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Taylor Widrig

July 27, 2020 by Alix Bruch

Out of New Nova Scotia Kitchens 
By Craig Flinn
Formac 

Craig Flinn is a champion of Nova Scotia cooking and is giving new life to old recipes in his latest book. Out of New Nova Scotia Kitchens takes inspiration from local staples including donair, lobster rolls and seafood chowder. Having enjoyed these foods his entire life, Flinn is re-imagining classic dishes making them accessible to everyone in every kitchen. 

Out of Old Nova Scotia Kitchens (revised edition): Nightingale ...

Out of Old Nova Scotia Kitchens 
By Marie Nightingale
Nimbus Publishing 

Out of Old Nova Scotia Kitchens is here to stay, bringing old recipes into new kitchens. First published in 1970, the classic cookbook has since found a home in pantries across the Maritimes. Providing more than just traditional recipes, the bestseller tells the history and stories of food across the region. The book is detailed with simple illustrations and bits of food lore that further add to its timeless quality. 

The Mermaid Handbook 
By Taylor Widrig
Nimbus Publishing 

The Mermaid Handbook tells a story of protecting the ocean and honouring where our food comes from. Told from the perspective of a mermaid, Taylor Widrig’s first book provides fun ways to cook with seaweed, while cultivating love and respect for the ocean. Her favourite recipes featured in the book include sticky rice panda bears and micro-fudge truffle balls. 

 

From Rum to Rhubarb: Modern Recipes for Newfoundland Berries ...

From Rum to Rhubarb 
By Roger Pickavance
Boulder Books 

Roger Pickavance’s latest book was inspired by his home in Newfoundland and Labrador. From Rum to Rhubarb is more personal than his first two books, featuring some of his favourite recipes, which he tested in his own kitchen. The fruits, vegetables and berries that grow in the province are some of the best in the world, and Pickavance has showcased them in new, creative ways. 

East Coast Keto | Breakwater Books Ltd. 

East Coast Keto 
By Bobbi Pike and Geoff Pike
Breakwater Books 

Bobbi Pike has put together a collection of over 120 recipes that offer an introduction to the keto diet and simplifies meals for those already following a ketogenic lifestyle. Offering flavourful low-carb meals, East Coast Keto is a practical guide to health and wellness based on Pike’s personal health journey. The book provides easy to understand information about the keto diet and tips to simplify keto cooking. 

Some Good Sweet Treats | Breakwater Books Ltd.

Some Good: Sweet Treats 
By Jessica Mitton
Breakwater Books 

If you are here for the dessert, Jessica Mitton has got you covered. Some Good: Sweet Treats is her second cookbook, guaranteed to satisfy your sweet tooth with no guilt attached. All of her recipes are gluten-free and dairy-free, leaving you feeling, well,  some good! 

The East Coast's Best Lobster Rolls (English and English Edition ...

The East Coast’s Best Lobster Roll 
By Virginia Lee
Formac 

Everyone is in search of the best lobster roll, and now you don’t need to leave your kitchen to find it! The East Coast’s Best Lobster Rolls features 50 recipes honouring the tried-and-true Atlantic treat. From simple to fancy, there is a roll for every occasion in Virginia Lee’s imaginative new book. 

Filed Under: # 91 Spring 2020, Cooking, Editions, Reviews, Uncategorized Tagged With: Bobbi Pike, Boulder Books, Breakwater Books, Craig Flinn, East Coast Keto, Formac Publishing, From Rum to Rhubarb, Geoff Pike, Jessica Mitton, Marie Nightingale, Nimbus Publishing, Nova Scotia, Out of New Nova Scotia Kitchens, Out of Old Nova Scotia Kitchens, Roger Pickavance, Some Good: Sweet Treats, Taylor Widrig, The East Coast's Best Lobster Rolls, The Mermaid Handbook, Virginia Lee

July 22, 2020 by Alix Bruch

In East Coast kitchens, we have come to expect music, perhaps even dancing, certainly some eating, and always, storytelling. In every East Coast Kitchen, there is also the cooking.  

When we cook, we share—in a subtle fashion—Atlantic history. That history is layered with the ingredients of our favourite recipes.  

While the act of cooking places us in the here and now, a recipe can be a portal to the past. Call it history by eating, where stories melt on your tongue, and folklore sizzles on a cast-iron pan.  

Diane Tye, a folklore professor at Memorial University, has spent much of her career studying Atlantic food traditions, and the stories they tell. She says that it is human nature to take something with historical-cultural meaning and re-interpret it through a modern-day lens.  

Tye uses the lobster—a prominent symbol of Atlantic tourism—as an example. 

“Lobster went from a food associated with poverty to a present-day delicacy,” Tye explains. “Those were different communities and different times.  

“When we take something out of our collective past, we are celebrating something in a new way. We are telling stories about ourselves.” 

In her 2011 article, “Lobster Tales: Narratives of Food, Past, and Place in Maritime Canada,” Tye discusses lobster’s changing story, how it evolved from fertilizer to the coveted meal it is today. The unique history of the famed crustacean is not necessarily documented in textbooks. Rather, it is echoed in kitchens across the Atlantic—a tale often told while preparing it. 

Whether through personal or communal experience, many East Coast cookbooks lean into this kind of storytelling, providing space for a cook to be present with the food they are preparing, while connected to the origins of the recipe.  

In Taylor Widrig’s book, The Mermaid Handbook, she shares the history of seaweed in the Atlantic region. From the perspective of an Indigenous mermaid, she explains that before seaweed was a food source, the Mi’kmaq used it to make baskets.  

Through folklore, ocean preservation tips, and seaweed-based recipes, Widrig effortlessly weaves cultural history with a present-day focus on health and sustainability.  

“Tradition is not this static thing—it’s always being reinvented,” Tye explains. “Foods are going to have elements of tradition, but at the same time they’re going to continually change to meet new tastes and new needs.” 

One of these new needs food that comes from secure, sustainable sources. Humans have always adapted to changing availability and access to certain foods. The way we eat has changed drastically over the years, prompting people like Widrig to reassess where our food comes from. 

A desire to transition to a plant-based diet, paired with her fascination with mermaids, led Widrig to create her company, Mermaid Fare, which began as a culinary education business. Mermaid Fare has since evolved, and seeks to promote seaweed as a secure, plant-based food source.  

Widrig says seaweed is a viable solution for a growing global population, because it does not require land, feed or fertilizer. With ocean conservation becoming a growing concern, Widrig feels a change in the tide.  

From a folklore perspective, Tye points to The Mermaid Handbook as an example of how tradition is carried forward through food and the ways in which we adapt recipes. Widrig’s book includes standards such as salads, sandwiches and casseroles, with a twist that reflects a shift towards a more sustainable diet. 

“Widrig is using some elements to provide that sense of continuity, while at the same time re-interpreting and pushing us forward with plant-based recipes,” explains Tye. “It may be when someone is looking back in 50 years, that this will be the tradition they talk about.” 

Some food traditions are specific to a single province. Roger Pickavance is the author of three books focusing on Newfoundland food traditions.  

His latest release, From Rum to Rhubarb, introduces recipes inspired by the easternmost province of Canada. Though Pickavance says the foods in the book are not necessarily unique to Newfoundland, it isn’t difficult to see his connection to the island he calls home.  

Berry picking is an enduring tradition in Newfoundland—an activity that honours the resourcefulness of the people who have lived there for centuries. What was once a supplemental activity, carried out by mostly women and children, is now a social gathering for family and friends.  

The book’s recipes use fruits, vegetables and berries, each of which speak to Newfoundland heritage. Though there are numerous wild berries that grow in the province, Pickavance highlights the famed partridgeberry, and lesser-known squashberry, and his selected recipes include jams, tarts, biscuits and ice cream.  

Calling himself an amateur historian, Pickavance has committed much of his life to studying the history of Newfoundland cuisine. His first two books delve deep into tradition, offering a record of recipes and cooking over many decades.  

From Rum to Rhubarb was a natural progression, offering his favourite recipes, still steeped in history, but accessible to the everyday cook. 

“Traditions are always changing,” says Tye. “Taking the essence of something and  tweaking, or revamping, or re-inventing it, and that’s true sometimes even for basic recipes.” 

Whether a seasoned chef or tying your first apron, Atlantic cookbooks provide a tasty mixture of food and history, honouring the roots of this region, and staying true to East Coast kitchens. 

Filed Under: # 91 Spring 2020, Editions, Food Tagged With: Boulder Books, cookbook, From Rum to Rhubarb, Newfoundland, Nimbus Publishing, Roger Pickavance, Taylor Widrig, The Mermaid Handbook

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