The acclaimed food writer and photographer explores the rich and varied cuisine of Morocco in this sumptuously illustrated cookbook.
With a wide range of exotic flavors and cooking styles, Morocco includes eighty recipes with Spanish influences, rustic Berber styles, complex, palace-worthy plates, spicy tagines, and surprisingly easy to make street food. Here you will discover piquant appetizers like cumin-spiced potato fritters, classic tagine and couscous entrees, stuffed pastries like Seafood Pastilla, fragrant sweets like Honeyed Phyllo Triangles Stuffed with Almonds, and, of course, Mint Tea.
Drawing on culinary traditions from across Morocco’s diverse geography—from the Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts to the Sahara Desert—this beautiful collection of recipes surprises and inspires the home cook. Gorgeous photographs of such iconic Moroccan scenes as the markets of Marrakech and the date-filled oasis of Zagora capture the many flavors of this sun-splashed country.
Of course, Morocco: A Culinary Journey with Recipes from the Spice-Scented Markets of Marrakech to the Date-Filled Oasis of Zagora is a cookbook, but it’s much more. Author Jeff Kohler fills readers in on the history and geography of Morocco, its various populations and the many influences on its cuisine. Had every recipe been a bust, this cookbook was definitely a worthwhile read, if just for this tantalizing travelogue, complete with photos.
But Kohler doesn’t disappoint on the recipes, either. From tangines to skewers to salads to desserts to the national drink of mint tea, there’s plenty of Moroccan dishes to love.
I paid $1.99 for it so I am not concerned. But the soup on the cover has like no ingredients and many of the things appear to be plain in flavor not what I expected from a Moroccan cook book
I liked where he discussed the different regions of Morocco and the differences in the cuisine the best. I would have liked the occasional description of what various photos depicted. Some of the recipes looked interesting but more for 4+ people rather than 1 person alone.
Ask people what the typical foods from Morocco are and you probably will get a blank look. Which is a great shame.
This richly-decorated, colourful book is a real cook's tour. A tourist book without the tourist information, combining culinary information and recipes together to really help deliver a flavour of Morocco. Drawing naturally on culinary influences from its neighbours, Moroccan cuisine remains an intriguing, mysterious world that, through this book, you can get a privileged look at.
Following on from an enchanting introduction and overview of Morocco - the country and its regions, the reader is taken inside a typical Moroccan pantry. Key ingredients are examined, their use and preparation discussed and even local language translations provided (in case you find yourself in Morocco?). A similar look is then made at the typical tools you may find in a Moroccan kitchen. Whilst you can make do at home with what you already have, there are a few bits and pieces that you might wish to acquire (if you are a kitchen magpie or just like to do things the authentic, traditional way).
After that it is straight to the recipes. Well almost as you still get a lot of useful information wrapped around the recipes and stuffed in-between for good measure. Starting off with breads and pastries - did you know that bread is a staple of Moroccan diets - and boy do some of the delicate 'basic' pastries stuffed with rice or cheese look absolutely scrumptious, yet so simple. Each recipe is comprehensively written without being verbose, providing sufficient information to help a total newcomer make great food without being patronising or overbearing. The book has about 80 recipes in total so you are getting more of an overview or taster than the total, one-and-only book you may need to Moroccan recipes, yet this is not a complaint as you are getting a great little package, a wonderful introduction no less.
After bread and pastries, the reader is guided through the Moroccan world of soups and legumes; street food; fresh & cooked salads; meats; eggs & poultry; fish & shellfish; couscous; sweets & desserts and finally drinks. Many of the recipes surprise (as in, aha! you can do that with that!) and quite a few amaze by their beautiful simplicity. The recipes standout by themselves. The quality photographs just make things even better, if that is possible. At the end there is a bibliography for the curious to read even more about Moroccan cuisine and, as you would expect, a great index.
This reviewer can see this book forming part of any ambitious gastronome's library, a basis for experimentation, a further weapon in the fusion arsenal.. as well as being a damn good introduction to another culture's culinary world. A further, more expanded companion to this book, written in the same style, is now needed!
Morocco: A Culinary Journey with Recipes from the Spice-Scented Markets of Marrakech to the Date-Filled Oasis of Zagora, written by Jeff Koehler and published by Chronicle Books. ISBN 9780811877381, 224 pages. Typical price: GBP15. YYYYY.
// This review appeared in YUM.fi and is reproduced here in full with permission of YUM.fi. YUM.fi celebrates the worldwide diversity of food and drink, as presented through the humble book. Whether you call it a cookery book, cook book, recipe book or something else (in the language of your choice) YUM will provide you with news and reviews of the latest books on the marketplace. //
Great book! It's got a wonderful introduction to Morocco (food and culture). Plus just all-together a beautifully put together book with lovely pictures and easy to follow recipes. I've made a few recipes (mostly the warm veggie "salads") so far and they've all been delicious. Moroccan is my new favorite, I think; exotic, yet simple.
"Eating is not an individual experience,” echoed a friend from the agricultural heartland between Fès and Marrakech. “Everyone is equal when eating. It’s about sharing."
This book is not merely a cookbook, with notes about history, culture, and the cultivation of ingredients. It shows the author's deep love for Moroccan cooking in the well-written description of spices, the tips contained to help the non-Moroccan cook adapt recipes to a modern kitchen, and the selection of recipes.
If you love food and cooking, close the windows. Your neighbors will wonder at the obscene noises you make when perusing this book's pages.