This Volume guides readers through the culinary and geographical landscape of France’s golden province. A delicious cuisine incorporating traditional foods and methods. 250 recipes. Over 250 full-color photos, maps, and illustrations.
Richard Olney was an American painter, cook, food writer, editor, and memoirist, best known for known for his books of French country cooking.
Olney lived in a house above the village of Solliès-Toucas in Provence, France, for most of his adult life, where he wrote many classic and influential cookbooks of French country cooking. He had first moved to France in 1951, to Paris, where he was close friends with (and painted many of) the American and English bohemian expatriate set, including James Baldwin, filmmaker Kenneth Anger, painter John Craxton, poet John Ashbery, and composer Ned Rorem.
For those of you who don't know about this series of books, they're really more combination cooking/travel/photography coffee table books than they are typical cookbooks; they're oversized and, thus, are rather cumbersome in the kitchen. The books are divided into sections by region, and each section includes writeups about the area and the local cuisine there, stunning photography and great recipes.
I'm honestly a bit weird in that I love reading cookbooks, but rarely try to make anything in them, so I haven't actually tried any of the recipes included here (though they look delicious). If you're hoping for a traditional cookbook on French or Provençal cuisine, you should probably look elsewhere, as the size and arrangement of this book will make it difficult to use practically in the kitchen. But if you're someone who loves travel writing, food and great photography, you won't be disappointed.
I joyfully stumbled on this book in a free little library in Boulder CO. Yes, it is cumbersome, but also easy to read because of its size. The photos are stunning and the writings on the regions of Provence (which you can easily ignore if preferred) are evocative and helpful should you decide to visit or even move there. I love hauling this out of my cupboard and making a recipe here and there. The recipe ingredients are affordable, simple, healthy (save the heavy cream), and delicious. Tonight we are having the polenta dish. Two nights ago we had Bouillabaisse Borgne. The eggplant dishes are coming next. In a this day of tech and online data overload, this beautiful book feels like grounding and a return to something tangible and sacred.
This book is as much travelogue and coffee table book as cookbook, but it manages to be quite useful. Linny and I have been cooking out of it for quite a while, and we come back to it despite it's massive size that frustrates our kitchen bookshelf.