Reviews

Sweeter off the Vine: Fruit Desserts for Every Season by Yossy Arefi

critterbee's review

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3.0

Beautiful photographs and gorgeous recipes. This book is enjoyable just to look at, before thinking about making the incredible creations! The recipes are written very clearly, and all appear possible for everyday cooks to accomplish. That is true for the rather grand-looking recipes as well.

The author shows immense respect for fruit, both more and less common varieties. I would recommend this to anyone who enjoys cooking, and especially for those who love making desserts.

**eARC netgalley**

ayargeau's review

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4.0

Sweeter off the Vine focused on fruit desserts, which I thought would be perfect for the upcoming summer. It focuses on using fresh ingredients, all year long. Arefi is a blogger, and the photos included in this cookbook are amazing. I will certainly be trying my hand at some of these recipes this summer!
**I received this book for review from Blogging for Books.

toad_maiden's review

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4.0

A delightful modern dessert cookbook full of timeless recipes.

athravan's review

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5.0

4.5 stars

Sweeter off the Vine by Yossy Arefi is a cookery book that focuses on fruit desserts - my favourite type of dessert. The recipes are broken up into season, highlighting the most suitable fresh ingredients for that time of year, although of course, you can still make them all year around. It ensures that there are a good selection of recipes for spring, summer, fall (autumn for us in the UK!) and winter, with an additional "seasonal larder" for basic supplies. Full page, high quality photographs pop out on you - focusing on vivid colours, unusual textures and of course, the finished product. The photos are very artistic, as well as being demonstrative, so make this a lovely book to flick through or have on the coffee table.

Each recipe contains a full list of ingredients, and then very easy to follow instructions. Measurements are provided both in metric and imperial, those who like me get very tired of books only giving you "cups" will be very glad to know the exact grams and ml are provided. The recipes are unique and interesting, focusing on complimentary flavours as well as a dessert that looks amazing, with some fantastic ideas I've never considered. They vary from simple to complex, but I think that they all seemed viable for me to replicate at home. I've already tried out a few, and look forward to getting through many more, but my waist line limits how fast I can try them out!

Between recipes, you get a sense of the author's personality, with little personal snippets of information, tips and stories about the fruit you're going to be using.

If I was going to criticize, it's a shame that no nutritional information was provided and with our health-conscious society, it would have been handy to have a quick overview of the calories, carbs, fat and fiber. That being said, sometimes nutritional data isn't the most useful, since different countries and brands will vary, and these days with apps that scan the exact items we use, it's easy enough to calculate the intake ourselves. Some of these recipes are far more healthy than others, and it would have been nice to see this at a quick glance.

Overall I think this is a wonderful recipe book full of great ideas for desserts made with fruit, highlighted with amazing photography. A book for the kitchen, for the coffee table, or to discuss with friends. 4.5 stars from me!

tonstantweader's review

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4.0

I am in love with Sweeter Off the Vine by Yossy Arefi. Arefi grew up in Seattleand moved to New York, but she has the Pacific Northwest orientation toward fresh, seasonal vegetables. As a transplant myself, I will never forget the revelation of eating a fresh peach, picked ripe right off the tree. I thought peaches were relatively flavorless, tough fruits until that moment. There was no turning back.

Arefi organizes Sweeter Off the Vine by season and by fruit. If you wished, you could cook your way around the calendar with this cookbook and now would be a good time to start since it begins in spring. Her Persian heritage ensures that the flavor profiles of her recipes are balanced with contrasting flavor elements and infused with aromatic herbs. These are not Persian desserts, though. These are traditional fruit deserts elevated with Persian-influenced flavor combinations.

These are not treacle-sweet recipes. She also uses a lot of alternate grains like buckwheat, spelt and my favorite, rye. My aunt made these amazing Swedish Rye Cookies and I am so glad to see someone else using rye in desserts because really, rye belongs everywhere, not just with ham and cheese.

Another thing I love about this cookbook is that she uses the same basic elements in many of her recipes and has a section of the back with all of these essentials like pie crusts and tart shells. In addition to the basics, she adds instruction for making homemade vanilla extract, cranberry juice and preserved lemons. She has a recipe for vanilla sugar as well. I make vanilla sugar all the time, I love it for my morning tea. It is also a great Christmas gift.

I am eager for the blueberries to arrive so I can make the cobbler and will love to try the lime bars when winter returns. and wow, I will definitely be trying the watermelon granita with chile and lime in the summer. I know I like lime with watermelon and lime with chile, but watermelon, lime and chile sounds fabulous. As a squash lover, I am pleased that she included squash in its rightful place as a fruit.

Arefi does not bring a lot of specialized knowledge of fruit. This is not a book for learning new things, just new recipes. Her introductions for the different sections and chapters are short and focus on suggesting specific varieties of a fruit and occasionally providing tips on picking the best, juiciest or ripest fruit. She introduces each recipe, making them all sound delicious

This is a fun and visually exciting cookbook. The recipes are fresh and exciting. Many of them are quite simple recipes that beginning bakers can handle. The pictures are gorgeous, large and generous. There are so many pictures! She is also the photographer, which is unusual, except she is a food blogger and usually food bloggers are their own photographers. What I liked about her photos is that they made her food accessible. There were little drops of cream on a plate here and some crumbs from the tart there. There is none of the intimidating perfection that makes a home baker feel like nothing they make will be good enough. Her donuts were not all perfect! I think recipe book publishers have no idea how encouraging it is to see slight imperfections, not quite regimented slices and a crumb here or there. The only thing that would make this book better would be more recipes.

I received this book from Blogging for Books for this review.

I shared a photo of one of recipes I had for supper tonight on my blog
https://tonstantweaderreviews.wordpress.com/2016/03/17/sweeter-off-the-vine-by-yossy-arefi/
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