Summer's Lease: How to Cook Without Heat

Hardback

Main Details

Title Summer's Lease: How to Cook Without Heat
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Thom Eagle
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:224
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 153
Category/GenreCookery, food and drink
Preserving and freezing
ISBN/Barcode 9781787135338
ClassificationsDewey:641.5
Audience
General
Illustrations Text only

Publishing Details

Publisher Quadrille Publishing Ltd
Imprint Quadrille Publishing Ltd
Publication Date 11 June 2020
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

From the author of the Fortnum & Mason Debut Food Book of 2019, Summer's Lease looks at the cooking techniques we use instead of heat which, in letting us step away from the stove, lend themselves perfectly to summer eating: breaking, salting, souring and ageing. The long dog days of a tiring summer are no time to be a cook. A few charred sardines are of course a wonderful thing, but there the grill sits, pouring out heat into the already-hot kitchen; anyone with any sense who wants charred sardines is somewhere close to the seaside.... It is a time when you might, if you weren't so hot, wonder what it means to cook at all. Is there cooking without fire...? We understand that when we say something is cooked, we mean it has been heated; but we also understand that a cook does much more than just cooking. The chopping, the beating, the marinating, the dressing ... What cooks do is best defined not by the word 'cooking', but by the idea of metamorphosis. Cooks transform ingredients. Through recipes and meanderings, award-winning food writer Thom Eagle explores what it means to create dishes without a reliance on fire and flame, and offers a unique and tantalising glimpse inside the mind of a chef.

Author Biography

Thom Eagle is a writer, chef and fermenter. He was head chef of Little Duck the Picklery in East London, and is now living in Sicily, exploring the food of the region. His first book, First, Catch, won the Fortnum & Mason Debut Food Book 2019. He blogs semi-regularly at In Search Of Lost Thyme, has presented at the Oxford Symposium of Food and Cookery and contributes to Locavore magazine; he is often very tired.