The Food of Spain
The Food of Spain book cover

The Food of Spain

Price
$38.50
Format
Hardcover
Pages
609
Publisher
Ecco
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0061969621
Dimensions
10.4 x 8.7 x 2.4 inches
Weight
4.75 pounds

Description

“After a series of fascinating essays on the historical forces that led to the creation of various Spanish cuisines (among others: Celts and Jews, Frenchmen, monks, peasants and royals), Roden slips into the kitchen to deliver the goods.” — Sam Sifton, New York Times Book Review In The Food of Spain , Claudia Roden, the James Beard award-winning author of the classics A Book of Middle Eastern Food and The Book of Jewish Food , and one of our foremost authorities on Mediterranean, North African, and Italian cooking, brings her incomparable authenticity, vision, and immense knowledge to bear in this cookbook on the cuisines of Spain. New York Times bestselling cookbook author Claudia Roden believes that through food a cook can reconstruct an entire world. And in her classic A Book of Middle Eastern Food –eight hundred recipes long, a treasure trove of folk tales, proverbs, stories, poetry, and local history–that's just what she did. Historian and critic Simon Schama has said of her that "Claudia Roden is no more a simple cookbook writer than Marcel Proust was a biscuit baker." The Book of Jewish Food , another classic, is equally magnificent in its span, a cookbook that is also a history of Jewish life and settlement, told through the story of what Jews ate, and where, and why, and how they made it. Now, in The Food of Spain , Claudia Roden applies that same remarkable insight, scope, and authority to a cuisine marked by its regionalism and suffused with an unusually particular culinary history. In hundreds of exquisite recipes, Roden explores both the little known and the classic dishes of Spain–from Andalusia to Asturias, from Catalonia to Galicia. And whether she's writing about smoky, nutty Catalan Romesco sauce, Cordero a la Miel–sweet and hot tender lamb stew with honey–or the iconic, emblematic national dish of Spain, saffron-perfumed Paella Valenciana, her clear, elegant, humorous, and passionate voice is a reader's delight, a guide not only to delicious food but to the peoples and cultures that produced it. Both comprehensive and timeless, The Food of Spain is one of the most important books on this tremendous cuisine to appear in the last fifty years. A classic in the making, it is an essential work not only for fans of Spanish and Mediterranean food but for every serious cook as well as discerning armchair travelers. Claudia Roden was born and brought up in Cairo. She finished her education in Paris and later studied art in London. She now lives in London. Roden writes about food with a special interest in the social and historical back-ground of cooking. Her books include The Book of Jewish Food , which won eight international awards, as well as The New Book of Middle Eastern Food , Arabesque , Coffee: A Connoisseur's Companion , The Food of Italy: Region by Region , Everything Tastes Better Outdoors , and Mediterranean Cookery . In 1989 she won Italy's two most prestigious food prizes, the Premio Orio Vergani and the Premio Maria Luigia, Duchessa di Parma. She has also won six Glenfiddich awards. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • One of our foremost authorities on Mediterranean, North African, and Italian cooking, Claudia Roden brings her incomparable authenticity, vision, and immense knowledge to bear in
  • The Food of Spain
  • . The James Beard Award–winning author of the classic cookbooks
  • A Book of Middle Eastern Food
  • and
  • A Book of Jewish Food
  • now graces food lovers with the definitive cookbook on the Spanish cuisine, illustrated with dozens of gorgeous full-color photographs that capture the color and essence of this wonderfully vibrant nation and its diverse people, traditions, and culture.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(227)
★★★★
25%
(95)
★★★
15%
(57)
★★
7%
(26)
-7%
(-27)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Spanish Cooking at Home Plus a Great Travelogue

Claudia Roden's breakthrough book, 'A Book of Middle Eastern Food' was not only a landmark work on one of my favorite cuisines, it was also a wonderful reminiscence of Roden's family history as Sephardic Jews who settled in Egypt. For Sephardic, read 'Spanish' and her credibility as a writer on this Mediterranean cuisine becomes clear. The first 120 plus pages contain a region-by-region overview of Spain's multi-ethnic food culture, ranging from signature agricultural products to 'bred in the bone' dishes. I very much agree with previous reviewers that the recipes she has selected accord well with what I have eaten and enjoyed during my travels in Spain. I also feel that this is the best overall book for a Spanish family (speaking English fluently) to select for their own cookbook. The great dishes, the expected dishes are here--from a homemade range of stocks through soups...well, to nuts! Famed convent-based recipes for egg and almond pastry 'bites' are here. We all have had them and we all have wished we 'knew how' to recreate them at home. Now we can! We can also share a thumbnail sketch of each region's history, their hopes for independence or autonomy or their roles in creating today's vibrant, modern Spain.

Why only four stars? I cook seriously (as does Roden)but I may be a bit 'jaded', a bit more interested in 'knockout' recipe and flavor or texture ideas. This book is wonderfully traditional. Her prose is not as rigorously edited as it used to be and there are some repetitions that pall on the careful reader.

Roden has also become a culinary 'goddess' by dint of her unremitting hard work and her text has acquired a bit of baggage: she is modest enough to feel she needs to recognize all the people in Spain who have helped her along the way and through the years. Notable names are dropped but there are also magic moments when she recognizes, for example, the president of a local gastronomic society of men, a man of humble origins but of enormous self-study and acheivement and a man of noble hospitality. 'Visiting' good people who love good food is one of the pleasures served up by this book; a pleasure seldom found elsewhere.

Obviously, I had to add this book to my collection and I feel you won't be sorry to do the same. For those who are seeking something a bit less ambitious and a bit more path-breaking, may I suggest Jose Andres' works 'Made in Spain' or 'Tapas?' The dishes he offers make me want to get in the kitchen and cook something for dinner tonight!
41 people found this helpful
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Magnificent Printing, 609 Pages, Hundreds of Color Photos, Best Cookbook Ever?

I bought this book because Judith Jones (Julia Child's editor) recommended it in her own wonderful book, "The Tenth Muse: My Life in Food." (Judith has perhaps the most sophisticated palate of any American.)

This will be one of the most attractive cookbooks that you own - looks good among my 55 volumes. If you read it, you will learn much about the geography and history of Spanish food over the past thousand years. If you cook from it, your enjoyment will know no bounds.

This is about the food of European Spain, not the also-wonderful food of Mexico and other Spanish-speaking areas of the New World. For your next block party, do paella, perhaps the best-known example of Spanish communal feasting.

The medium-grain rice, sweet paprika, chorizo sausage, and other important Spanish ingredients can be hard to find. Use Amazon gourmet foods to find these items until you learn the substitutions available at your supermarket.

There are important French influences in Spanish cooking but less to fear. Eating is celebrated in Spanish cooking more than culinary arts - you can do it!
20 people found this helpful
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Another massive hit for Roden

Claudia Roden has long been my favorite cookbook author. Her books are well-researched, tasty travelogues, as well as cookbooks. I have thoroughly explored and cooked many of her recipes in Arabesque, The Good Foods of Italy, and The New Book of Middle Eastern Food. Each and every recipe works perfectly and tastes exactly like the dishes of the region tasted when I traveled there.

I was thrilled to see that Roden recently tackled my favorite cuisine, The Foods of Spain. This massive tome of recipes and information is exactly what I would expect from Roden. The research and information is all-encompassing and the recipes thoroughly explore each region of Spain. So far, I have made a dozen recipes from its pages and they all have turned out beautifully and taste just like the Spanish food of my memory.

Cooking from Roden's recipes is the next best thing to traveling to Spain and eating the fabulous food.

This book is a must for any cookbook connoisseur, traveller, or Spanish enthusiast..all of which I am! The Foods of Spain is my new favorite cookbook, hands down...just narrowly beating out Roden's past books.

Victoria Allman
author of: SEAsoned: A Chef's Journey with Her Captain
19 people found this helpful
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A Spaniard should write this book!

I bought this book after I read her Middle Eastern cookbook, which I found to be a great read with the personal intimate stories. Unfortunately, I have to say Claudia Roden is out of her depth here. Not being Spanish and not having lived there for extended periods of time, I felt she treated this book as a research project. Therefore, the writings felt dry and contrived. Most of the personal interactions she cited appeared to be people she met on the research trips, therefore, appearing quite hollow. The pictures are beautiful and the food look delicious. Somehow, it’s hard for me to trust her authority on Spanish food. This book feels like an extension of her franchise, but entending a bit too far in this case.
16 people found this helpful
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This is why Claudia Roden is one of my favorite cookbook writers

This book is basically everything that makes a Claudia Roden book -- personal stories, history, and much more -- combined with some truly beautiful Phaidonesque food photography. It's a doorstop, no question, but it's worth trying to schlep it around just to be able to browse through it. The recipes are all marked by area of origin, and are chosen to reflect each area's specialties, such as Valencia's rice, seafood from Cantabria, the Basque country, and the Balearic Islands, Asturias' apples, and Madrid's signature boiled dinner, the cocido madrileño.

The aesthetics are an important aspect of this book; while the text itself is probably about the same or slightly shorter than Roden's other books, the book as a whole was conceived as a coffee table book, with generous (and obviously Phaidon-influenced) food photography. Roden's friends who helped her with the book also get their own introductions in sidebars, along with ingredients and cultural forces that shaped Spanish food from medieval into modern times. (Roden, being Sephardic Jewish, places special emphasis on the Jewish contributions to the cuisine, and makes a special point to cover how Spain has come to appreciate centuries of contributions by Jews and Conversos.)

For a long time -- over twenty-five years now -- Penelope Casas' [[ASIN:0394513487 The Foods and Wines of Spain]] has been possibly the definitive book in English on Spanish food. It's still an excellent book, but in the years since Casas published her first book, Spanish food has rocketed to worldwide fame as the youngest of Europe's great national cuisines, joining French, Italian, and Greek food thanks to the efforts of both traditionalists and modernists. I don't know that I'd say Roden's book replaces Casas', but the simple fact of it being so far up to date as well as being artistically beautiful just edges out Casas as the book to buy if you're only buying one. (I own both, and I'd suggest you do too, along with [[ASIN:0714848360 1080 Recipes]], which was written in Spain for Spanish cooks, but received a very nice, slightly quirky treatment from Phaidon.) But even if you don't care about any of the above, Claudia Roden is one of the Anglophone food world's great treasures, and frankly a new book by her is really all the excuse you need.
13 people found this helpful
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Binding and construction of the book is terrible!

The recipes and history of Spain are great. The book is massive and pretty much fell apart as soon as I opened it.
I guess on the up side now that it's in sections of 20 or so pages I can just grab the section I need...
12 people found this helpful
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Missing an index in the back of the book

This is a large, beautiful cook book - 594 pages! However, the copy I was sent does not have a complete index. It only has AG - AST. This flaw makes it difficult and time consuming to use. Sometimes the table of contents is too general and not specific enough. I did not notice the lacking index when I first received the book. Wish I would have noticed it earlier and asked for a replacement.
12 people found this helpful
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Not thrilled

I could have done without the revisionist history lessons, thank you. It would be best to leave Spanish history to historians as it's much too complex to be treated in a cookbook. I agree with one of the previous commenters that much of the book is pulp. Broken down to the elemental it's not as rich as I would expect a book called "The Food of Spain" to be. But I do like some of the recipes, especially most of the desserts and sweets, and some of the meat,poultry, and seafood dishes are very interesting and I will definitely use the book. But please Claudia, omit the hearsay history lessons, leave that to the professionals. I do appreciate your passion for good food and good cooking.
8 people found this helpful
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A Country In A Book

For three years, I lived in the south of Spain in a town called Rota, the tip of Andalucía - across the bay from Cadiz and fifteen miles south of Jerez de la Frontera, the sherry capital of the world. Reading this book not only recalled those memories, it made me eager to duplicate them and with the aid of this book, it is exciting to know that with the food aspects at least, I can. The book contains many of the food groups important to every day Spanish life - most of our meals began with a beguiling soup called gazpacho. Every restaurant in Spain serves some version of gazpacho, it wouldn't be in business long if it didn't. The recipe included in the book is a paragon of simplicity - and one that I will try out tonight. Another dish on the menu in 99% of Spanish restaurants is merluza (hake) and it is represented in the book in two forms: hake cooked in cider, and a savory hake in green sauce with asparagus. Evenings, as the damp sea air wove through the town, platters of shrimp with garlic (gambas al ajillo) beckoned on restaurant tables and a recipe for this is also included.

One of my friends boiled down the essence of Spain to its paella, so much so that he has mastered the sausage and chicken version of it known as paella valenciana. The book contains several recipes for paella, but alas, no picture of it. But in the same casserole class, there are many interesting dishes with pictorial adornment the most tempting of which is a seafood pasta (fideua catalonia). For desert, the Spanish love flan, a cold custard with a caramelized top and the book contains many intriguing recipes for this desert.

The author took five years to perform the research, and has interlaid the book with brief histories of Spain's regions, as well as ample illustrative photography. The end result is a distinctive book giving readers and chefs the benefit of the author's broad knowledge and experience.
7 people found this helpful
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Too Much Ham and Few Eggs

The book is good, BUT ...
it is way too thick, expensive and pretentious for what it delivers;
teh author has had many presults that are way more successful, thi sis a good attempt, but by no means does it get close to any form of definite Spanish Cookbook - basic and even "inaccurate" if that term coul dbe applied, as she gives many recipes as The Recipe, while you will find a number of variations that might produce a better end result
5 people found this helpful