Kitchen : Recipes from the Heart of the Home

A big, compendious, comfortable, informative and utterly engaging book, “Kitchen” brings us feel-good food for cooks and eaters, whether Express-style and exotic-easy during the week, or leisurely and luxuriating (in the spirit of ‘How to be a Domestic Goddess’ and ‘Feast’) at weekends or for occasions. Divided into two parts – Kitchen Quandaries and Kitchen Comforts – Nigella gives us the wherewithal to tackle any situation and satisfy all nourishment needs. But real cooking is often about leftovers, too, so here one recipe can lead to another…from ham hocks to pea soup and pasties, from chicken to Chinatown salad.

This isn’t just about being thrifty but about demonstrating how recipes come about, and giving new inspiration for last-minute meals and souped-up store cupboard suppers. As well as offering the reader a mouthwatering array of new recipes, both comforting and exciting – from clams with chorizo to Guinness gingerbread, from Asian braised beef to flourless chocolate lime cake, from Pasta alla Genovese to Venetian carrot cake – Nigella rounds up her kitchen kit must-haves (telling us, too, what equipment we don’t need) and highlights individual ingredients – both basic essentials and modern-day life-savers. But above all, she reminds the reader how much pleasure there is to be had in real food, and in reclaiming the traditional rhythms of the kitchen, as she cooks to the beat of the heart of the home, creating simple recipes to make life less complicated.

Archer

This, the first in a series, is by Warwick author Jacky Gray and is one boy’s fight against adversity to find friendship, romance and the generosity to love his enemy. The Hengist books are about a fictitious race of people, descended from Hengest and Horsa: Anglo Saxon settlers who used a White Horse as their banner. They live in southern England (Wessex) in a world that coexists with our present day in an alternative reality.

Archer is the sort of boy things happen to. Orphaned as a baby, he has certain qualities that make him very different to all the other kids. He doesn’t understand why he is so much stronger and faster than other boys his age, why a sword just feels right in his hand, or how he can fire an arrow at a target and it will hit the centre even if his eyes are closed. He does know that he has to fight his friend Finn in a joust and compete against his best friend Fletch to see who is the most worthy. Whoever wins the competition becomes King of the May, rewarded with fame, honour and plenty of female adoration. Edlyn has been a big thorn in Archer’s side for many years and he will go to any lengths to win, but his lack of respect for the natural order has dangerous consequences. Archer is the only one who can save him, but after the way Edlyn has treated him, does he really want to?

 

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