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Mary McCartney

Author of Food: Vegetarian Home Cooking

11+ Works 151 Members 6 Reviews

Works by Mary McCartney

Associated Works

Demon in the Wood (2022) — Narrator, some editions — 782 copies, 14 reviews
The Meat Free Mondays Cookbook (2011) — Introduction — 85 copies, 1 review
The Most Important Comic Book on Earth (2021) — Contributor — 62 copies
Elizabeth II : 1926-2022 : A royal life (2022) — Photographer — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
McCartney, Mary Anna
Birthdate
1969-08-28
Gender
female
Relationships
McCartney, Linda (mother)
McCartney, Paul (father)
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
London, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

6 reviews
There is much to love about Mary McCartney's cookbook Food, though there are some oddly irritating aspects. The photography is lovely, the dishes are simple, easy to follow and consistent. The use of spices and other seasonings is on the subtle to bland side, though, obviously one can adjust up. Because for the most part the recipes are simple and towards subtle side in flavor there is plenty of room for adjustments for personal and family tastes. Everything I have tried has been easy to show more make and savory. There are some odd ingredients; I am surprised to see her asking for things such as canned lentils and other canned beans rather than dried. She seems to use an awful lot of soy sauce. She also has a seeming love affair with onions, the quiche calls for 6! Some measures are off. The shortcrust pastry was far to dry to hold together, the quiche that is suppose to fit in a 9' -10" dish overflows the dish. I was able to make a quiche and several mini-quiches. Many of the names are irksome. Arty's Chocolate Chip cookies? Arty is her son. That's cute and all, but I can't go around calling them that. Crispy Chocolate Chip Cookies is what I would call them. There are wonderful with the orange zest. And a quiche with 6 onions should not be called Cheesy Quiche. There are 6 onions!
Strong points: well organized, great photograph, not too chatty, simple flavorful recipes that are easy to adjust for preferences.
show less
There is much to love about Mary McCartney's cookbook Food, though there are some oddly irritating aspects. The photography is lovely, the dishes are simple, easy to follow and consistent. The use of spices and other seasonings is on the subtle to bland side, though, obviously one can adjust up. Because for the most part the recipes are simple and towards subtle side in flavor there is plenty of room for adjustments for personal and family tastes. Everything I have tried has been easy to show more make and savory. There are some odd ingredients; I am surprised to see her asking for things such as canned lentils and other canned beans rather than dried. She seems to use an awful lot of soy sauce. She also has a seeming love affair with onions, the quiche calls for 6! Some measures are off. The shortcrust pastry was far to dry to hold together, the quiche that is suppose to fit in a 9' -10" dish overflows the dish. I was able to make a quiche and several mini-quiches. Many of the names are irksome. Arty's Chocolate Chip cookies? Arty is her son. That's cute and all, but I can't go around calling them that. Crispy Chocolate Chip Cookies is what I would call them. There are wonderful with the orange zest. And a quiche with 6 onions should not be called Cheesy Quiche. There are 6 onions!
Strong points: well organized, great photograph, not too chatty, simple flavorful recipes that are easy to adjust for preferences.
show less
There is much to love about Mary McCartney's cookbook Food, though there are some oddly irritating aspects. The photography is lovely, the dishes are simple, easy to follow and consistent. The use of spices and other seasonings is on the subtle to bland side, though, obviously one can adjust up. Because for the most part the recipes are simple and towards subtle side in flavor there is plenty of room for adjustments for personal and family tastes. Everything I have tried has been easy to show more make and savory. There are some odd ingredients; I am surprised to see her asking for things such as canned lentils and other canned beans rather than dried. She seems to use an awful lot of soy sauce. She also has a seeming love affair with onions, the quiche calls for 6! Some measures are off. The shortcrust pastry was far to dry to hold together, the quiche that is suppose to fit in a 9' -10" dish overflows the dish. I was able to make a quiche and several mini-quiches. Many of the names are irksome. Arty's Chocolate Chip cookies? Arty is her son. That's cute and all, but I can't go around calling them that. Crispy Chocolate Chip Cookies is what I would call them. There are wonderful with the orange zest. And a quiche with 6 onions should not be called Cheesy Quiche. There are 6 onions!
Strong points: well organized, great photograph, not too chatty, simple flavorful recipes that are easy to adjust for preferences.
show less
A nice book for beginning vegetarians and cooks, this book doesn't offer much beyond basic recipes.

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Statistics

Works
11
Also by
5
Members
151
Popularity
#137,934
Rating
4.1
Reviews
6
ISBNs
14
Languages
1

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