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Pipers Farm The Sustainable Meat Cookbook: Recipes & Wisdom for Considered Carnivores [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 288 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 262x200x32 mm, weight: 1280 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 29-Sep-2022
  • Leidėjas: Kyle Books
  • ISBN-10: 191423927X
  • ISBN-13: 9781914239274
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 288 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 262x200x32 mm, weight: 1280 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 29-Sep-2022
  • Leidėjas: Kyle Books
  • ISBN-10: 191423927X
  • ISBN-13: 9781914239274
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
How to eat ‘less but better’ sustainably produced meat via a seasonal flow, in harmony with nature and regenerative farming principles

This book is an aria for proper meat. Meat as it was before it got messed with. Before animals became a unit of production, but were reared to produce excellent food, and were willingly given an equally excellent life. 

It explores the connection between nature and farming and the result is a mixture of hands-in-the-earth farm stories and meat-first carcass balanced seasonal recipes. Meat is revered and stretched as far as we can make it go by respecting the animal and using every part, cheek to lard, tendon to tail. 

The recipes are not just meat and two veg, but provide cooking that is devised for the way we live today. Think a modernized version of warming farmhouse food, to suit the weather and our homes. Fast, fresh, surprising dishes for midweek, and slow-cooking or theater pieces shared with friends for weekends and holidays.

Far from countering the vegan spike, this is the definition of fair, honest, sustainable food. This is meat done right.

How to eat ‘less but better’ sustainably produced meat via a seasonal flow, in harmony with nature and regenerative farming principles

This book is an aria for proper meat. Meat as it was before it got messed with. Before animals became a unit of production, but were reared to produce excellent food, and were willingly given an equally excellent life. 

It explores the connection between nature and farming and the result is a mixture of hands-in-the-earth farm stories and meat-first carcass balanced seasonal recipes. Meat is revered and stretched as far as we can make it go by respecting the animal and using every part, cheek to lard, tendon to tail. 

The recipes are not just meat and two veg, but provide cooking that is devised for the way we live today. Think a modernized version of warming farmhouse food, to suit the weather and our homes. Fast, fresh, surprising dishes for midweek, and slow-cooking or theater pieces shared with friends for weekends and holidays.

Far from countering the vegan spike, this is the definition of fair, honest, sustainable food. This is meat done right.
Foreword 7(1)
What on Earth Should We Be Eating? 8(2)
January: Frozen mud, nourishing broths, rich, slow cooking and comfort
10(20)
February: Stirring soil, cooking flow, slow roasts, nutritious warm salads
30(24)
March: Sap rising, lambs jumping, real fat is back, uplifting spring duck
54(22)
April: Swallows return, the joy of chicken, saving abattoirs, the hungry gap
76(18)
May: Cattle turn out, garden herbs, the beauty of beef, anatomy of a cowpat
94(22)
June: First fruits, the loss of family farms, summery salads, pork chops
116(20)
July: Mob grazing, meadow orchids, garden gatherings, good farming
136(22)
August: Seeds setting, cooking over fire, eating to change the planet
158(24)
September: Autumn light, roast pork, magnificent mutton, native breeds
182(22)
October: Mud returns, forager's pie, the glory of venison, fungi aplenty
204(22)
November: Cold fingers, warming soups, time to slow-down pies, fireside reading
226(18)
December: Festive preparations, roast goose, glazed ham, a Pipers Farm Christmas
244(38)
Glossary 282(1)
Notes on Our Chefs 283(1)
Index 284(4)
Acknowledgements 288
Abby Allen is a food writer and ardent campaigner for slow, seasonal food, having spent the last 10 years behind the scenes of some of the UK's most recognizable ethical food brands including River Cottage and Pipers Farm. Rachel Lovell is a writer and producer dedicated to food and farming stories who has worked with the farm for many years, having spent much of her childhood on a small family farm in Devon struggling through the 1980s.