Lovers of Indian culture and cuisine will delight in the panoply of characters in these tales where food is the riddle, the salve, the forger of bonds, the wisdom, the life-and-death clincher. Aromatic and flavourful reading! Excellent recipes a happy bonus!
Alice Zorn, author of Colours in Her Hands
This book is ingeniously designed as a banquet for the body and the mind: each of its ten chapters offers a tale and a recipe from various eras and regions of India. Men and women, divinities, demons and animals are the heroes of these vivid and colourful stories, over which floats the heady scent of mangoes and spices.
Frédéric Charbonneau, author of L'école de la gourmandise
Veena Gokhale is a talented fiction writer and a food lover. Annapurna’s Bounty is an irresistible blend of these two great passions, combining delightful Indian legends, freshly told, with her personally honed recipes. This is a book you will want to buy twice: one to give a good friend and another to keep.
Marianne Ackerman, Montreal novelist and playwright
Lovers of Indian culture and cuisine will delight in the panoply of characters in these tales where food is the riddle, the salve, the forger of bonds, the wisdom, the life-and-death clincher. Aromatic and flavourful reading! Excellent recipes a happy bonus!
Alice Zorn, author of Colours in Her Hands
Annapurna’s Bounty is ingeniously designed as a banquet for the body and the mind: each of its ten chapters offers a tale and a recipe from various eras and regions of India. Men and women, divinities, demons and animals are the heroes of these vivid and colourful stories, over which floats the heady scent of mangoes and spices.
Frédéric Charbonneau, author of L'école de la gourmandise
Veena Gokhale is a talented fiction writer and a food lover. Annapurna’s Bounty is an irresistible blend of these two great passions, combining delightful Indian legends, freshly told, with her personally honed recipes. This is a book you will want to buy twice: one to give a good friend and another to keep.
Marianne Ackerman, Montreal novelist and playwright
Gokhale fleshes out the archetypes in these stories in a way that feels fresh and compelling, and time and place are beautifully, vividly rendered. I could almost swear that some of these stories have an actual aroma. When I came across the recipe for dal, I was inspired to head to the kitchen and make it.
Anita Anand, author of A Convergence of Solitudes
There is a golden vein of poetry that flavours food lore, and Veena Gokhale has mined it well. Gokhale has served up a new oral tradition: a book fit to be consumed voraciously by mind and by mouth. These ancient tales of feast and famine and fire and flood have been skillfully reworked into a tapestry that weaves myth with menu. It deserves a permanent place at our dinner table.
Gavin Barrett, Toronto poet, author of Understan, founder of Tartan Turban Secret Readings