The format of this book is eminently helpful: each master recipe is followed by variations; i.e. the master recipe teaches technique; the following associated recipes then ring the changes (some quite exotically so). The recipes I’ve tried have a) tasted good, b) looked good, and c) not raced beyond my technical ability. This is what shopping for food is all about: not having a written list of absolutes, but instead applying one’s knowledge to buy whatever is of highest quality for the lowest agreeable price.
My only quibble about this book is its size and weight. Had I been the publisher I would have published it as two volumes, slip-cased. More expensive? Yes; but so much easier to handle. I’d have saved money by cutting out the glossy lifestyle photographs, only keeping the (fewer) photographs which explain a technique, or the assembly of the finished dish. Actually, come to think of it, this book minus the informational-junk photographs and double-spaced text of the chapter/section introductions would very likely make for a nice usable single volume!