Bob Howitt – Hardcover – Harper Collins - $49.99
Graham Henry reflects on a remarkable rugby coaching
career having restored the All Blacks as holders of the Rugby World Cup. The
book has caused something of a sensation following his account of the
circumstances of the All Black loss in the RWC in 2007, something he has kept
under wraps until now.
But the book is much more than that, it follows his
career from school coaching days, to Auckland and the Blues, to Wales and
finally to his long spell coaching the All Blacks. Fascinating stuff for rugby
buffs supported with some great photos.
Eating
Dirt – Adventures and Yarns from New Zealand’s Action Man
Steve Gurney – Paperback – Random House - $39.99
Steve
Gurney is an adventurer, inventor and motivator. A
qualified engineer, he is an ex-professional adventure athlete turned
professional motivational speaker. Gurney won the ‘Coast to Coast’ race a
record nine times and twice raced mountain bikes for New Zealand at the world
champs. He once waxed his entire body for ‘Dancing with the Stars’ and was
awarded an MNZM for his services to Endurance Sport. Eating Dirt is Steve Gurney’s second book.
Eating Dirt takes up the story where his bestselling autobiography Lucky Legs (2008) left off. Here, we find Gurney about to undertake his
latest extreme adventures, including a world-record crossing of the Sahara
Desert by kite-buggy, while trying to avoid land mines, terrorists, corrupt
border officials, gear breakages and bone-breaking rocks — one of which almost
took him out — and climbing Aoraki Mount Cook the hard way.
By Kerry R Tyack
HarperCollins Publishers - Paperback RRP $44.99
Fifteen years ago, ago, 12 adventurous chefs in restaurants along
Auckland’s Ponsonby Road took a culinary plunge by agreeing to participate in a
competition that would test their ability to firstly create two unique and
unusual dishes and then pair them with beer.
The book contains the best
recipes from the past 15 years of the challenge, along with innovative new
recipes from well-known New Zealand chefs.
All the recipes have been adapted for the home cook by writer and beer
aficionado Kerry Tyack, making them easy to create in your own kitchen along
with a few more challenging recipes for the experienced home cook.
The book also includes an
easy-to-use beer and food matching guide, emphasising one of the simple
principles of the challenge: if you choose the right beer to accompany the
right food, your enjoyment of both will be enhanced.
Hunter from the Heartland
Cameron Petley
Paperback -RRP: $49.99 - Random
House New Zealand
Cameron Petley is a father of five who lives in Putaruru. Before
becoming one of the finalists in series two of MasterChef NZ, he worked at a
chicken farm.
Hugely popular, Cameron is
an unassuming country bloke who cooked what he caught and hunted for his
family. What’s more, the judges thought he was a ‘genius with flavour’, able to
understand what ingredients worked together perfectly — without any training at
all. Judge Josh Emmet said that Cam’s venison was the best he’d ever tasted.
Although he didn’t win the
series he was seen as the ‘people’s choice’ and considered to be unlucky to
have been eliminated and there was a public outcry when Cameron was sent home
and even a ‘bring back Cameron’ Facebook page started.
In his new book Cameron shares his
stories and recipes with over fifty excellent recipes for fish, seafood, pork,
lamb, beef and poultry plus there are some great yarns from Cam about how he
got into hunting, what it was like for him growing up in New Zealand — riding
horses bare-back with his cousins, going bush, catching eels — how he ended up auditioning
for MasterChef and what has happened since — including meeting Rick Stein.
Bangers
to Bacon - A New
Zealand guide to making, cooking and using sausages and cured meats
By
Jeremy Schmid, Photography by Devin Hart
New Holland– RRP $45.00
In Jeremy Schmid’s step-by-step guide to making, cooking and
using sausages, ‘Bangers to
Bacon’, one is introduced to the art of home curing and smoking using your
own meat.
Jeremy
wrote ‘Bangers to Bacon’ to
share his passion for sausage-making, proving that the process is achievable at
home with some practise and patience and your choice of beef, chicken, lamb,
pork or venison. He shows how to get started; the basic equipment, lots of
useful tips, simple to advanced recipes and step-by-step photos, you will take
the meat and seasoning mix to the finished item, ready to cook and eat. Also
included is a list of stockists and suppliers.
He
starts with simple classics such as Bangers and Mash and Toad in the Hole, and then goes on to Papperdelle in basil and
garlic cream with Chicken Bratwurst to Dry-cured pork and potato gratin and
even Hot-Smoked Venison Sausage and Artichoke Salad.
In my case I doubt I will ever make my own sausages but I am
very keen on eating them if they are top quality and the book is full of
wonderful mouth-watering recipes using sausages that I will buy from my butcher
or deli.
An abridged version of the above mini-reviews appeared in the Herald on Sunday 26 August, 2012.
2 comments:
Surely the boys can do better than this!
Depends entirely on their/your taste. There are of course hundreds to choose from. Go in to your nearest indie bookstore and see for yourself. If my Dad was still alive I would give him the Graham Henry book or in the case of fiction the new Jack Reacher yarn, A Wanted Man by Lee Child, being published worldwide on 30 August.If all else fails give him a book token and let him choose for himself. Do give him a book though, not something for the garden!
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