Wednesday, April 9, 2014

WILD BLACKBERRIES - Recipes & memories from a New Zealand table



‘… this book is not simply a good cooking book (which it is) but a great,
and in many ways unexpected pleasure, to read in all sorts of ways.
Read on! Cook on! Eat on! Be part of a universal human need, experience and art.’
— from the foreword by Margaret Mahy

I have to agree with Margaret Mahy, Rosie Belton's book is an utter delight. a total 
must-read memoir for all foodies.

She traces the recipes and memories that colour her fully-lived life and fondly remembers the traditional  foods of her childhood such as apple dumplings, homemade  tomato sauce, 
condensed milk salad dressing and Yorkshire puddings, moving through to the 60s when  the influences of post-WWII migrants began to  impact on the Kiwi diet. Foreign ingredients like salami, olive oil and yogurt were embraced. 
Early 70s experimentation (inspired by Elizabeth David) transformed the way we ate: coq au vin, boeuf bourguignon, summer pudding and fresh strawberry ice cream – a brief interlude of sophistication before the hippy movement took hold. Then came vegetarian cooking, organic 
growing and self sufficiency with spinach pie, baked cheesecake and big platters of mixed roast vegetables becoming popular dishes of the day.

Travelling widely from the late 80s, Rosie’s many trips exploring different cultures and cuisines 
helped bring  a richness and variety to her home cooking. She visits France, Italy, South 
America, Italy, Scandinavia and  Africa, collecting delicious recipes for quail, waffles, crème 
 brulee, gelato, ratatouille and tagines. 
Back in  New Zealand, she looks back at the quintessential summer holidays at the bach with
 the freshest of seafood - paua, shellfish hotpots and bouillabaisse. During quiet days in her
 home garden and orchard at Ribbonwood, Rosie makes gooseberry and blackcurrant tarts, 
real fruit jellies and plum jam.

And during life’s hard times, like the Christchurch earthquakes, Rosie reaches for classic 
comfort food, bringing to the table pea and ham soup, meatballs in tomato sauce and the delicious 
warmth of a sausage ragout.

Simultaneously intimate and broadly social in its sweep, Wild Blackberries: Recipes and 
memories from a New Zealand table is a glorious celebration of a life spent enjoying the 
pleasures and comfort of eating well with others.

In times of joy, food enhances the celebration, and in times of sadness, it colours 
and comforts us. 
In  times of anxiety and emptiness its preparation gives rhythm and meaning to the day. 
In my own life, offering food to others also brings me a sense of accomplishment
and  fulfilment. 
When all else fails - cook! – Rosie Belton


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rosie Belton has always had a love of food and celebration. She is a 
Christchurch-based writer, drama teacher, director and producer, businesswoman and author of Just A Bang On The Head (Craig Potton Publishers). 
Rosie lives with her husband Mark in the home and garden they have created  together over the last 35 years in Governors Bay, New Zealand.





Allen & Unwin - $36.99 - Publication 14 April, 2014

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