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Sally Butcher
174 x 246 mm, 300 pages, b&w illustrations; paperback
ISBN 978-1-903018-51-4; £17.99 |
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RECIPES FROM PERSEPOLIS
‘Like all great cuisines, the food of Iran is more than just about food
– it is a window into the history and soul of a nation. This book is the
one we will be cooking from this year.’ Sam Clark of Moro Restaurant. Persepolis
is a foodie's paradise. Sally Butcher and her husband Jamshid have created
a food store from heaven, gathering all that’s best from Iran and the Middle
East. Chef and food writer Tom Norrington Davies remarks that ‘Persepolis
is my corner shop. But even if it wasn’t, I’d happily cross town and country
to get there. Otherwise I’d miss the heady scent of their herbs and spices
every time I opened my kitchen cupboards. Persepolis is an emporium in
the true sense of the word. It feels exotic and local all at once, and
this is, in no small part, thanks to Sally Butcher. She is always happy
to give advice on everything from chick peas to hookahs with the same warm
mix of humour, expertise and enthusiasm. And if the samovar is on you get
all the above with a cuppa. Persepolis is the sort of place no neighbourhood
should be without.’
This book distils all that is remarkable about this shop and the style
of cooking that it supports. Sally herself is English, but she has had
to learn the ways of her customers and her husband’s family. She is a matchless
interpreter of Persian food and cookery, as well as of modern Iran and
the tremendous changes that have been going on in that society since the
revolution. This book should be seen as a way for British readers to enter
into the Persian experience; to understand how the cuisine has developed;
and to appreciate how the cookery (and the society) is reacting to the
modern world.
The recipes are full and informative,covering every aspect of Persian
cookery from soups and stews to drinks and sweetmeats. This will be a book
to remember; and a book that will be applauded and endorsed by some of
the most respected of our modern food writers and chefs.
INFORMATION ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Sally and her Iranian husband, Jamshid, run a small Persian empire
in south-east London comprising an import and distribution business, and
the shop of the title. A university drop-out, she spent a number of years
pretending she could cook for a living, along the way acquiring a vast
store of useless foodie information and just a scraping of culinary ability.
She absorbed both the Persian language and the Persian kitchen by osmosis.
Click here to see Introduction
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