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Bitter: 80 delicious flavour-packed and original recipes, as seen on Saturday Kitchen

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80 flavourful, vibrant recipes to brighten up your table this Spring. Fearlessly bringing together the best flavours and culinary strategies from around the world, Alexina Anatole will help you use bitter flavours in your cooking to improve the taste of everything you make, whether it's a savoury weeknight dinner or a sweet and decadent dessert - one flavour-balancing technique at a time. These 80 recipes take classic favourites to a new level and include moreish solutions for every meal.

Emamples: Matcha Basque Cheesecake Tomato, Lapsang Souchong Salad, Raw Kale and Grapefruit Salad Roast Chicken with Beer Butter.

Using ten star ingredients with recipes that demonstrate how to cook with each type of bitterness - from grapefruit and bitter oranges, bitter greens, tahini, beer, walnuts, cranberries, tea, coffee, cocoa, and liquorice - each dish will expand your repertoire and open the door to new worlds of deliciousness.

Kindle Edition

Published September 28, 2023

62 people are currently reading
99 people want to read

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Alexina Anatole

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Rosemary Standeven.
1,024 reviews53 followers
April 3, 2024
This was an interesting collection of recipes. Personally, I like bitter tastes, and like the author, believe that they are good for your health (particularly good for the liver). The current fashion is to make everything sweet: adding sugar, corn syrup or other sweeteners, or breeding plants (such as lettuces, apples) to get rid of any bitterness or acidity. This plays a not insignificant part in the worldwide pandemic of obesity. So, it is nice to see bitterness being championed, and a different approach to managing our tastes.
At the start there is a discussion about bitterness, its importance, and how the addition of non-bitter ingredients can soothe, balance, distract or offset it.
The book concentrates on ten different bitter ingredients: grapefruit & bitter oranges; bitter leaves; tahini; beer; walnuts; cranberries; tea; coffee; cocoa; and liquorice. There is a chapter on each, with a range of recipes – vegetarian, meat, sides, desserts, drinks.
So far, I have only tried six of the recipes – a couple of those twice – but there are more that do appeal to me, to try at a later date. I would love to try some of the liquorice recipes, but first need to get hold of some liquorice powder.
My absolute favourite was the ‘Aubergine, Walnut + Pomegranate Melanzane’ – amazing taste and textures. It took hours to prepare and cook (worth it, but drove my husband, who has to do the cooking, up the wall). Nothing difficult – just a lot of parts to set up before everything is brought together for the final baking. Just before serving, we noticed a tip hidden right at the end of the recipe, saying that most of the parts could be prepared days in advance! Serves us right for not reading the recipe right through. Next time (and there will be), it will be so much easier.
Also excellent were the ‘Tabbouleh fritters’ and the ‘French Chicory, Roquefort + Walnut salad’ . With special mention to the ‘Raw Kale + Grapefruit Salad’ and the ‘Asparagus with Sesame Seed Dressing’ .
An unusual, but very interesting cookbook. Recommended.
Profile Image for Julie Thomason.
Author 3 books18 followers
April 20, 2025
I enjoyed this cookbook, I like the focus and the writing and loved the historical nuggets of the ingredients. I will try some recipes, other def not for me. However, the paring of items not usual was refreshing and I look forward to experimenting with some of them.
2,043 reviews41 followers
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September 19, 2025
As heard on The Splendid Table: Conversations & Recipes For Curious Cooks & Eaters (834: Fall Cooking and Bitter Flavors with Genevieve Ko and Alexina Anatole)

This week, we’re diving into fall cooking and the beauty of bitter flavors. First, Genevieve Ko, deputy editor at New York Times Cooking, joins Francis to take your fall cooking questions. From freezing smart to cabbage makeovers, Genevieve shares practical advice for making the most of fresh produce and tackling leftovers. She also shares the NYT Cooking piece 15 Ways to Make a Head of Cabbage Dinner and her Pumpkin Meringue Pie recipe. And check out her Cinnamon-Toast Graham Crackers from the last time she joined us to talk about Better Baking. Then, London-based cookbook author Alexina Anatole shares the inspiration behind her debut book, Bitter. She makes the case for bitterness as an essential flavor, one that brings depth, intrigue, and balance to our cooking. Alexina reminds us how bitterness touches so many of our favorite foods and she leaves us with her recipe for Stout Sticky Toffee Pudding, a perfect example of sweet meeting bitter in harmony.



Broadcast dates for this episode:


September 19, 2025 (originally aired)


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