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One: Pot, Pan, Planet : A Greener Way to Cook for You and Your Family: A Cookbook
Jones, Anna ¤Ó Knopf Publishing Group
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336page/201*249*28/1224g
  • ISBN
9780593320327/0593320328
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  • TIME¡¯s Most Anticipated Cookbook of the Year ¡°This is a book where thought meets practical action meets deliciousness...a huge achievement.¡± --Yotam Ottolenghi, bestselling author and award-winning chef ¡°It¡¯s true to say that Anna Jones always delivers: reading any recipe of hers is like receiving a promise of dependable deliciousness. With this book, however, she has given something deeper of herself. There¡¯s so much humanity and wisdom in it . . . It¡¯s like being led by the hand by a smiling, kind reveller, who wants only for us to enjoy food as much as possible, without wasting it, or missing out on everything it brings . . . The food itself is tummy-rumblingly good [and] strikes absolutely the right balance between accessibility and originality.¡± --Nigella Lawson ¡°Page after page of bright vegetarian recipes with punchy flavours that casually globe-trot from Laos to Greece. There are plenty of delicious juxtapositions (saag aloo shepherd¡¯s pie!), but by now we¡¯ve learned that few writers are so adept at celebrating vegetables and creating showstopper dishes that manage to be easier than you expect.¡± --Tim Lewis, The Guardian ¡°[Anna Jones¡¯] book doesn¡¯t just share a wealth of delicious recipes but also explores all the different ways that what we eat and how we prepare it can be used to help?not hurt?the planet.¡± ?Refinery29 ¡°Still dedicated to giving us stylish dishes with maximal flavour (think broad bean and green herb shakshuka, and golden rosti with ancho chili chutney), the book is punctuated with palatable nuggets of information: in chapters entitled ¡®Planet I¡¯ and ¡®Planet II,¡¯ Jones explains how we might combat the climate crisis through small behavioural changes around the way we eat.¡± ?Harper¡¯s Bazaar ¡°Every so often a cookbook comes along that raises the bar for food writing. Think Nigella Lawson¡¯s How to Eat or Samin Nosrat¡¯s Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat. The latest chef to join the pantheon: Anna Jones.¡± ?British Vogue ¡°Anna Jones trained under Jamie Oliver and has now made a name for herself as one of the best wholly veggie chefs . . . Not only is [her book] brimming with excellent recipes, [it] is also a bible on how to live greener, healthier lives overall. Anna has spent three years tweaking and testing recipes to make them as easy, cheap, and sustainable as possible.¡± ?Woman & Home
  • Winter Red Cabbage & Apple Soup This is a cheerful, vibrant soup that ticks all the flavor boxes. It¡¯s a soup I make all year, as it¡¯s both comforting in winter and vibrant enough to eat on a colder spring or summer day too (think borscht). Sweet red cabbage comes with a pickled edge, earthy caraway and freshness from a couple of apples. The crunch from buttery toasted walnuts, brightness from dill and some leveling creaminess from cr?me fra?che finish it off. I use an oat cr?me fra?che here but a dairy version or some thick Greek yogurt would work too for non-vegans. First, put the cabbage into a bowl with a good pinch of salt and the red wine vinegar. Squeeze together in your hands, then put to one side to pickle, while you start on the soup. Melt a little butter or heat some oil in a heavy-bottomed saucepan over a medium-low heat. Add the onion and celery and sweat until soft and translucent, stirring from time to time. It will take about 15 minutes. Once the onions are soft and sweet, add the caraway seeds and stir for a minute. Turn the heat up a little and add the apples and three-quarters of the cabbage, then fry for a further 5 minutes until the cabbage begins to soften. Add the stock, balsamic vinegar and honey or agave. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat, cover and simmer for 30 minutes. Uncover and simmer for another 10 minutes. Meanwhile, heat a frying pan and add some oil. Once it's really hot, add the remaining cabbage and cook until crisp. For the last couple of minutes add the walnuts and half the dill. Back to the soup. Stir in the rest of the dill and season to taste with salt and pepper. You can leave this as it is, but I like to blitz it with a handheld blender to make a vibrant purple soup. Ladle the soup into warmed bowls and top each serving with the fried cabbage and walnuts, a spoonful of cr?me fra?che, sour cream or yogurt and some more dill if you like. SERVES 6 1 pound/500 g red cabbage, finely shredded 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar a little butter or olive oil for frying 1 large red onion, finely chopped 3 stalks of celery, finely chopped 1¨ö teaspoons caraway seeds 2 apples (Coxes, a British variety, are my choice, but any sharp eating apple would work), cored and cut into chunks 6 1/3 cups/1.5 liters vegetable stock 2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar 2 teaspoons honey or agave¨ö cup/50 g walnuts, crumbled a small bunch of dill, leaves chopped, with some fronds reserved for garnishing TO SERVE 4 tablespoons oat cr?me fra?che, sour cream or thick Greek yogurt Quick Squash Lasagna Pasta has my heart like nothing else. My love affair with it was cemented when making stuffed agnolotti, caramelle and everything in between in restaurant kitchens, but it started with something simpler: my mum¡¯s lasagna. This lasagna is something slightly different but still as nostalgic and comforting. It is the quickest I¡¯ve made, ready for the oven in 10 minutes (not the hour it normally takes), yet there is still a rich deep tomat...
  • Jones, Anna [Àú]
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