This environmentally friendly growing guide/vegetable pop-history/cookbook conducts a leisurely tour of the Simply Grande Gardens in Winslow, Maine, "which consist of 1 acre of well-loved and -tilled land where the husband-and-wife team of gardener-hydrogeologist... Garrett and artist-writer... Pollard plant and harvest delicious vegetables for 15 families... every year." Readers will learn where to buy the best asparagus seeds and how to grow them ("An asparagus bed could be your pride and joy till you're old and toothless"); how to contain mint and oregano using an old car tire; and how to prepare lamb's-quarters and make dandelion wine. Organized by season, the book nonetheless proceeds somewhat haphazardly; nutritional information, for instance, is provided only for some vegetables (peas and endive, yes; grape leaves, arugula and celery, no). Pollard (The New Maine Cooking) and Garrett want dinner to resume its importance in people's lives. Heavy on superstitions, the book passes on acclaimed nutrition writer Jean Carper's hypothesis that hot paprika is a natural painkiller and playfully suggests that antifertility agents in peas are responsible for Tibet's low population growth. Drawing directly from other books like Richardson's Wild Edible Plants of New England and James Trager's Food Chronology, this book will not add much new information to an extensive library. However, unusual recipes such as Sauteed Daylily Buds and Milkweed in Whole-Wheat Beer Tempura will delight dedicated gardeners, chefs and organic produce enthusiasts, as will the thorough bibliography.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
Simply Grande is the name of the organic garden that writer/artist Pollard and her husband, Garrett, an award-winning gardener, run in Winslow, ME, providing vegetables for some 15 families. Pollard's book is logically organized by season, from fiddleheads, asparagus, and other spring vegetables in April to potatoes, beets, and other hardy winter vegetables in November. Garrett offers detailed gardening notes on the more than 70 herbs and vegetables they cover, while Pollard provides informative text and background, along with close to 300 recipes (just about all of which are vegetarian as well as vegetable). Pollard's extensive research will make this a culinary historian's delight, with references to a vast array of primary and secondary sources ranging from a 1475 Icelandic medical text to early Puritan diaries, among others; cooks and organic gardeners will find the book a valuable resource as well. For most collections.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.