The Independent has published its run-down of the 50 best cookery books, and there are some notable examples of interest to self-sufficientists.
Like Margeurite Pattern’s The Basic Basics: Jams, Preserves and Chutneys, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall’s The River Cottage Family Cookbook
, which aims to get not only parents but also kids busy in the kitchen, and Jamie Oliver’s Jamie at Home: Cook Your Way to the Good Life
, in which the TV uber-chef jumps on the grow your own bandwagon and shows you what to do with your home-grown produce.
But the one thing we like even better than a cookbook that shows you what to do with the produce you have gathered or grown yourself, is a cookbook that costs you nothing to read.
The UK government has decreed that all schools have to start teaching kids how to cook, and to help it’s produced a free book of 50 everyday recipes, including a Blagger favourite, mushroom risotto.
All 50 recipes can be downloaded, for free, from the Teachernet website, even if you have no connection with the world of education at all.
Related posts:
