Ottolenghi Flavor: A Cookbook (2024)

NILTON TEIXEIRA

1,032 reviews452 followers

December 21, 2020

For the love of veggies and coconut!
Brilliant!
And delicious!
The imagination (or talent?) is incredible.
I want to try every single recipe.
And I love that there is an interactive companion to the book, so that I can check for ideas anywhere and at any time.

    cookbooks my-5-stars

Kimberly

573 reviews84 followers

October 4, 2020

Ottolenghi Flavor is the third cookbook in a series that began with Plenty and continued with Plenty More. Recipes are described as "low-effort, high-impact dishes that pack a punch and stand out." Of the one hundred recipes, forty-five are vegan and all are plant based. The book is broken down into thirds. The first third pertains to process (what is done to the ingredients) and discusses charring, browning, infusing, and aging. The second third focuses on how ingredients are paired to intensify flavors in terms of sweetness, fat, acidity, and chile heat. The final third centers on the ingredients themselves: mushrooms, aliums, nuts and seeds, and sugar - fruit and alcohol.
This is a very informative cookbook that in many ways resembles a textbook in that there is so much text. Recipes are well done and distinct and there is a photo for each. While the recipes may be described as "low effort," this does not mean fast. In fact, only five of the recipes can be made in under thirty minutes or in one pan. Most take more than an hour and involve multiple steps and pans. You have to really want to make these dishes. Many recipes focus on less common vegetables such as rutabagas and celery root. Recipes all seem highly unique and creative but tend to run on the exotic side. Fans of Ottolenghi will love this book.
I received a free copy from Ten Speed Press in exchange for a free and unbiased review.

Luca Fois

29 reviews2 followers

September 12, 2020

So, I always thought rating cookbooks was strange. But I have actually read this, and cooked some of the recipes and planning to do more. I am hooked.
Date barbecue sauce with roasted celeriac and goats cheese - i used ricotta : flavour heaven!
Cascabel chili oil for butter beans:very enticing flavours!
Apart the recipes, between the various chapters lots of information regarding cooking styles and techniques and components.
A must read for the people that like to cook and are not scared by long ingredient lists. It's well worth to make your mouth dance.

Paul (Life In The Slow Lane)

715 reviews47 followers

September 27, 2021

My daughter spent her hard-earned money buying me this book for my Christmas present. She was fooled by its trendy looking cover and colourful photos.

I have perused its 300 pages several times now and not found one, single recipe I want to try. In fact, some are utterly repulsive: "The Ultimate Traybake Ragu" looks like a plate of pasta with fried mince and nothing else. The dishes are quite complex and many of them use ingredients that are almost impossible to get here where I live. It's totally impractical for an average home chef like me.

Not to my tastes at all, thought the photos are pretty. Into the book recycle cabinet it goes.

Carol

970 reviews6 followers

October 30, 2020

I’m sure these recipes are all delicious but find myself uninterested in trying even one. Is it that it seems too fussy or have I grown tired of putting complex dishes together? I’ll say it’s me, not the book, and leave it at that.

Ella Shoup

8 reviews

January 10, 2022

Like many of Ottolenghi’a recipes, the ones in Flavor often require an outrageous amount of time and ingredients. In fact, he doesn’t even care to list the cooking time on the recipes. It’s actually sort of cruel. But if you approach it in a Half Blood Prince sort of way - scribble your own notes on the margins, develop your own Plan of Attack - you’ll feel just like Ron did when he took Liquid Luck right before his first quidditch match: p f*cking invincible. So whatever the downsides and frustration you may feel when you first start, know that it’s all worth it in the end.

Grace

2,982 reviews167 followers

March 9, 2022

3.5 rounded up

I've been wanting to flip through an Ottolenghi cookbook for a while, so when I saw this on a friend's shelf, I asked to borrow it! I hadn't realized this one is focused on vegetables and is entirely (I'm fairly certain!) vegetarian, which was cool! I definitely bookmarked several recipes to make later, but I wouldn't say this felt like the most accessible cookbook. Some gorgeous platings and flavor combinations, but there's something about the recipes that feels a bit fancy and finnicky, particularly when it comes to ingredients--in almost every one there was an ingredient I'd be unlikely to find at my local grocery store, though they're good about recognizing those and offering substitutions. These recipes feel like the kind of thing you'd pull out for a dinner party when you want to impress.

    food-related-and-cookbooks
December 18, 2020

This cookbook is an absolute delight. I like to think I'm a fair hand in the kitchen, but Ottolenghi introduced me to flavors and methods I'd never even heard of, much less attempted. Even better, Ottolenghi's voice is completely approachable, inviting even amateur cooks into the kitchen without a hint of pretentiousness. Explanations are clear and precise, and the book itself is a visual feast, with beautiful photographs for every recipe. Flavor is king, and even the staunchest meat-and-potatoes eater will find reams of dishes they can't wait to try. Suitable for everyone from the ace chef to the newcomer. I received this book through a Goodreads giveaway, which did not impact the objectivity of my review.

Karen Foster

692 reviews2 followers

October 21, 2020

Read every word of this one, and feel totally inspired. Vegetable-centric, unique combinations and flavor driven recipes, that are totally doable plus the gorgeous photography make this the perfect cookbook to me... loved it...

Linda

905 reviews

December 22, 2020

For me, this is not a home-kitchen cookbook. The lists of ingredients are quite long. The ingredients are often unfamiliar to me or difficult to find. I can't even imagine how the finished dish would taste. This book is not for me.

    2020 cookbook

Sabina Hahn

169 reviews32 followers

December 10, 2020

He is a talented chef but I find the recipes overly complex. I think it is a personal preference, I like when there is a solo instead of a choir.

    recipes

Jill

1,308 reviews6 followers

October 27, 2020

I feel bad for vegetarians. I think they need a superhero. For those of us who eat meat, there are hundreds, maybe even thousands, of cookbooks out there just for chicken. Since we need to come up with new and interesting dishes for dinner every night, cookbook authors offer up every conceivable option for meat they can come up with—roasted, fried, braised, sauteed, grilled, and so on. Imagine that many cookbooks out there for kale, or for cauliflower. They just don’t exist yet.

Well, put a cape on Yotam Ottolenghi, because he is a superhero for vegetarian and vegan cooks. He is doing everything he can think of to add interest and flavor to vegetables. His cookbooks are a love letter to the taste and texture of vegetables, and his latest, Flavor, is his strongest missive to date.

In Flavor, Ottolenghi, along with his test kitchen chefs Ixta Belfrage and Tara Wigley, focus on 3 Ps: process, pairing, and produce. Add in his homemade condiments (aka his secret weapons: flavor bombs), and you can find vegetable recipes for main dishes, sides, and even desserts for the most vegetable-averse out there.

We start with process, meaning a way of cooking a vegetable that brings out the most flavor. For this, he focuses on four processes: charring, browning, infusing, and aging. Charring bumps up the taste of dishes like Calvin’s Grilled Peaches and Runner Beans, Herb and Charred Eggplant Soup, and Slow-Cooked Charred Green Beans. Whereas browning adds depth and color to the Hasselback Beets with Lime Leaf Butter, Celery Root Steaks with Cafe de Paris Sauce, Curried Carrot Mash with Brown Butter, and Lime and Coconut Potato Gratin.

Garlic-infused olive oil adds extra flavor to the White Bean Mash with Garlic Aioli. The Pappa al Pomodoro with Lime and Mustard Seeds gets its unique taste from an olive oil infused with chilis, curry leaves, and mustard seeds. And the Black Beans with Coconut, Chile, and Lime are also infused with garlic to add an extra burst of savory satisfaction. An aged miso butter adds a level of depth to the Rutabaga Gnocchi with Miso Butter, miso and wine add the complexity of aged flavors to The Ultimate Roasting-Pan Ragu, and parmesan adds a new level to the Spring Vegetables in Parmesan Broth with Charred Lemon Sauce.

Pairings of ingredients can also add depth of taste, from adding sweetness to the Butternut, Orange and Sage Galette to adding acidity to Rainbow Chard with Tomatoes and Green Olives. Adding fat can add flavor to Kimchi and Gruyere Rice Patties, and chili heat can add pungency to the Spicy Berbere Ratatouille with Coconut Sauce.

Produce shows the way to bring out the best in your vegetables, by adding the umami of mushrooms, the magic of onions and garlic, the texture of nuts and seeds, and the sugar in fruit and alcohol. The Spicy Mushroom Lasagne, Dirty Rice, Radish and Cucumber Salad with Chipotle Peanuts, or Tangerine and Ancho Chile Flan can demonstrate this with ease.

Yotam Ottolenghi has long been known as the chef who can make vegetables sing. Flavor takes that melody he started in Plenty, the harmony he added in Plenty More, and added orchestration to his dishes in Flavor.

That being said, I would not suggest these recipes for beginning cooks. These dishes are elevated and elegant, the equivalent of meals from a four-star restaurant, and the ingredients he uses as his go-tos are hard to find on the shelves of many local American grocery stores. These are intermediate to expert dishes, with the refinements that come from many years of cooking. But there is nothing wrong with getting the cookbook to read and aspire to, trying one of the simpler recipes to add a dramatic flair to a holiday dinner or dinner party, and then working up to the more complicated recipes.

And those who are looking to elevate their vegetarian or vegan cooking will definitely find new ideas that can expand their cooking horizons and inspire new levels of taste and texture. The gorgeous photos used liberally throughout the entire book will entice and encourage all readers to try new recipes for their meat-free nights or side dishes.

A copy of Flavor was provided by Ten Speed Press for an unbiased review, with many thanks.

    tenspeedambassador

Cristina Muresan

36 reviews1 follower

February 1, 2022

This may well be my favourite cookbook ever. Got it for Christmas and been cooking lots out of it already - basically every day in the first week or two back home in the new year, slightly reduced to once or twice a week recently (sadly, work and life have been getting in the way of extensive bouts of kitchen extravaganza). The title isn't lying, everything I've made from it so far has been so. damn. flavoursome!! A lot of the recipes do tend to be a bit involved, time-wise and ingredients-wise, though it certainly is possible to skip some of the more exotic ingredients and still get perfectly lovely results; plus some of the recipes (have prep steps that) are "pop it in the oven and forget about it till your alarm goes off", so they are more realistic even for weeknights, especially if you're working from home and can get away from your laptop for a cheeky 10mins food prep! I must say though, even the "more difficult ones" have well explained steps which make sense and aren't overwhelming so the overall cooking experience is a joy. The only minor drawback maybe is that a lot of recipes tend to be quite chilli heavy, which, after a while, my stomach was complaining about! Easily sorted by going easy on the chilli amounts in the recipes....and maybe not choosing one of the spicy meals every single time!

Overall, I'd say this book is perfect if you're looking to cook more vegetarian meals, it has lots of creative ideas and interesting combinations! Even inspired me to try some of my own creations in a similar vein. :)

Thomas

95 reviews5 followers

March 28, 2021

A very close toss up between 4 and 5 stars.

The good:
* I want to cook almost everything in this book - it's rare for me to want to make such a high proportion of the dishes.
* Most recipes include an ingredient or technique outside of my comfort zone, but not so far outside that it's intimidating. It's in the Goldilocks zone of cookbooks and very inspiring for the amateur fusion cook!
* Beautiful photos of every dish, with great attention to detail on presentation.
* Summarises all the cool sauces, marinades and dressings that can be made in batches and stored for later use to spice up other meals.
* Includes pairings for each recipe in case you don't know how to incorporate it into a meal plan.
* Very nicely presented and just the right length of preamble to chapters and recipes to add context but not detract from the main purpose of cooking.

The not so good:
* Intros to the chapters feels very comparable to Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat but without so much of a clear direction, so probably unlikely to reuse these for reference.
* Grouping together multiple recipes steps in one bullet point is a real bugbear of mine - I don't like one step in a recipe to be a dozen lines long with a dozen substeps and taking several hours to complete. Feels like a case of trying to hide the complexity when the recipe could also afford to be a little simpler.
* A little cringey at times.

Would very much recommend for the unique recipes.

    cooking

A

26 reviews

October 13, 2020

Ottolenghi Flavor
By Ottlenghi

This cookbook, which features plant based recipes, at first felt like a graduate course in cooking. The chapters Process, Pairing, Produce introduce a new way of thinking about food and flavor. It goes pretty deep BUT, the recipes are deceptively easy to make. The hasselback beets with lime leaf butter were just luscious and easy (even though I couldn’t find murket lime leaf). I made the chickpea pancakes with Mango pickle yogurt and egg - it took some time but it was not hard and the new flavors made it a great dinner. The favorite so far is the White Bean Mash with Garlic Aioli which was easy and delicious and sort of a new take on hummus. I can see that I will sometimes have to omit or replace some of the hard to find ingredients but the recipes were still great ! This cookbook is wonderful for learning about new flavors, new ways to think about food, and new ways to make plant based eating more of a part of the regular diet. There is a lot here to read, learn and think about.

Thank you Clarkson Potter for sending me a free copy to cook from and in exchange for a free and unbiased review.

Lana

7 reviews

November 3, 2020

Amazing and unique flavor combinations that blow up your tastebuds. Ottolenghi's creative writing and informative advice with how-to help is appreciated. I feel that this book makes anyone who reads it and cooks through it a better chef.
The book has straightforward recipes that seem complex but are actually very doable even for a novice cook, if the recipe is followed correctly. Some ingredients may be a little difficult to find but can generally be substituted. I haven't had the need to tweak any recipes...well, except the spice levels, as I'm not a big spicy person.
All in all this is a massive hit of a book that truly let's Ottolenghi's mastery shine. It's easy to make a quick meal out of common flavors, it's a whole other ball game to make approachable Michelin star worthy dishes in 30 minutes to 1 hour. And the desserts in this book are excellent, too! Incredible cookbook! I have 2 other Ottolenghi cookbooks Simple and Jerusalem. I can say that this one is a beautiful addition to the collection with unique flavors and the recipes from Flavor are not a regurgitation of his other cookbooks.

Kim Sanders

81 reviews3 followers

January 6, 2021

I love this cookbook. I have made 5 recipes from it, and all have been absolutely incredible. While he calls for a million ingredients and many specialty, the introductory materials specify which will keep appearing throughout the book. That list is small, and he offers where to purchase or what to substitute right there.
I was able to get makrut lime leaves and curry leaves fresh from Etsy for a very reasonable price--and I would recommend buying them as they appear in the most recipes. Rose harissa is great, but I find that I prefer more spice and less perfume, so I have been fine with the brand I use. Sumac and other spices he relies on are readily at Wegmans. So this is classic "I need a lot of things" but less frustrating than in some of his other recipe collections.
AND...the organization of this is just wonderful. Flavor profiles and cooking technique really helped ground me in how to serve this stuff up. Love this book overall.

Wolana

57 reviews

May 17, 2022

Reading this made me feel inspired to start cooking again! These recipes look straight forward and delicious. I love that the back has a section showing which recipes compliment each other. I didn't realize all the recipes were vegetarian because I was so engrossed and mesmerized. I appreciate when a cookbook has photos that increase a recipes appeal. Some cookbooks look more like a meal photography art book and others that don't have any photos are not exciting at all. This cookbook had the perfect balance of photos to recipes. I'm so giddy and I'm already planning my next dinner party and I don't even know where to start because it all looks so amazing!

Danushika Sivanathan

10 reviews1 follower

September 5, 2021

This was my first introduction to Ottolenghi and cooking more with vegetables. Having tried multiple recipes over the past few weeks since purchasing the book, it is certainly one I know I will keep coming back. Beyond providing excellent recipes, the book also cultivates an understanding and appreciation for vegetables and how to cook them. In that sense I consider this an excellent cookbook! It’s not a just a list of recipes for a call for exploration.

Taylor

178 reviews3 followers

August 3, 2021

Stunning food photography and a great introduction with good food tips. Lots of obscure ingredients are needed and for a book titled 'Flavor', I've found the few recipes I've tried so far to be lacking in flavor. I'll continue to try more recipes but am disappointed so far. I'd be interested in trying his previous books to see if there are stronger recipes.

    cookbooks

Swetha

61 reviews

January 24, 2021

One of the best vegetarian cookbooks that I have found to date! Recipes supersede Plenty and provide vibrant delicious fusion options! Don’t miss out on: Eggplant Dumplings, Tofu Meatball Korma, Cardamom Tofu and Sweet Potato in Tomato and Lime Sauce.

Haley Stricker

52 reviews4 followers

October 4, 2022

I loved the educational component to this cookbook! The book is set up in three sections: cooking methods, pairings, and produce. There was so much helpful information to enhance plant-based meals. I’ll be working through the recipes for a while but the ones I have tried have been great.

Nadia

376 reviews33 followers

November 23, 2020

The best cookbook I've read this year by one of my favorite chefs. Gorgeous photograhy and delicious recipes, plus cute little illustrations in the non-recipes parts of the book.

    favorite-cookbooks

Loz

1,499 reviews21 followers

November 23, 2020

Absolutely beautiful, respectful, wide-spanning homage to and springboard for cooking

    cookery

Jen W

274 reviews8 followers

January 26, 2021

What an amazing cookbook to add to my library! This was a Christmas gift that will be used over and over again! Have already tried 3 recipes and they were all a hit!

    cookbooks paper-books

Mairzi

844 reviews

March 12, 2021

Gorgeous book with unnecessarily complicated recipes and ingredients that are not always easy to source. Also Cookbooks should not be so heavy that they are difficult to carry.

Nelly Santanna

28 reviews

May 2, 2021

My favorite from all the Ottolenghi books! Everything I did was amazing!

Savanna

218 reviews16 followers

May 30, 2021

I love Ottolenghi’s previous cookbooks, but I thought he had more or less exhausted what he could do. As he says, “how many ways can there be to roast an eggplant?” But this cookbook is an evolution from his previous work. Where most of his previous recipes have been focused in Middle Eastern cuisine, this cookbooks is… not “fusion,” which to me implies a mixing of different cuisines, but rather post-national cuisine. With the help of Ixta Belfrage, Ottolenghi is now into using ingredients with big, bold flavors. Sometimes this is in context of the cuisine they come from, other times, like with the cascabel chile oil with butter beans, it’s just because that’s the big flavor they want to play with for the dish.

This cookbook isn’t for everyone. It is generally meat-free and vegetable based, and it features more adventurous ingredients like rose harissa, black garlic, and a wide array of chiles. If you’re a somewhat experienced and adventurous cook and a fan of big flavors (like me), this book will be great for you.

    arc best-of-2021-contender cooking-food

Jay Gabler

Author12 books140 followers

December 13, 2020

Thank you Random House for the free book.

“How many more ways are there to fry an eggplant?” asks Yotam Ottolenghi in his new cookbook. The answer: “Many.” 🍆🍆🍆🍆🍆🍆🍆🍆🍆 Even for those of us who don’t forsake steak, “Flavor” is full of tasty adventures in the land of vegetables.

Anita

521 reviews

November 25, 2023

I've made a few recipes from this book and they are labour intensive, but also fantastic, so... great stuff.

Ottolenghi Flavor: A Cookbook (2024)

FAQs

What was Ottolenghi's first cookbook? ›

His debut cookery book Ottolenghi: The Cookbook was published in 2008.

How many cookbooks does Ottolenghi have? ›

He is the author of ten best-selling cookery books which have garnered many awards, including the National Book Award for Ottolenghi SIMPLE which was also selected as best book of the year by the New York Times.

Is Ottolenghi flavour vegan? ›

Yotam Ottolenghi and his Ottolenghi FLAVOUR co-author Ixta Belfrage may not be vegan chefs, but their joint obsession with vegetables means that many of their recipes just so happen to be completely plant-based.

Who is Ottolenghi great British chefs? ›

Yotam Ottolenghi is a cookery writer and chef-patron of the Ottolenghi delis and NOPI restaurant and ROVI. He writes a weekly column in The Guardian's Feast Magazine and a monthly column in The New York Times.

What does Ottolenghi's husband do? ›

Ottolenghi entertains every second weekend at the London home he shares with his Northern Irish husband Karl Allen, a law graduate and former British Airways flight attendant, and a collector of vintage 1950s antiques, and their two sons.

What is the oldest cookbook still in print? ›

The first recorded cookbook that is still in print today is Of Culinary Matters (originally, De Re Coquinaria), written by Apicius, in fourth century AD Rome. It contains more than 500 recipes, including many with Indian spices.

What is the best Mediterranean cookbook Ottolenghi? ›

Ottolenghi Simple

One of the best Mediterranean diet cookbooks has to be Ottolenghi's Simple.

Which cookbook has sold the most copies? ›

More than 75 million copies of the book have been sold since it was first published in 1950. Owing to the dominant color of the book's covers over the years, the Betty Crocker Cookbook is familiarly referred to as "Big Red", a term that General Mills has trademarked.

Does Ottolenghi have a restaurant in New York? ›

Share All sharing options for: Chef Yotam Ottolenghi Has No Plans to Expand to America Anytime Soon. London-based chef and cookbook author Yotam Ottolenghi will not be opening in New York, or anywhere outside of London for that matter, in the foreseeable future.

What is Ottolenghi style food? ›

From this, Ottolenghi has developed a style of food which is rooted in Middle Eastern and Mediterranean traditions, but which also draws in diverse influences and ingredients from around the world.

What is surprisingly not vegan? ›

Beer and Wine

Isinglass, a gelatin-based substance derived from fish, is used as a clarifying agent in some beer and wine. Other non-vegan ingredients sometimes used are casein (from milk) and egg whites.

What is the recipe book called Flavour? ›

Ottolenghi FLAVOUR combines simple recipes for weeknights, low-effort high-impact dishes, and standout meals for the relaxed cook. Packed with signature colourful photography, FLAVOUR not only inspires us with what to cook, but how flavour is dialled up and why it works.

How rich is Ottolenghi? ›

Key Financials
Accounts20192021
Cash£1,336,712.00£1,688,812.00
Net Worth£1,543,770.00£2,583,579.00
Total Current Assets£1,938,410.00£3,162,953.00
Total Current Liabilities£406,652.00£612,500.00

How did Ottolenghi become famous? ›

In 2002 the pair opened Ottolenghi, the famous delicatessen in Notting Hill, which became an instant hit for its use of unique flavour combinations and fantastic produce paired with Middle Eastern opulence.

Which is better, ROVI or Nopi? ›

Two choices, buy the cookbook and pull your hair out trying to make the dishes or just go to the source and eat at one of Ottolenghi's restaurant.

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