'One of the most beautiful hardbacks we’ve ever seen' The Evening StandardSimple, modern, Italian cooking from one of the world's most iconic restaurants on its 30th birthday.This bold and beautiful cookbook shares over 120 simple, modern Italian recipes - revisiting favourites from the first iconic River Cafe blue book, updated for home cooks today, and introducing 30 new recipes, with new tips and anecdotes from Ruth Rogers. Written by Ruth and head chefs Sian Wyn Owen and Joseph Trivelli, with new photography by Matthew Donaldson and Jean Pigozzi, River Cafe 30 is peppered throughout with previously unseen archive material and exclusive bespoke menu artworks from friends of the restaurant.A must-have for all food lovers.
Ruth Rogers, Baroness Rogers of Riverside, CBE, is an American and British chef, renowned for owning and running the Michelin-starred Italian restaurant The River Café in Hammersmith, London. Born Ruth Elias in upstate New York, she grew up in a politically active household and was influenced by her parents’ left-wing politics. She attended Colorado Rocky Mountain School and later studied design at the London College of Printing. In 1969, she met architect Richard Rogers, marrying him in 1973 after his divorce. They spent time in Paris and Italy, where Rogers' work and the culinary culture inspired her love for seasonality in cooking. In 1987, Ruth and her partner Rose Gray opened The River Café, which became known for its authentic Italian cuisine. The restaurant, designed by her husband, gained significant acclaim, and its cookbooks became best-sellers. It has also trained celebrated chefs like Jamie Oliver and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall. After Gray’s death in 2010, Rogers continued to run the restaurant, maintaining its prestigious Michelin star. Her work has earned her multiple honors, including a CBE in 2020 for services to the culinary arts and charity.
I made a few recipes in here, the vegetable and pasta dishes primarily, and they were simple and good. I enjoyed reading about the history and inside stories of the River Cafe. The meat dishes were just a bit overly complex for my home kitchen, and the dessert dishes, while they looked indulgent, were written to feed a party of two dozen people. Even so, the book is lovingly written and gorgeously photographed. It’s not simply “put together,” but crafted to be a tactile reading experience and an emotional historical journey. Even the dishes I would never make are a pleasure to read about. But I really, really do wish those ice cream recipes were designed for the 2-quart ice cream maker and not the larger restaurant size. Starting off with 11 cups of heavy cream is a bit much...
Pretty book but I'm not sure how many recipes I would make. I have a few I am going to try. If I ever get an ice cream machine there are tons of recipes for that
I'll be honest, I'm not familiar with this particular River Cafe and on first blush a lot of the recipes seemed a little on the posher side for me, both in taste and ability. But in reading more closely the recipes are not necessarily as complicated as I first thought and I've tabbed quite a few for testing including ricotta al forno (basically a cheese souffle), risotto with procini and girolles, marinated grilled lamb and various courgette recipes (not to mention an amazing slow cooked tomato sauce recipe). This book also includes a bit of background and history to the Cafe and how its changed over the years, including its changing menus as well as some stunning photos of the Cafe both then and now and of the action behind the scenes.