World
Chefs: Mina Holland's cookbook spans world in 100
recipes
Send a link to a friend
[June 10, 2015]
By Dorene Internicola
NEW YORK (Reuters) -
Recipes from around the world are served with equal
portions of history and anecdotes in food writer Mina
Holland’s first book, “The World on a Plate: 40
Cuisines, 100 Recipes and the Stories Behind Them.”
|
Holland, who is based in London, is the editor of Guardian
Cook, the food section of the Guardian newspaper. Her book, a
travel-cookbook hybrid, has been translated into 12 languages.
“It’s a book you can read from in bed and use in the kitchen,”
she said.
Holland, 30, spoke to Reuters about book, her love of food and
being led around the world by her stomach.
Q: What’s the link between food and travel?
A: For me it’s a very natural entry point into the culture
because it’s one of the first things you need to do when you
land in a place. You see a culture operate in a very natural
capacity when food is involved.
Q: Have you been to all the countries you write about?
A: I’ve been to a lot of them but I didn’t get to all. I didn’t
get to Iran, for example.
Q: What do all these cuisines have in common?
A: (It's) the intersection of geography and climate and people
and culture. All cooking has this in common. Also, they’re all
continually in flux. Obviously there are the traditional dishes
but even how those are made is going to shift over time ... All
cuisines are alive. They’re like batons passed between
generations.
Q: What’s your favorite cuisine?
[to top of second column] |
A: I think it’s a cheap answer but if I had to live with one for the
rest of my life I would probably pick Italian cuisine.
Q: How is this book geared to the home cook?
A: The idea was for all these recipes to be very accessible. It’s
all very straightforward and you should be able to make all
(recipes) with ingredients you can pick up.
Q: What’s always in your pantry?
A: I always have lemons, garlic and really good olive oil. I usually
have some feta cheese and lots of fresh herbs, honey, vinegar, Dijon
mustard and a tin of anchovies.
Q: What’s next for you?
A: I’m about a month into my second book, a collection of oral
history and recipes, about culinary inheritance and how the food of
our forebears shapes us. It’s called “Mama.”
(Editing by Patricia Reaney and Meredith Mazzilli)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |