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The Spice and Herb Bible: A Cook's Guide
 
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The Spice and Herb Bible: A Cook's Guide [Hardcover]

Ian Hemphill (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 2, 2002

Cooks use spices and herbs to not only enhance food flavor, but to also create new taste combinations and sensations. From the vanilla bean used in creating ice cream to the cinnamon in fragrant cinnamon buns, it is virtually impossible to imagine a kitchen without spices.

The Spice and Herb Bible is a fascinating, authoritative history and reference source. Ian Hemphill describes a wide range of global herbs and spices which can be used in today's kitchen, either alone or in magical combinations. This book demystifies the art of combining herbs and spices, and introduces the home cook to worlds of tastes formerly to be had only at "exotic" restaurants. With delightful recipes and great tips for use and storage, The Spice and Herb Bible is truly an essential resource for any well-equipped kitchen.

  • More than 100 spices and herbs listed alphabetically
  • Quick, complete reference
  • Storage and use details for each herb and spice
  • Detailed color photographs of every herb and spice
  • 29 spice blend recipes, including Garam Masala and Herbes de Provence
  • For the novice and experienced cook



Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Ian Hemphill grew up in a Australian family that pioneered in the spice business in the 1950s and it became his life's work. In The Spice and Herb Bible: A Cook's Guide he offers insight into the exotic scents and flavors of culinary herbs and spices. In this alphabetical guide, the author includes sidebars containing the botanical and common names of each subject, the family, flavor group and weight. Included are 32 pages of close-up color photographs of many of the 97 spices and herbs.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal

Australian-born Hemphill grew up on his family's herb farm, and he and his wife now run a specialty spice and herb market in a suburb of Sydney. His ambitious reference work covers more than 95 herbs and spices, ranging from ajowan to zedoary and including both the familiar and the exotic. The detailed entries (there are nine pages on vanilla alone) provide common and botanical names, origin and history, "flavor group," and tips on buying, storage, and use, along with a wealth of other information; most also include a recipe, and there are color photographs of the herbs and spices as well. In addition to the A-to-Z guide, there is a large section on combining spices and herbs, in blends such as Moroccan chermoula, Indian garam masala, and French quatre spices, among others. This invaluable reference is essential for most collections.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 512 pages
  • Publisher: Robert Rose (March 2, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0778800474
  • ISBN-13: 978-0778800477
  • Product Dimensions: 10.1 x 7.2 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,479,658 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Ian Hemphill can't remember when herbs and spices were not a part of his life. The younger son of John and Rosemary Hemphill, who pioneered Australia's love of herbs and spices in the 1950's, Ian earned his pocket money picking herbs and remembers many a season when the family home was strewn with bunches of drying culinary produce. Ian worked with his parents for many years, managed a spice company in Singapore and was a senior manager for a multinational food company in Australia. In 1997 Ian and his wife Liz opened a specialty spice shop in the Sydney suburb of Rozelle, which bears the nickname Ian has had since school days.....Herbie's. Herbie is now enjoying sharing his extensive knowledge and experience with his customers at Herbie's Spices. Herbie's Spices was founded to fill a need in the community of cooks and food lovers who wanted to access hard-to-find herbs and spices, have access to reliable information and be assured of the very best quality available in the world.

In 2000 Herbie's Spices was the winner of the Gourmet Traveller Jaguar award for excellence for Innovation in Produce.

Ian's first book "Spice Notes" A cook's compendium of herbs and spices was launched in October 2000 and was received with wide acclaim.

In 2001 Spice Notes won the coveted Food Media Club Food Writer's award for best hard cover food related book in Australia.

Shortly after at "Tasting Australia" in Adelaide, Spice Notes was one of eight nominees for the Jacobs Creek award for best hard cover food related book in the world.

In January 2002, the American magazine "Saveur" listed Spice Notes as number 51 in its list of 100 'favorite foods, restaurants, recipes, people, places & things.'

Indian Tourism awarded "Herbie's Spice Discovery Tour to India" an Award of Excellence.

In 2002 Spice Notes was published for the American market under the title there as "The Spice & Herb Bible".

In September 2002 Ian's second book Spice Travels - A Spice Merchant's Voyage of Discovery" was launched and was nominated in the Best Food Book category for the Jacobs Creek World Food Media Awards 2003.

In March 2003 "Herbie" was awarded the Food Media Club Australia Peer Industry Award for Best Overall Contribution to the Communication of Food, at the Vittoria Australian Food Media Awards 2003.

Herbaceous - A Cook's Guide to Culinary Herbs, authored by Ian and wife Liz was launched in April 2003, and has been warmly received by herb lovers around Australia. In September 2004, Herbaceous was awarded a Highly Commended at the Vittoria Australian Food Media Awards 2004.

Spicery - A Cook's Guide to Culinary Spices, written by Ian & Elizabeth Hemphill with Philippa Sandall, was launched in October 2004. In December 2004 Spicery was awarded Best Single Subject Cookbook - English, in the Gourmand World Cookbook Awards 2004.

In Early 2007, Herbaceous and Spicery were combined into one edition and launched under the title "Sticks, Seeds, Pods & Leaves - A Cook's Guide to Culinary Herbs and Spices" with over 150 recipes.

Spice Notes and Recipes - A new edition of Spice Notes with new listings, additions and over 60 new recipes developed by Ian and Liz's daughter Kate, launched in November 2006. This new edition is also published in the USA as The Spice and Herb Bible Second Edition. The USA edition was joint winner of the Best Reference Book category at the International Association of Culinary Professionals Cookbook Awards in Chicago in April 2007.

In October 2007, Ian "Herbie" Hemphill was inducted into the Sydney Morning Herald Sydney Magazine's Food Hall of Fame.

Liz and Ian work full time at Herbie's Spices, dividing their time between the "Spicery" where their spices are processed, blended and packed and their retail store in Rozelle, where they get a chance to meet and talk to their regular customers.

Herbie & Liz also take groups of tourists to India nearly every year on a Spice Discovery Tour that explores the sights, sounds, flavours and atmosphere of India. To date they have led 10 of these tours to India since opening Herbie's Spices.

Ian is Immediate Past President of Food Media Club Australia Inc. (now called Australian Association of Food Professionals), he continues to conduct Spice Appreciation Classes at his shop in Rozelle while Liz cooks tasty spiced morsels. Ian is a regular guest on ABC radio and also manages to fit in guest spots on television, various radio stations in Australia and on cable T.V.

In October 2008, Channel 9's "Fresh" sent Herbie to South India to record 10 six minute segments which went to air mid November 2008.

In April 2010, Just Add Spice, published by Penguin was launched. Just Add Spice was co-authored with Lyndey Milan and has been received with critical acclaim by the media.

In July 2011, Ian & Liz Hemphill were presented with the trophy for Herbie's Spices for winning the Most Outstanding Providore in the ABC Delicious Magazine 2011 Produce Awards.

 

Customer Reviews

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

22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Lots of interesting and useful information, but not the best., January 22, 2006
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Spice and Herb Bible: A Cook's Guide (Hardcover)
`The Spice and Herb Bible' by Australian spice merchant, Ian Hemphill, published by Canadian culinary `bible' publishing specialist, Robert Rose is a serious entry to be one's definitive reference for spices and herbs, but it fails largely because of the strength of its competition and from the fact that it is not as cook friendly as its subtitle, `A Cook's Guide' may make you believe.

My choice for first and second place among good books on kitchen seasonings are `The Contemporary Encyclopedia of herbs & spices' by Seattle spice merchant Tony Hill and perennial culinary expert, Jill Norman's `herbs & spices, the cook's reference'. While these books are very different from one another, they are both superior to Hemphill's book as a reference to the average home cook. Oddly enough, this book may actually be the best of the three as a reference for the aspiring spice merchant.

The first thing that made me wary of Hemphill's book was its very choppy and anecdotal history of the spice trade. It hit only the most interesting highlights, and got several facts wrong in the process. The two most serious errors may have been ascribing the military expansion of Islam to the prophet Mohammed personally and by ascribing to the inaccurate and largely discredited doctrine that the European use of spices was to mask poorly preserved meat. In fact, meat preservation technology (charcuterie) was really very highly developed by post-Roman Europe.

There is no question that Hemphill gives us oodles of good information about herbs and spices, but unlike Norman's very cleverly organized book, this information is practically useless for the cook who happens to want to use an herb or spice in a dish and wishes to find an appropriate selection, when she knows she wants a hint of licorice flavor in a fresh herb, but her local megamart is all out of her known sources of anise flavorings. If it were not for the historical gaffs in the historical overview and the fact that Hemphill puts all of his entries under the rubric of `spices' rather than splitting them up by herb and spice (like Norman), or at least identifying the dictionary section as `Herbs and Spices' (like Hill).

Each entry does look like a guide for the merchant or scholar rather than the cook. It includes:

Common Name
Other Common Name(s)
Botanical Name, i.e. genus and species
Botanical Family (genuses belong to families in the Linnean classification scheme)
Names in other languages (a la Bruce Cost's excellent `Asian Ingredients')
Flavor Group - This is a means of organizing seasonings which Hemphill may have contrived himself. At the very least, it is not broadly used and does not correspond to the familiar four or five tastes on the tongue.
Weight per Teaspoon - A means of converting weights to volumes for shredded, ground, or finely chopped seasonings. The usefulness of this material escapes me.
Suggested quantity per pound - A similarly arcane fact that I doubt any professional chef would ever use.
Complements - Foods best used in. If this were presented in a tabular fashion giving foods followed by best used spices, this would really be useful.
Used in - Lists spice blends in which the material is an ingredient.
Combines with - Spices which work well together. Somewhat useful.
Description - Why not a picture! This is Norman's greatest strength in that she gives color pictures of every single species.
Origin and History - Nice, but I don't trust the author's history lessons!
Processing - Interesting
Buying and Storage - Most useful for a merchant.
Use - The only really useful section.
Recipe - Elaboration on `Use'.

Hemphill's last section is on spice mixes where, again, Norman and Hill do much better jobs of providing both useful recipes and avoiding any misleading notions. Where Hemphill gives but one recipe for the French `bouquet garni', Norman gives six, making it clear that the notion of this spice mix is highly mutable, depending on the use to which it is to be put.

As encyclopedically complete as Hemphill's book seems, I detected a few significant oversights, such as his ignoring the two different (Middle Eastern and California) sources of bay leaf. Most cooking authorities warn us away from the offering from the golden state and endorse the Turkish bay. Hemphill deals only with the Turkish source. Also, while Norman cites fourteen (14) different varieties, including pictures of every single one, Hemphill features but one and dismisses the others. This seems to me a bigger oversight then one may think, as there is a great divide between the Mediterranean basils and the varieties used in southern and Southeast Asia.

While this book is useful if you happen to already own it, if you searching for a good book on spices and herbs, I strongly suggest you pick Jill Norman's book or both Norman's book and Hill's book, as the two are highly complementary.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Worthy of any home library, August 10, 2002
This review is from: The Spice and Herb Bible: A Cook's Guide (Hardcover)
Cooks use spices and herbs to enhance flavors and create new ones: Spice And Herb Bible provides a reference and a history, describing a range of global herbs and spices that can be used in modern kitchens. The a-z reference allows for quick, easy look-up of ingredients. While an index of herb and spice sources would have helped those without a shop at hand, this reference still packs in essential details and is worthy of any home library.
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5.0 out of 5 stars wonderful item, August 2, 2010
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This is one of the best purchases on spices that there is, they have the history and the information about the spice, the photos are excellent. I am happy with the author "Ian Hemphill" he has put in alot of reserch and time and effort. I purchased both books on the 'spice and herb bible first and second edition and they are both a good buy, you don't need both books because each one has basically the same information in them but the second edition has more reciepe's.
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