
Orange Blossom & Honey: Magical Moroccan Recipes from the Souks to the Sahara
Tom Verde
John Gregory-Smith
2018, Kyle Books, 978-1-90948-790-1, $29.99 hb.
If you ever tried Moroccan food, then you sampled the cuisines of many cultures. Building upon the foundations of richly spiced Berber and Arab diets, “[e]xiled Moors from Spain brought olive cultivation, citrus fruits, and paprika,” while Moorish Jews introduced pickling and preserving. The Ottomans, with their fondness for fiery grilled meats, added kebabs, while café culture and “an appetite for sophisticated pastries and breads” is a legacy of French colonizers. This book celebrates that mix, with a variety of dishes from all parts of the country. Seffa, a saffron-and-almond-infused chicken braise, is a celebratory dish of desert tribesmen; goat-cheese-and-grapefruit salad hails from the Bouhacem Forest in the north; and rosewater and lemon ricotta cheesecake blends “classic Moroccan fruits and flavors” with “a European style.” Personal stories and lovely illustrations complement the recipes in this enticing cookbook.
You may also be interested in...

The Vanishing Sea by Artist Dinara Mirtalipova—Our Book Review
How often do we take nature for granted, assuming it will never vanish? In US-based folk illustrator Dinara Mirtalipova’s new children’s book, a sea is the main character: the one that provides livelihood and prosperity, until humans’ poor choices cause its demise.
Nuha Alshaar’s Essay Compilation Muslim Sicily—Our Book Review
What emerges from this volume by Nuha Alshaar, a professor of Arabic literature and Islamic studies, is a rounded picture of Sicily as a site of cultural exchange that shaped the medieval Mediterranean.