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The Flavour Thesaurus
 
 

The Flavour Thesaurus [Kindle Edition]

Niki Segnit
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (97 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Review

'An original and inspiring resource' -- Heston Blumenthal

`Intriguing, surprising and remarkably useful'
-- Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall

`this imaginative and beautiful little book deserves a place on the shelves of every serious home cook.' --Spectator

'Goes way beyond recipes...the perfect manual for experimental cooks.' --The Independent

`The Flavour Thesaurus is a deceptively simple little masterpiece, set to take its place by McGee on Food and Cooking as a household Bible.' --The Sunday Times

`With Niki Segnit's fascinating book we can all take cooking to the next level.' --Homes and Gardens

`You'll never be bored with your dinner again'
--Psychologies

Product Description

Ever wondered why one flavour works with another? Or lacked inspiration

for what to do with a bundle of beetroot? The Flavour Thesaurus is the

first book to examine what goes with what, pair by pair.





The book follows the form of Roget's Thesaurus. The back section lists,

alphabetically, 99 popular ingredients, and suggests classic and less

well known flavour matches for each. The front section contains an

entry for every flavour match listed in the back section and is

organised into 16 flavour themes such a Bramble & Hedge, Green

& Grassy, and Earthy. There are 980 entries in all, with 200 recipes and suggestions embedded in the text.





It covers classic pairings such as pork & apple, lamb &

apricot, and cucumber & dill; contemporary favourites like

chocolate & chilli, and goat's cheese &

beetroot; and interesting but unlikely-sounding couples including black

pudding & chocolate, lemon & beef, blueberry & mushroom,

and watermelon & oyster.





Beautifully packaged, The Flavour Thesaurus is not only a highly

useful, and covetable, reference book that will immeasurably improve

your cooking - it's the sort of book that might keep you up at night

reading.




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Niki Segnit
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
480 of 491 people found the following review helpful
By Third Time Lucky TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
This book has had stunning reviews in the national newspapers, and I decided to buy it as a present for my husband, the chef in our household. On the tube home, I had a quick flick through it out of curiosity...and I haven't been able to part with it since.

The concept of `The Flavour Thesaurus' is utterly, utterly genius. Segnit has taken 99 basic flavours (mint, coriander, basil, strawberry etc) and researched 980 pairings of them. The result is part recipe-book, part food memoir, part flavour compendium. (The English Language geek in me feels compelled to point out that `thesaurus' is a misnomer - even similar flavours are NOT synonyms, jeez, though the book retains Roget's format).

Some of these pairings are familiar, such as Bacon & Egg, whilst others (Avocado & Mango, anyone?) are not. Now and then, Segnit provides a recipe; many of these sound incredible, and despite being the most amateur of cooks, I reckon even I could manage many of them. Under Melon & Rose, for example, she merely tells you to drown a cantaloupe melon in rosewater syrup, so that it tastes like "a fruity take on gulab jamun". Can you even read that sentence without wanting to dash to the supermarket for the ingredients?

Segnit also peppers the book with restaurant and dish recommendations - not in an insufferable shiny London lifestyle way, but in an enthusiastic, unpretentious, eating-out-with-your-mates "you really have to try this" way. If only she had supplied phone numbers so we could immediately make reservations.

The real revelation, though, is Segnit's language. It is, quite simply, superb. Modern cookery writing seems to fall into three distinct camps: venomous snob, obsessed with tablecloths and ambience rather than the food itself; faux-geezer dahn the faux-pub; and flirty girl breathlessly enthusing over cake. With `The Flavour Thesaurus', Segnit may well have ended the careers of many of these over-hyped morons.

For a start, her prose is endlessly entertaining. Breezy erudition sits alongside hilarious similes. She is a whizz with description: when she tells you that cloves on their own taste the same as sucking on a rusty nail, you half suspect she conducted a comparative taste test just to be sure. She incorporates references so wide-ranging that both Sybil Kapoor and Velma from Scooby Doo rate a mention. Then there are her unmissable riffs: p 148 instructs us on that "essentially unitary quantity, fishandchips", and insists they must be served in "newsless newspaper" (never polystyrene boxes) and always eaten at a bus stop or "on the wall outside the petrol station". Read about Instinctos and you will be snorting with laughter (and visiting Pizza Hut at the first excuse). I have now read `The Flavour Thesaurus' from cover to cover, and still I have not finished.

I must temper my enthusiasm with a few tiny criticisms just to prove this is a genuine review. At nigh on £20 full price, it's expensive for a book without illustrations or photographs (though note Amazon has since discounted it). It assumes a certain level of prior culinary knowledge, which was sometimes frustrating to a novice like me, though it won't bother those with lots of cookbooks and greater competence in the kitchen. The integration of the recipes into the text - Elizabeth David and Simon Hopkinson style - can be irksome until you've got busy with post-it notes. The index needs further sub-division: `crab', for example, offers 11 entries in the index, but the recipe for crab cakes is easily missed under Butternut Squash & Bacon.

But these are such minor complaints given the enormous appeal of this book. My husband hovers over it constantly, anxious for his promised present. My brother and my best friend have already asked to borrow it. `The Flavour Thesaurus' is truly a classic in the making, and no foodie's bookshelf is going to be complete without it.

EDITED TO ADD, the husband (Latin geek) points out that 'thesaurus' means treasury. Well, whatever language you're using, this book is ACE.

UPDATE - JANUARY 2011 Recently, the aforementioned husband, brother and I went to a "book dinner" organised by a local restaurant with recipes inspired by 'The Flavour Thesaurus', at which the author read from her book. Niki Segnit was lovely and exactly as she comes across in the text - funny, clever, and passionate about food in a very down-to-earth way. There was much discussion and disagreement about which flavour combinations worked, but most options on the menu were utterly delicious. If you get the chance to do this, I highly recommend the experience.

UPDATE - FEBRUARY 2011 In response to comments below, my husband and I were both wrong - 'thesaurus' is Greek! Also, a fellow customer reviewer has expressed scepticism about the number of positive votes I've had for this review. I don't know why I've had so many votes (though I'm very grateful for the ones I've received), but I haven't been voting for myself, and I don't have 200 friends to vote on my behalf. In response to his/her insinuations, I also want to make clear I'm not related to this or any other author, nor paid by anyone - including Amazon - to submit reviews (more's the pity). Please also click on the link which leads to my other reviews so you can see that I regularly leave critical reviews as well as "effusive" ones. Of course other readers may disagree with my opinion of this book; but it has been a bestseller, and the author now writes for The Times, so I'm definitely not her only fan. As always, your mileage may vary.
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49 of 50 people found the following review helpful
Utterly essential 9 Aug 2010
By Tyrone
Format:Hardcover
What a fantastic book!

This is probably the most inspirational cookery book I've ever read. By mostly eschewing full length recipes in favour of ideas, sketches, anecdotes and improbable analogies, Niki Segnit has written a book where every page has enough ideas to keep me cooking for a week.

I can think of very few books that are both practical enough to use on a daily basis (when you fancy a stir fry and have a fridge full of brocolli, why not mix in some chilli and coarse ground peanuts?) and enjoyable enough to dip into as light reading (the much quoted comparison of lime and coriander to the "whoo whoos" in Sympathy for the Devil), but The Flavour Thesaurus is both of these - to leaf casually through it is to immediately be reminded of just how much you love cooking.

If I have one complaint, then it's just that it's so good that it could be twice as long without being the worse for it.
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
By Syriat TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
I bought this the other day as I realised, like the author states in her intro, that I am too attached to recipe books. I was hoping that this would inspire me to try new combinations and start a bit more experimentation. And it has. However, before buying its really important to know what this book is and more importantly what it is not.

What this book is not
- a book with detailed recipes (it doesn't really have any recipes at all)
- a book with illustrations of food (there are no illustrations at all of food)
- a traditional cookery book (no measurements, no oven settings, no real cookery guide)

What this book is
- a jumping off point where you identify flavours with a brief guide to examples
- a well written explanation of how flavour combinations work
- a way for budding chefs to try new flavours with confidence

Not all the combinations are to my liking. And you won't be using this as a cooking bible. However, its very readable and as a resource for a budding chef it really takes some beating. It allows you to be creative rather than follow a recipe to the letter. Which is exactly what I wanted from this book. If, however, you are expecting recipes then avoid.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Inspiring!
This certainly isn't a shiny, glossy, picture perfect cookbook, but it is a door to inspiration and true cooking confidence. Read more
Published 3 days ago by Effie
A sensual delight
Just opened the book at random where the author referred to a chocolate bar (now defunct) called 'Cabana' as an example of the combination of the flavours of cherry and coconut. Read more
Published 8 days ago by raimundhejduk
really good
A really interesting book on how to work with different combinations, when you want to create something new with different flavors specially for the ones that are on the beginners... Read more
Published 9 days ago by Raul Cunha
An inspiring and witty read.
When I first ordered this book, I had decided I was at a point in my cooking "career" where I wanted to experiment more and start making up my own recipes. Read more
Published 29 days ago by snowbunny
Perfect gift
Bought this for a foodie friend and she was delighted.exceptional amount of information in the book however I obviously only skimmed through. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Bexcyd
phenomenal!
This book is ingenious. It is a marvel no one thought of a similar concept it before. We all know that the sum of flavour is often greater than its parts and this book cleverly... Read more
Published 1 month ago by SL
Fantastic for adventurous cooks
Myself and my boyfriend bought this book at Christmas for his dad and naturally took a sneaky peak. The book is well written and has a sturdy cover, nicely laid out and easy to... Read more
Published 2 months ago by katiekate
The most moreish food+ book since ever
While on the surface, this could be seen to be a book of golden formulae, it is actually a liberator to cooks like the trembling Julian Barnes (of The Pedant's Cookbook), anally... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Anna Tambour
Fantastic book
This book is brilliant, really gets your brain into gear of what flavours work together and has already made a huge difference to the meals i'm cooking. Read more
Published 2 months ago by LB
Fun, but is it practical?
I this book definitely gave me some ideas for things to try in the kitchen, but that's all it contains- barebones ideas. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Andrew J. Tindall
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