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asked by john316 on November 25, 2006 5:59 PM
If you think "raw food" means carrots and alfalfa sprouts, Raw will astound you with its elegance and inventiveness. It's a combination no-cook book featuring gourmet recipes using raw and dehydrated vegetables, and a gorgeous, eye-popping, food photography book. The large, glossy book is beautifully designed, with well-arranged recipes, presentation notes, elegant language, and full-page, bigger-than-life photographs of exquisitely arranged food. Each recipe is introduced by an enticing description, e.g., "…the juxtapositions of the crunchy peppercorn pieces and the creamy cheese [made from cashews], the crispy smoked almonds, and the chewy dried apricots, the erotic gooeyness of the honeycomb mounds and the elegant crispiness of the thyme spouts…." This is for special meals, not everyday--the recipes are not quick to prepare, and many include references to other recipes. Authors Charlie Trotter and Roxanne Klein are master chefs at two internationally acclaimed gourmet vegetarian raw-food restaurants--Charlie Trotter's in Chicago and Roxanne's in California. Photographer Tim Turner turns food photography into contemporary art. Wine notes by Jason Smith give the final touch of elegance. Highly recommended for the adventurous, gourmet cook willing to go the next step in vegetarian fine dining and anyone-- cook or not--who appreciates food photography. --Joan Price


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As a newcomer to raw food cooking--or un-cooking--this book is an absolute delight. Raw offers beautiful photographs of each recipe as well as step instructions for preparation. Setting it apart further from the five other books I've recently purchased, the authors describe exactly how to achieve the look you see in the photograph. It has a glossary of ingredients and techniques. For those who get pleasure from not only enjoying taste but presentation of scrumptious food this book is a treasure.
reviewed by perfect10 on November 27, 2006 1:17 PM

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Not only is it beautiful to look at but the recipes are really good. Yes, some of them have a lot of ingredients but if you are into RAW cooking, you will have many of them on hand anyway. I highly recommend the dragon crackers, the soups, and the taco recipes. They are so tasty and unique. I wish Roxanne still had her wonderful restuarant in Mill Valley. I miss it and wish that the hummus recipe was in this book.
reviewed by fazer on November 29, 2006 6:47 PM

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I usually have a rule when buying books on amazon, I dont buy them if I cant "look inside".....that is unless the reviews are overwhelmingly positive. That said this book ahs been in my wishlist for a while and I was tempted to buy it. I was at Barnes and Noble today and got to look at it in person and Im so glad I didnt.

Yes, the pictures are beautiful.But I dont want a picture book, or a coffee table book. I want a book that I can actually cook from and has pretty pictures of the food too!

None of the recipes in here really stood out to me. I was flipping through the pages not impressed at all. Ive read other reviews about this book that give it a negative review and their main complaint is hard to find ingredients or long preparations. I actually dont have a complaint about either of these aspects. I have "Raw Food, Real World" which many complain of the lengthy sprouting and dehydration time. But my complaint is that the recipes arent outstanding in my opinion. And the recipes that have photographs of arent enticing at all.

I know this book will be for some which is why I give it 3 stars. But it's not for me and I would reccomend not buying it until you can flip through it yourself and see if it's right for you.
reviewed by perfectstorm on November 29, 2006 6:59 PM

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I've been trying to transition--as much as possible--to raw food. and this is the first book i've encountered that is reasonable to follow and still delicious. they both have such a wonderful appreciation for food in its absolute form and then just to accentuate that in fun still elegant ways is such a gift.

thank you.
reviewed by iconfess on November 29, 2006 7:31 PM

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