From: Fantastic Fungi

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Mushroom Magic

From fantastic field guides for foragers, to what to do with them when you get back to the kitchen, mushroom magic is to be found in this four books. If you don't like mushrooms, perhaps you will be converted. If you do, here is all you need for your fungi feast.

Fantastic Fungi

Fantastic Fungi

Eugenia Bone

A culinary journey of all things ‘shroom, curated by Eugenia Bone and made up of 100 magnificent mushroom recipes from global enthusiasts, showcasing diverse cultures and simple, family-friendly dishes. Bone includes essays on cultivation, foraging, and cooking techniques. With gorgeous photography, this book is a must-have for mycologists.
Mushrooms

Mushrooms

Roger Phillips

The late Roger Phillips's 'Mushrooms' is an invaluable visual index for chefs and for amateur mycologists looking for information on the fungi species of the UK and beyond. The book provides up-to-date botanical and common names of more than 1,000 species, along with accompanying images for each listing. An unbeatable field guide.
The Mushroom Cookbook

The Mushroom Cookbook

Michael Hyams and Liz O'Keefe

Covering 30 of the most common cultivated and wild edible varieties around the world, this book is an excellent resource for mycophiles, with clear photographs and notes about seasonality and where to find each type. The 50+ recipes are divided by season and include such tempting dishes as Enoki Green Tea Buns and Rabbit and Morel Ravioli.
Wild Food

Wild Food

Roger Phillips

Author Roger Phillips was one of Britain’s leading voices on foraging and horticulture. For this book, he scoured riverbanks, fields, and moorlands to collect edible gems (mushrooms, seaweed, berries, herbs, bark) before transforming them into 100 modern recipes. Combining critical instructions with detailed descriptions, Phillips’ gorgeously illustrated directory is a series of unexpectedly delicious wild food discoveries.

Recently added cookbooks

Recipe of the Day

Recipe of the Day

Milk Chocolate Cinnamon Truffles

Rococo: Mastering The Art Of Chocolate

Chantal Coady

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"These are silky smooth, with a delicate flavour of cinnamon and vanilla – a lovely way of getting children to taste a flavour other than straight milk chocolate. You could also use other spices in it if you wish: nutmeg, cardamom, star anise, liquorice root or bark." Chantal Coady

Author spotlight

Renee Erickson

Renee Erickson

Seattle native Renee Erickson is a James Beard award winning chef, author and co-owner of several restaurants and coffee shops in Seattle, Washington. Getaway, her book paying homage to the food of some of her favorite places in the US and across Europe, follows her PNBA award-winning debut A Boat, a Whale, and a Walrus.

Ken Hom

Ken Hom

Ken Hom OBE is a chef, cookery writer and authority on Chinese cuisine. In a career spanning four decades, he has written dozens of cookbooks, selling millions of copies, and presented several hugely popular cookery series for the BBC. He has also sold over 8 million Ken Hom woks worldwide!

Jenny Jefferies

Jenny Jefferies

Based in Cambridgeshire in the UK, Jenny knows farming from the inside: she’s married to a farmer. In her books ‘For the Love of the Land’ and ‘For the Love of the Sea,’ Jefferies gives voice to Britain’s food producers, highlighting the role they play in looking after the country’s land and seas. In her 3rd book 'Islands in a Common Sea' she brings together stories from 25 food producers all across the globe.

Features & Stories

Newsletter: 🍜 In celebration of 40 years of Chinese cooking with the great Ken Hom 🥢

Newsletter: 🍜 In celebration of 40 years of Chinese cooking with the great Ken Hom 🥢

In 1984 a young Chinese-American appeared in his first BBC television programme, a new series on Chinese cookery which, in his own words, “opened up a whole new world to the British Public.” That young man was, of course, the great Ken Hom. He thrilled viewers by cooking exciting dishes in real time and introduced British viewers to the wok – in fact his second ever programme focused on how to choose and use your wok.

Consuming Passions: Garlic

Consuming Passions: Garlic

For me, garlic is divine, and at the centre of what I call the holy trinity of ingredients that is garlic, ginger and chillies. Few ingredients can produce flavour in so many distinct ways when cooked correctly. Nothing is more beautiful than delicately roasted garlic, simply popped into the oven whole with all the cloves still on the bulb