Photo de l'auteur

Colette Rossant (1932–2023)

Auteur de Apricots on the Nile: A Memoir with Recipes

14 oeuvres 484 utilisateurs 9 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Colette Rossant is the author of eight cookbooks and the memoir Memories of a Lost Egypt. A James Beard Award winning journalist, she is a columnist for the Daily News and a contributor to many food and travel magazines. She is pictured above with her husband. James at their home in New York City
Crédit image: www.coletterossant

Œuvres de Colette Rossant

Return to Paris: A Memoir (2003) 107 exemplaires
Vegetables (1991) 23 exemplaires
Colette's Japanese Cuisine (1985) 17 exemplaires
New Kosher Cooking (1986) 15 exemplaires
Cooking with Collette (1975) 4 exemplaires
Colette's Slim cuisine (1983) 3 exemplaires
Mostly French Food (1977) 3 exemplaires
NEW KOSHER COOKING 3 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1932
Date de décès
2023-10-12
Sexe
female
Nationalité
France
Lieu de naissance
Paris, France
Lieu du décès
Normandy, France
Lieux de résidence
New York, New York, USA
Professions
cook
cookbook writer
Relations
Rossant, Juliette (daughter)

Membres

Critiques

I was pleased to find this book in my library. I had a wonderful gastronomical experience when I was in Egypt this past March. The memoir was charming, and the recipes doable for an inexperienced cook such as myself.
 
Signalé
mimo | 4 autres critiques | Dec 18, 2023 |
A lovely book with some really good recipes. Cairo in the 1940s for a young girl torn between her Egyptian and French heritage.
 
Signalé
secondhandrose | 4 autres critiques | Oct 31, 2023 |
I was given this book by a friend as a gift. I had not read her first memoir, Apricots on the Nile, and did not know the author at all. The book is a delight, warmly written, with delicious recipes and family photographs. The book chronicles the author’s – Colette -coming of age in Paris. As a teenager, Colette - an Egyptian Jewish convert to Catholicism –returned unwillingly with her mother to Paris in 1947 but her mother flees soon afterwards. Colette stayed with her bitter, malaisé grandmère and her older brother who having stayed in Paris during the war was a stranger to her. Her grandmère housed her not out of love but because she needed her allowance. Initially, Paris seems grey and forbidding; relatives conspired to marry her off suitably. She resisted through food. Taken under the wing of Mademoiselle Georgette, the family chef, she develops a taste and talent for French cooking. As her mother re-marries, Colette develops an affectionate bond with her stepfather who educates her in flavour and ingredients. He gave her and her American bridegroom a gastronomic tour of four-star France as a wedding gift. Colette recollects each meal and navigates the streets of Paris with its outdoor markets, bistros, café and restaurants menus and attempts to control her fate and her life through food. The book ends with her moving to New York in 1955 and the birth of their first daughter.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Acia | Sep 6, 2017 |
This is a great memoir book of a lady who starts her story when she was a young girl and till the moment she's writing the book. Her life has been living in different continents and via food/ dish discoveries she's about to shape her life - knowing and befriending new friends, fulfilling sudden opportunities with tv shows and writing books.

The author has great storytelling, I enjoyed that apart from other memoirs of foody people, this one also include real recipes! Ups and downs, difficulties and cheerful mode.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
ilonita50 | 2 autres critiques | Jan 12, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
14
Membres
484
Popularité
#51,011
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
9
ISBN
37
Langues
3

Tableaux et graphiques