Nordic Light: Lighter, everyday eating from a Scandinavian kitchen
By (Author) Simon Bajada
Hardie Grant Books
Hardie Grant Books
1st July 2016
Australia
General
Non Fiction
641.5948
Hardback
224
Width 212mm, Height 267mm, Spine 29mm
1108g
Nordic Lightembraces the clean, fresh flavours of modern Scandinavian cuisine to provide a compelling new blueprint for the way we eat now.
Drawing on the traditional ingredients and contemporary preparations of Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Iceland and Norway as well as taking inspiration from further afield Nordic Lightis a celebration of nourishing, vegetable-centred food that is simple to prepare, sometimes surprising and, above all, truly satisfying.
Nordic Lightalso features Simon Bajadas stunning food styling and photography. A standout feature are the landscape shots that evoke the seasons and show-off Scandinavias incredible natural beauty.
'These pages highlight deliciously simple food that will invigorate and inspire you." -MiNDFOOD
Simon Bajada is an internationally acclaimed chef, photographer and food stylist. Originally from Melbourne, he now lives in Sweden with his Scandinavian wife and two sons. Simon met his wife while working in a kitchen in Stockholm, and his interest in the food of her homeland grew form there. He got a sense of the produce used and the balance of flavours a long time before contemporary Nordic cuisine was understood by the international culinary community as it is today.
He says he has found parallels in new Nordic and contemporary Australian food. While the taste differs due to ingredients, the idea of balance, technique and produce is mirrored in both cultures. While new Nordic cuisine seems only to use Northern European ingredients, Simon says that this is changing, slowly incorporating bits and pieces from all over the world. Nordic Light is about exploring the results of that process looking at how an isolated food culture is developing international flare.
Simon's first book, The New Nordic, was published in April 2015. He says he is inspired by the newness in thinking of Nordic chefs because it's easier for them to break the rules than say an Italian or French chef as they are not restricted by the idea of "how it is meant to be".