RAW: The
UNcook Book-
Book Review
This article is courtesy of Vegetarians in
Paradise
http://www.vegparadise.com
By Zel and Reuben Allen
RAW The Uncook Book
New Vegetarian Food for Life
By Juliano Brotman with Erika Lenkert
Regan Books,
An Imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, 1999
From cover to cover RAW, The Uncook Book is a graphic grabber
with stunning color photography, beautiful layouts, and top-notch professional
food styling. Every page whets the salivary glands with tempting photos of the
unique raw, vegan, dishes Juliano has created. But don't take our word for it,
pick up the book and start flipping pages just as we did.
You, too, will be instantly awakened by the
beauty and vibrant colors each page presents. By chance we opened the book to
page 145 and were dazzled by Purple Blueberry and Raspberry Burritos,
a purple cabbage leaf that contains a filling of creamed nuts, marinated
portobello, salsa, and curried guacamole with a colorful garnish of blueberries
and raspberries, and chopped mango. Awesome! RAW, The Uncook Book presents
raw foods in a brilliant new dimension. Raw food cookbooks of the past
contained simple salads, blender soups, a few fruit beverages, and instructions
on how to sprout. Juliano's book, on the other hand, offers complex taste
sensations that titillate the taste buds with every recipe. Each dish is a
masterpiece of colors, flavors, and textures, while the garnishing is a literal
celebration of design mastery.
How did Juliano, who is not even 30 years
old, develop his unique brand of exceptional raw food cuisine? He didn't even
start his life as a vegetarian. He grew up in Las Vegas, worked in his father's
Italian restaurant, and paid little attention to food in general. As a 15 year
old, he moved to Palm Springs where his hikes into the hills quickly bonded him
with nature. He found trickling streams, a waterfall, majestic mountains,
birds, fish and frogs, and his instant response was to become a vegetarian.
By the age of 19, he was totally vegan and
into organic foods which he found far tastier. His path naturally led him to
raw fruits and vegetables and to seek education about the nutritional benefits
of sprouting seeds, grains and legumes. An innovative person, Juliano at 22 was
creating raw food dishes with flair and enjoying the zest and energy he derived
from them. "I was enjoying the most exquisite, unique, decadent food on
the planet and my mentor was not some fancy cooking school, but the earth itself,"
he says.
At 24 he became the owner of RAW, a raw
foods restaurant near Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. Success came quickly
with recognition from USA Today, People magazine,
theNew York Times, Vegetarian Times and the San
Francisco Chronicle. His soups and salads are visual and flavor treats
that go way beyond any soups and salads one has ever encountered before. The
section on breads is an eye opener. With whole, sprouted grains, unexpected
seasoning combinations, nuts, fruits and vegetables, he creates breads with
exceptional flavor and textures that depart from the familiar.
Juliano's recipes for sandwiches carry
familiar names, but that's where familiarity ends. He has a BLT (bacon,
lettuce, and tomato) and a Tuna Sandwich that have none of those ingredients,
yet the flavors have a familiar quality. His Marinated Caviar in the
section "Snacks, Appetizers & Side Dishes" is anything but
familiar, yet beckons one to taste this unlikely combination of berries of
one's choice that are marinated in apple cider vinegar, Umeboshi plum paste,
Nama Shoyu and lemon and oranges juices.
The author's pizza section blew us away with
nine different take-offs on one of America's favorite foods. Recipes include Lebanese
Pizza, Pesto Pizza, Avo Mango Pizza, and Samurai Pizza. With a
skilled hand, he takes the familiar and turns it into the unique throughout the
whole book.
It truly is difficult to imagine foods that
taste this good. One has to try it to believe. And try it we did. We started
with the NRG Soup, a blender creation including tomato, a whole cup of
fresh mint, onions, red bell peppers, fresh sweet corn, garlic, ginger, apples,
orange juice, a habanero chili and Nama Shoyu. Complex flavors? Yes, but not
complicated to prepare. The taste was sensational! From there we moved to Thai
Green Papaya Salad with a daunting ingredient list. The directions said
simply, "Mix and munch!" It was easy! We were on a roll!
Moving
on to the entrees and various accompaniments, we ran into a challenge. Raw food
preparation Juliano style, requires a kitchen with an array of equipment that
departs from the familiar. First, there is no stove needed in a raw food
kitchen unless the temperature control can be set as low as 90 degrees. Most
stoves have the lowest setting at 150 degrees. Juliano uses a dehydrator with
an adjustable temperature control and never dehydrates foods above 120 degrees
in order to preserve the living enzymes. We don't have a dehydrator.
Second, many of the recipes list fresh fruit
or vegetable juices that most people just don't have on hand. We don't have a
juicer.
Third, many of the recipes included recipes
from several other pages in order to assemble one dish, making preparation
rather lengthy. With a number of the recipes, one has to have presoaked nuts on
hand or already sprouted grains or beans on hand to complete the dish. Advanced
planning is a must.
Although we sing the praises of this book
for its beauty, the quality of its recipes, and its health benefits, Juliano's RAW,
The Uncook Book is not a book for the novice cook. Maneuvering in a raw
foods kitchen is a departure from the cooking style most of us grew up with and
practice today. Raw food preparation is a different orientation, and we
concluded that one must enter into this genre slowly. It's a learning process,
but well worth the effort.
A User's Review
His colorful photos and imagination of ingredient components that put together this wonderful work of food art called an uncook book is worth 4 stars. RAW is indeed worthy of coffee table status. Each recipe appears to be indescribably delicious and full of adventure to the chef looking for a challenge.One such recipe, Hummus a L'orange was gold. I've prepared raw sprouted hummus before and the taste was never very desireable, yet Juliano's version with the addition of cashews, miso, amongst other obscure ingredients and exotic spices has turned this ordinary dish into a festival for the tastebuds.
The falafel patties were more of a dissapoinment to me. Since this recipe also required sprouted chickpeas, I made it alongside the hummus recipe. The high percentage of salt called for in this recipe was overkill, leaving the main ingredients without a note of possibility in taste. Suggestion: if you must use salt, add at the end and a little bit at a time. Juliano's intentions for the high amounts of sodium chloride (present in both sea and table salt) is understandably to impress upon the palate of a cooked food eater.
Since many of the recipes within this book are multi-stepped, and some requiring other recipes within his book, they appear to be meant for company or pot luck type functions, rather than simple meals a raw eater could throw together to enjoy by his raw self. In other words, if you are a begninner in the kitchen, RAW will prove quite a challenge for you.
Yet many recipes DO seem easy to put together, like the soups, salads, and some of the drinks, and as long as you have all the ingredients or good substitutions on hand, you are good to go. Good-quality blenders and knives are a necessity for most of these.
There are many more complicated recipes that appear sublimely delicious which I do desire to try, and with some careful planning for several days of soaking and sprouting; and ensuring other recipes are prepared before-hand to be ready to add with the list of ingredients to the one I eventually DO prepare; and perhaps adding in the necessary dehydrating time involved - I am quite certain that I may win over the approval of many family and friends to the raw eating way of life. Timing may be everything so my suggestion to you is to whip out your calendars and make sure those soaking, sprouting, other recipe-making and dehydrating works with your own schedule.
Whether the recipes are actually accomplished by the reader, or the photos and recipes are merely visually enjoyed, any raw fooder would undoubtedly glean good ideas and insight from the wonderful work of RAW.