Turkey, Syria, and the countries on the Black Sea.

Wolfert's food dazzles the palate. Her book begins with recipes for sauces and dips, including two walnut and pomegranate sauces; soups include Anatolian Sour Soup and Macedonian "Green Cream." Meat, poultry, and fish dishes include eleven varities of kibbeh, Duck with Quinces, and Skewered Swordfish. Her sumptuous recipes for vegetables and grains--stuffed eggplants, pilafs, and pomegranate-flavored vegetables, to name a few--reflect the bounty and healthful eating patterns of the Eastern Mediterranean.

Wolfert's Middle Eastern grain salads are healthy and rich with flavor. Paula travels into the kitchens of native cooks to ensure that her recipes are as genuine as they are delicious. She takes us into the home of a friend in the Republic of Georgia, whose mother teaches Wolfert how to prepare Chicken Tabaka; to a mountain village in northern Greece where, with a sister food writer, she searches for fine cheese to complete a savory pie; and to a farm in Turkey, where the country's best bread baker tells her secrets of baking unleavened flat griddle bread.

These delicious, authentic recipes focus on the healthy eating patterns for which the Eastern Mediterranean is increasingly being recognized. Wolfert's recipes are as delightful to read as they are to use. Armchair cooks and travelers will be moved by the descriptive geography and resonate personal stories Paula Wolfert relates along with her fabulous dishes. Wolfert's expertise is renowned among food lovers, amateur and professional, and her joy of discovering new ways to prepare food is infectious to her many devoted readers.


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 15



5 out of 5 stars Eastern Mediterranean Cooking   May 28, 2010
I. Fawcett (California)
This is exactly what I was looking for. The information and layout of recipes is excellent.


5 out of 5 stars Recipes and History   January 17, 2009
R. Haglund (Seattle, WA)
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

This is one of my favorite cookbooks. I received it as a gift years ago from friends in the printing world. The recipes are easy to follow. Ingredients may not be common to westerners, but Wolfert takes the time to explain them, give alternate options to those that are hard to find, and provides sources to find the "uncommon".

I adore the yogurt-herb stuffed grape leaves, the basmati rice and potatoes, the lebanese tomato salad, the walnut stuffed eggplant with pomegranate, and so many others in this book. I've taken samplings from this book to a friend's annual Persian new year party in the past, and everything has disappeared in a flash.

Buy this book. You will love it!



5 out of 5 stars Paula Wolfert knows about food   April 5, 2008
Lee Duke (Blue Ridge Mountains, VA, USA)
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Ever since I first purchased her cookbook, Couscous and Other Good Food from Morocco, I have been a fan of Paula Wolfert. Her recipes are not always easy, but they always produce great food. Buy the book.


5 out of 5 stars A fantastic cookbook--a favorite for years   August 24, 2007
R. Patterson
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

I adore this cookbook and never tire of reading the recipes and fascinating intros to each. Paula Wolfert does an amazing job a painting a picture of the food--you can almost taste it even before you walk into the kitchen. I found the plethora of kibbeh recipes exciting and it was a real thrill to have them work on my first attempt. Unlike many of the reviewers, I don't find the ingredient lists 'esoteric' (this may simply be b/c I spend way too much time ordering spices from Penzeys and visiting Indian groceries), but I have also had great success when when skipping or substituting ingredients. My all time favorite recipe, and worth the price of the cookbook alone, is the "Split Tummies" which are softened eggplant stuffed with a lamb/spice /pinenut mixture (I often use turkey) baked over a bed of vegetables. At the height of summer, when the garden is bursting with peppers, tomatoes, greens and eggplant, this cookbook is a joy!


5 out of 5 stars Wonderful cookbook for the serious cook   September 23, 2005
MotherLodeBeth (Sierras of California)
14 out of 14 found this review helpful

What a wonderful cookbook for the serious cook who is interested in new recipes, other cultures and healthy food with a nice mix of history of a given recipe or dish. Ironically it was a negative review or slam, about the authors many (50) Kibbeh recipes that perked my interest and made me want the book.

So when I got the cookbook within a couple days of ordering it I went straight to the kibbeh section and had to smile, because it is so interesting because it reminded me of a favorite Italian cookbook with a lot of recipes for different meat balls, or a cookbook I have that has dozens of different types of hamburger recipes. It's awesome.

The book is big and the variety of recipes is vast, with some of my favorites that call for chickpeas, or roasted peppers, fish or chicken. Am a huge fan of pilaf and love her recipes. Love the Macedonian chickpeas, eggplants and tomatoes on page 252, which is easy to make and will make an impression for family and friends.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 15


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