A Year Of Russian Feasts
By (Author) Catherine Cheremeteff Jones
Transworld Publishers Ltd
Bantam Books (Transworld Publishers a division of the Random House Group)
1st January 2004
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Memoirs
National and regional cuisine
914.70486
Paperback
240
Width 127mm, Height 198mm, Spine 14mm
169g
'Foreigners who spend time in Russia soon learn that there are actually two Russias - one public and the other private. The public Russia is typically cold and dark, backward and wary. The private Russia - the Russia of tea at a friend's kitchen table or of sauteed mushrooms in a village dacha - is almost unfailingly cosy and kind'- From the IntroductionTravel to the author's Russia on a journey that takes you to a springtime bliny festival and Easter feast, to a small Russian village to discover nature's bounty, on a mystical quest for autumn mushrooms, and to Red Square for New Year's and Christmas celebrations. Stop along the way for a vegetarian dinner in a communal apartment, a birthday party, a baptism, a tea party and a Russian wedding. A fascinating behind-the-scenes view of Russia and its people and a quest to rediscover a family's cultural heritage, Jones reveals how forty of its finest dishes have been preserved and passed down through the feast days of the Russian Orthodox Church and the gentle rhythm of country life. -'Foreigners who spend time in Russia soon learn that there are actually two Russias - one public and the other private. The public Russia is typically cold and dark, backward and wary. The private Russia - the Russia of tea at a friend's kitchen table or of sauteed mushrooms in a village dacha - is almost unfailingly cosy and kind' From the Introduction Travel to the author's 'private' Russia on a journey that takes you to a springtime bliny festival and Easter feast, to a small Russian village to discover and preserve nature's bounty, on a mystical quest for autumn mushrooms, and to Red Square for New Year's and Christmas celebrations. Stop along the way for a vegetarian dinner in a communal apartment, a birthday party, a baptism, a tea party and a Russian wedding. A fascinating behind-the-scenes view of Russia and its people, Catherine Cheremeteff Jones' quest to rediscover her family's cultural heritage also reveals how forty of Russia's finest dishes have been preserved and passed down through the feast days of the Russian Orthodox Church and the gentle rhythm of country life.
'A trip filled with treats...a fascinating behind-the-scenes view of the place and the people' * Traveller *
'A perfect 'curl up in front of the fire' cookery and travel book' * Observer *
A descendant of the Romanov dynasty, CATHERINE CHEREMETEFF JONES's grandfather was the great-great-great grandson of the last Czar Nicholas I. She attended La Varenne cooking school in Paris and worked for two-Michelin star chef Jean-Louis Palladin in Washington, DC. The author is married to a foreign service officer and they travel the world with their two children.