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The Cafe Cook Book: Italian Recipes from London's River Cafe
 
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The Cafe Cook Book: Italian Recipes from London's River Cafe [Hardcover]

Ruth Rogers (Author), Rose Gray (Contributor)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 6, 1998
With their innovative interpretation of Italian country cooking, Rose Gray and Ruth Rogers have made London's legendary River Cafe one of the most influential and popular restaurants in the world. Their first book, Rogers Gray Italian Country Cookbook, was an international bestseller. Now, in The Cafe Cook Book, they provide more than 200 sensational new recipes in the vibrant, accessible style that has become their trademark.

Gray and Rogers continue to provide fresh interpretations of Italian cuisine, and in this new book, their enthusiasm for roasting in a wood oven takes center stage. Home cooks can create the same results by roasting meats, fish, vegetables, or fruits at a high temperature on the lowest rack of the oven or by slow roasting over a longer period of time. With these techniques, flavors become more intense, concentrated, and delicious: Pumpkin wedges with thyme. Radicchio wrapped in pancetta. Turbot or monkfish with capers. Baked loin of tuna with coriander. Chicken pan-roasted with milk and marjoram. Crisp, thin-crusted pizza. Rustic, country-style bread. Apricot, nectarine, and plum bruschetta. Baked pears with valpolicella.

In addition, favorite recipes from the River Cafe include seasonal fruit drinks, antipasti, pastas, risotto, soups, ice creams, and desserts. The Cafe Cook Book is essential for everyone who loved the first book as well as for those who have yet to discover this irresistible style of cooking.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

At The River Café, chefs Rose Gray and Ruth Rogers serve dishes inspired by Italy's rustic regional cooking. In traditional Italian dishes, Prosciutto and Radicchio with Balsamic Vinegar and Wood-Roasted Asparagus, for example, they demonstrate the felicitous minimalism of fine Italian food. Lemon Risotto, livened with basil and mascarpone cheese, and Pigeons Braised in Red Wine, seasoned with chile, cumin, and Dijon mustard prove how these chefs are also creative. Most recipes in this book are short and simple; for Tagliatelle with Walnut Sauce, just pound the sauce ingredients together in a mortar and boil the pasta. However, dishes like Rise e Bisi, Risotto studded with green peas and seasoned with fresh mint, and most of the others in this book, require impeccable ingredients. If you go after them, you can turn out dishes as breathtakingly flavorful as those earning raves from London diners and restaurant critics; if you do not, the results will taste pleasing but not stunningly special. Martyn Thompson's many magnificent color photos of the food by Gray and Rogers are so precisely vivid and engaging that they recall work by Irving Penn. --Dana Jacobi

Review

[T]he authors earn points by devoting their first chapter to fizzy-wine cocktails, always a good idea at the top of a meal. But, by and large, the recipes depend entirely on absolutely top-notch ingredients to make an impact. At the River Cafe, no doubt, every dish in the book is sublime. The home cook is likely to find that they land a bit flat. -- The New York Times Book Review, William Grimes

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Broadway Books; 1st edition (April 6, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0767902130
  • ISBN-13: 978-0767902137
  • Product Dimensions: 10 x 7.9 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #660,718 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

59 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars supurb, sensual cookbook for people who know how to cook, April 24, 1998
By 
joshu@teleport.com (Portland, Oregon. USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Cafe Cook Book: Italian Recipes from London's River Cafe (Hardcover)
This cookbook is sensual almost to the point of obscenity. Whether it's a crustini with roasted aporicots, or a well-cut London baker with trim muscles bulging, the photos have a way of bringing out a person's lust for cooking. The recipes and the pictures are gorgeous, mouthwatering perfection. The recipes are neither fast nor easy. But they are well-described and scruptious! This book is geared towards people who know how to cook. For example, they'll tell you to blanche almonds without telling you what that means or how to do it; they'll tell you that the flavor of a cake depends on the perfect roasting of the hazelnuts, but they give no clue as to how to attain that perfection. That said, they do an admirable job of telling what you need to know and no more. And really, a bunch of extraneous information can confuse instead of being helpful.
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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Excelllent Regional Italian Cooking, December 20, 2000
By 
roger w. shoemaker (Dunn Loring, VA 22027) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Cafe Cook Book: Italian Recipes from London's River Cafe (Hardcover)
Being a cooking novice who loves eating and cooking Italian food and dishes, this book is a wonderful edition to anyones cook book collection. The pictures are scrumptious with most dishes easy to reproduce. I wanted this book ever since I saw Ruth Rogers and Rose Gray on a supplementry PBS program. I thought that they captured the essence of Italy's regional cooking and have obviously transfered this to the The Cafe Cookbook. Highly recommended!
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Recommended Simple Recipes for Good Cooks, June 22, 2004
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This review is from: The Cafe Cook Book: Italian Recipes from London's River Cafe (Hardcover)
`The Café Cook Book' authors Rose Gray and Ruth Rogers are two English chefs who seem to carry a lot of weight in the community of writers on Italian Cuisine. They are one of the first employers of Jamie Oliver and were, I suspect, a strong influence on his style and choice of cuisine. In fact, Oliver is credited as a River Café chef in the Acknowledgments. Gray and Roger owe nothing to Oliver's current celebrity. Their reputation is firmly based on doing good Italian food before Jamie came to the limelight.

This is their second book, which I am reviewing after having reviewed their third, `Italian Easy' and I am doubly unhappy with myself that I have left Gray and Rogers unread for so long. Among celebrity restaurant cookbooks, these are distinctive in that they are all about the recipes. There are the usual lists of American suppliers and the usual glossary of ingredients which does nothing more than tell us how these ingredients are used at the River Café. There are few headnotes, no sidebars, very few tips on technique, and no endearing stories introducing the chapters. That is not to say there is nothing endearing about the book. The few personal comments by the authors, the photographs of the authors at work, and the overall design of the book conveys the strong sense that these are two people you would really like to know.

While I have not read the authors' first book, `Italian Country Cook Book', I sense all three books share a strong common philosophy which gives us exquisitely simple recipes based on classic Italian recipes and ingredients. This simplicity can be deceiving. There are virtually no tips on technique and few steps recommending you taste and season. Much of this is probably due to the natural saltiness of Italian ingredients such as the hard cheeses, anchovies, capers, cured hams, and salt cod. All this means is that a genuinely inexperienced chef may miss some very simple steps which an experienced home cook takes for granted, such as techniques for garlic in heated oil and pealing tomatoes.

The centerpiece of this book is recipes based on a large wood-fuelled oven installed at the River Café as part of a major renovation and expansion. Be assured that the way the `wood-roasted' recipes are written, they are entirely doable in your gas or electric oven at home.

Drinks chapter's primary feature is that most of the drink recipes use prosecco plus fresh fruit.

Second chapter on salads, frittatas, and other starters opens with the simple style that characterizes the whole book. The headnotes supply nothing except recommendations on which varieties of vegetable to use in each dish. There are some simple but unusual techniques in some of the recipes. One, for example, uses boiled lemon wedges in a salad with artichokes. Another novelty is a venison carpaccio salad. A great surprise for an Italian-themed dinner party. The frittatas are made with the simplest method of a quick turn in the oven after stovetop curdling of the eggs.

The chapter on pasta includes a basic fresh pasta recipe plus recipes for pasta verde, ravioli, and several recipes with fresh tagliatelle. Like new book, there are also several recipes for spaghetti, all exquisitely simple. The chapter also includes three recipes for wet polenta combined with porcini, truffles, and cavolo nero.

The risottos chapter has a good mix of recipes which are so simple, one wonders what all the fuss is about. The chapter on soups contains the usual mix of bean soups and some special treats with an arugula and potato soup, a salt cod soup which looks deliciously like Manhattan clam chowder and a wild fennel soup. The stock recipes are so simple, it makes you embarrassed not to make your own.

The wood-roasted vegetables chapter opens the way to caramelized beets, carrots, artichokes, asparagus, zucchini, eggplant, Swiss Chard, and lots of potatoes. Yum.

The `Vegetables in Padellla' chapter changes venues and presents the all the usual suspects in a wine braise.

The most interesting recipes among the fish and shellfish offerings are the wood-roasted methods that you can do in the bottom of your Hotpoint at home. The most unusual recipe may be the layered sardine sandwich. No bread makes an appearance in the ingredient list.

The chapter on meats, including pork, chicken, duck, and game opens with two spectacular recipes for doing a whole suckling pig and a slow roasted shoulder of pork. These are just the things for urban pig meat lovers who don't want to mess with barbecue. The other really unusual recipe is a combination of leftover pork and tuna.

The chapter on breads opens with a potato sourdough starter, something you may not see outside of a book on artisinal baking. Two recipes for sourdough bread follow this. The chapter has a recipe for pizza dough plus five (5) pizza recipes. There are some shortcuts I do not see in more detailed recipes. I pizza novice may want to go to Peter Reinhart's `American Pie' book on pizza to get an in depth look at pizza before tackling recipes at this level.

Chapter on sixteen (16) sauces has a lot more variety than you may see in more traditional Italian books.

Chapter on desserts has everything that is great about Italian baking, great simplicity and great taste, especially if you are familiar only with French and American pastry. It is truly amazing how simple some of the recipes for tortes and tarts and cakes can be.

The main blemish I find in this book is the loose way in which the authors do the translations of Italian names for dishes. Some are absent, some leave terms untranslated, and some translations even seem wrong.

Very highly recommended for great taste and great simplicity. Rogers and Gray are interpreting Italian cuisine in a dramatically simple and straightforward manner accessible to all amateur cooks.

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