Caroline, Stéphanie, and Patricia Ho-Yi Wang, three sisters of Cantonese descent, have made it their mission to introduce gardeners, cooks, and vegetable lovers of all flavours to wider sources of sustenance.
Organized around fifteen Asian vegetables that are presented according to the rhythm of the seasons, this lush, full-colour book offers advice on growing and harvesting organic crops intended for both weekend and commercial gardeners, along with a host of ideas to preserve and prepare them, including forty or so recipes, some of which have been developed by renowned chefs.
The Wang sisters complement the book’s practical advice by offering thoughts on Asian vegetables from a cultural point of view and sharing the importance of these foods within their own family, members of whom left China to immigrate to Madagascar before settling in Québec.
Asian Vegetables is a generous and gorgeous tribute to good food, to the land, and the importance of strong roots.
Details:
Stephanie, Caroline, and Patricia Ho-Yi Wang are, respectively, a farmer, a dietician, and a musician. The three sisters teach about and spread love for Asian vegetables in this unique work, simultaneously a gardening guide, a cookbook, and a family memoir. The vegetables they’ve chosen are all grown at Rizen, the organic farm that Stéphanie founded at Frelighsburg, in the Eastern Townships of Québec.
J. C. Sutcliffe is a translator, writer, and editor. Her translation of Back Roads by Andrée A. Michaud was a finalist for the Governor General’s Literary Award. Her other translations include Mama’s Boy and Mama’s Boy Behind Bars by David Goudreault, Document 1 by François Blais, and Worst Case, We Get Married by Sophie Bienvenu. She has written for the Globe and Mail, the Times Literary Supplement, and the National Post, among others. She lives in Peterborough, Ontario.
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