Amazon.com Review
British tycoon Terence Conran has turned to gardening with the same exacting eye and aesthetic sensibilities that have made his books on home decorating such a success over the years (
The Essential House Book,
Terence Conran's Easy Living, etc.). His modern, clean, uncluttered look extends here to the kitchen garden, his simplicity and good taste to the recipes. Conran believes it worthwhile to cultivate a kitchen garden in even the smallest of spaces, seeing it as a chance to grow chemical-free, more intensely flavored varieties of fruit and vegetables than can be found in the supermarket.
The Chef's Garden is a beautiful book, full of color photographs of luscious produce. Who would have thought purple broccoli, cherry tomatoes, and chard could be so ornamental? Best of all, you don't need an acre of farmland to cultivate these fruits and vegetables; most are shown growing in small urban gardens or in pots on decks and patios. There is even a plan for growing a kitchen garden on a rooftop.
The point of all this bounty is in the cooking and eating, and Conran emphasizes taste and appearance by using herbs and edible flowers, with information on growing, propagating, and preserving a variety of the most useful kinds. Conran recommends container culture, but also gives a detailed plan for a tiny, formal herb garden (10 by 3 feet) which will hold a generous array of herbs enclosed by rosemary hedges. Detailed instructions are given for pruning dwarf fruit trees, and training espaliers, to encourage fruit production in the smallest possible spaces.
Conran goes beyond aesthetics to cover all the practicalities: selection, soil prep, sowing, thinning, protection from pests, disease and weather, harvesting, and finally, cooking. Eighteen delicious and simple recipes inspire the gardener. Gratin of chard, a spinach and ricotta tart with tapenade, caldo verde, and a mouthwatering salad of figs, ricotta, and honey are a few of the international recipes showcasing homegrown fruit and vegetables. --Valerie Easton
Cooking and home furnishings maven Conran turns his attention to gardening supporting the cook's needs. A chef's garden must be practical and efficient, since a chef's energy is best expended in the kitchen, not poking about in soil. Because most restaurants are urban phenomena, a chef's garden is frequently a city garden. Conran provides design alternatives for small spaces and for creating gardens where no soil currently exists. Conran's attention to detail makes the gardens models of orderly planning. He provides plans for plot gardening, container gardening, and roof and deck gardens. He even allows for an ultimate luxury: dining areas in the garden. Conran inventories possible plantings for the chef's garden, citing some less common produce such as Eastern greens and cardoons. To use all the herbs and vegetables, Conran offers a few recipes, including a noteworthy gratin of Swiss chard. For those with requisite space and soil, Conran suggests that even fruit trees are possible in the chef's garden.
Mark Knoblauch