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Dear Readers,
One question I often get asked is this: What are
your secret vices?
I love that question. It flatters me to no end that
people think I have the imagination and the energy to cultivate any
vices, never mind secret ones. I always want to say "Buying Vermeers,
dahling," or "Collecting Ferraris."
Sadly, the truth is much tamer. My secret vice is
cookbooks. I love them. Swoon over them. Devour them. And waste far
too much money on them. Every time I buy one, I think, "Yes! This is
it! This
is the one that will finally make me a four-star, Cordon Bleu
chef!"
As P. T. Barnum said, "There's a sucker born every
minute." That's true and it's me.
I love the pictures. The layouts. The impossibly
romantic stories -- of a meal eaten al fresco in a Tuscan olive
grove. A walk taken through a Calcutta spice bazaar.
Cakes and a pot of Darjeeling at four
in London. Or Paris. Vienna. St. Petersburg.
It's hooey. I know it is. It's glossy yuppie porn
tailor-made for rubes like myself. But I don't care. It's a world
away from my weekly mad, frantic dash through Stop and Shop, and
it's one I desperately want to live in.
I want to believe. So I do. I believe that one day,
I'll be living in Western France,
eating lamb lovingly raised in the salt marshes of the Camargue. Or
walking through a forest in Piedmont, with my truffle hunting dog. He'll turn up a big
fatty and we'll take it home to our 13th century villa
and slice into the fresh pappardelle that I've made. Expertly and
effortlessly, of course.
One of my favorite cookbooks is Nigella Lawson's
Feast. Nigella, Britain's
domestic goddess, has me convinced that one day I, too, will figure
out how to cook a standing rib roast with onion gravy and yorkshire
pudding for twenty, while delivering clever repartee and looking
luscious in a dress from Harvey Nic's. I love her because she's sexy
and fun and eats like a teamster and doesn't drone on tediously
about the proper way to measure flour or enumerate 101 imaginative
uses for a melon scooper.
Because I love cakes, and sugar in all forms, I
also love Luscious Berry
Desserts by Lori Longbotham and James Carrier. There's a cake in
there -- a lemon cake with lemon buttercream frosting and raspberry
curd filling -- that is so good, I have tears in my eyes just
thinking about it.
And here's another one --
Birthday Cakes: Recipes and Memories from Celebrated Bakers by
Kathryn Kleinman and Carolyn Miller. I've made Beth's Very Berry
Shortcake, from this book, which is summer in a forkful, and Fastest
Fudge Cake, which is so
good, but is even better if you bake in a round pan, slice it in
half, fill it with whipped cream, and then heat the frosting and
drizzle it over individual slices just before serving. Or so I've
heard.
I know I should reform myself. Stop buying so many
cookbooks. Stop kidding myself. Or at least stop eating so much
cake. But where's the fun in that? In fact, I'm already thinking
about my next purchase:
Southern Cakes: Sweet and Irresistible Recipes for Everyday
Celebrations by Nancie McDermott. There's a fluffy coconut cake
on the cover that's calling my name.
But shhh! Don't tell anyone. It's a secret.
Happy reading (and eating!),

Copyright © 2006 Jennifer Donnelly
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