Cook Book of the Month 2008

Top Cook Books of 2008

Our Top Cook Books of 2008...

Riverford Farm Cook Book - Guy Watson

Oct 08: You may not have heard of Guy, but you'll probably have heard of Riverford Farm...

Jams & Chutneys - Thane Prince

Sept 08: All the mysteries and delights of preserves, pickling, fruit and more.

Better Gravy - Shaun Hill

August 08: Shaun Hill is one of my heroes...

Barbecue - Chris Schlesinger & John Willoughby

July 2008: Barbecue is a serious contender as the book on barbecuing...

Go Slow England - Alastair Sawday

June 2008: Once hooked, followers of Alastair Sawday remain committed for life...

The New English Table - Rose Prince

May 08: The title of Rose Prince’s latest book The New English Table...

How to Cheat at Cooking - Delia Smith

March 08: I really don’t know what I think about Delia’s How to Cheat at Cooking

Beaneaters & Bread Soup – Lori De Mori & Jason Lowe

Feb 08: Exploring a rich and varied food culture…

The River Cottage Fish Book – Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall & Nick Fisher

Jan 08: An encyclopaedic trawl through fish sourcing, preparation and cooking…

Moro East - Samantha Clark & Samuel Clark

Dec 07: A great Christmas present written by the husband and wife team of Moro...

Week in Week Out - Simon Hopkinson

Nov 07: Simon Hopkinson – ‘One time chef’ appeals equally to professional and home cooks...

Moro East - Samantha Clark & Samuel Clark

Sam & Sam Clark

Famous for Spanish- and North African-style food, the couple have gone East - literally and metaphorically.

A few years ago they 'acquired' an allotment in London's East End and found, amongst fellow growers, Turks, Greeks and Cypriots. The two Sams swiftly became part of the allotment community even if there's little detail of any actual digging in the book. Rather it marks the passage of the seasons and the breadth of the crops with rich and alluring recipes – some their own, others weeded from neighbours.

Not that you have to grow-your-own to enjoy or cook them. They concentrate, not surprisingly, on vegetables and are cool about using up "all the bits" or eating weeds or young leaves – I'd never imagined young poppy leaves had anything to offer; now I can't wait to try them next spring. Recipes highlight Moro's approach to cooking of "three simple flavours jostling in the mouth to create something exciting".

Strong on soups, there's a buxom leek and rosemary soup with blue cheese (great for any leftover Stilton over Christmas) or a heavenly almond and fennel with scallops. Bitter leaves with tahini and caramelised onions, one of FoodLovers featured recipes, is a bitter-sweet sensation and pumpkin pisto is fast becoming my favourite way of cooking pumpkins this autumn.

Now Moro East the allotment is sadly gone. The fertile land has been swallowed up by bulldozers, concreted over and incorporated in the Olympic site. For a mere four weeks, the two Sams write poignantly "it will be used as a pathway between stadiums". Luckily for us, the book remains.

Publisher Ebury Publishing
Publication date November 2007
Photographer Toby Glanville


Buy the Moro East Book

FoodLovers price £15.00(RRP £25.00)

Moro East
Bitter Leaves with Tahini & Crispy Caramelised Onions
Fried Spiced Cauliflower
Tuna with Red Onion, Tomato and Sweet Vinegar