Winner of the 1992 Glenfiddich Award for Food Book of the Year, this is
a cookery book with a strong travel bias, dealing with each of
Andalucia's eight provinces in turn to provide a personal, geographical
and culinary survey of the area. It shows how the land itself and
historical events have influenced the culinary tradition of the region,
with its intriguing combination of hearty peasant fare and the delicate
seasonings that are a legacy of the Moorish invasions. Each province
draws on its own magnificent natural larder, and the recipes, such as
hot gazpacho from Huelva, salt cod with potatoes and peppers from Jaén,
pork and beans with chard from Seville, and chickpea and wheat soup from
Almería, reflect this diversity. The author lived in the area for
several years. Her personal reminiscences are interwoven with a wealth
of cultural and historical information, and the text is accompanied by
the author's own watercolors of dishes, places and scenes of Andalucian
life.