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You are very likely see a copy of Spice Odyssey by Paul Merrett. I’ve been in several bookstores and Spice Odyssey is given prominent placement. You cannot miss the book lying on the “New Arrivals” table. The cover features a mortar and pestle. Not the pristine marble and marble pairing you first think of. No, this pestle is dark wood, hand carved and worn. The mortar is metal with yellow peeling paint. That’s the definitive hint: this book is all about heavy duty, real food. It’s comfort food with a spice punch.

Author and chef Paul Merrett was almost destined, from birth, for this book, his West London restaurant, his TV appearances, and the two Michelin stars he has won at two different restaurants. Paul was born in Zanzibar to a mom from South Africa who, he describes, had wanderlust. He grew up in the spice capital of the world, influenced by Asian and African cuisines.

The pathway then was simple: home to England, college, apprenticing in restaurants, then leading the outstanding teams that have won those Michelin stars.

This book is a display of Paul’s favorite ideas and dishes. He has crafted it for the home cook and provides recipes written for us, not his accomplished restaurant staff. So, you are carefully guided on this Spice Odyssey. And, odyssey it is. Paul tells you up front that you will be dodging from country to country, continent to continent. On one page, you are in Asia, then Mexico, then Italy, then somewhere else. The pace is breathtaking, even before you hit the spice rack.

Here are the main chapters with some sample recipes:

Appetizers

  • Batel leaf wraps with ginger, crispy shallots, chile and broken cashew nuts
  • Ginger beer-battered broccoli tempura with minted mango yogurt dipping sauce
  • Fennel risotto with chilled melon and green peppercorns
  • Watermelon, mint and chile gazpacho
  • Fried egg soup with smoked paprika and ground chile

Lunch and Dinner

  • Whole baked sea bass with wok-fried peppers and a citrus-chile-cilantro broth
  • Clams cooked in cider with smoked bacon, chorizo, parsley and chile
  • Smoked paprika chicken casserole with chickpeas, peppers and chorizo
  • Asian spiced short ribs

Quick and Simple Suppers

  • Roasted vegetable couscous with feta and pomegranate
  • Tomato and scallion quesadilla with three bean, chile and avocado salsa
  • Twenty-five minute vegetable tangine with cauliflower couscous
  • Shrimp papparadelle with chile, lemon, garlic, basil, and parsley
  • Classic coronation chicken [ginger, curry, mango chutney, mayo, coconut cream, cilantro]
  • Moroccan spiced lamb burger with tomato chile jam and tzatziki

Sweet, Sweet Spice

  • Coconut and lemongrass panna cotta with sweet chile pineapple
  • Poached bananas on toasted brioche with coffee bean, cardamom and star anise syrup
  • Almond, cinnamon and cranberry wontons
  • Pecan and walnut baklava with apricots, Greek yogurt and honey

Those sample recipes have been carefully selected. There are many recipes here whose titles are going to puzzle you a tad, like the seared shrimp with patatas bravas, chile, garlic and pimento aumado and aioli. I have to tell you, as I write this down, my spelling checker is having a heart attack. What is all this stuff? Fear not, Paul explains it all. The pimento aumado is smoked paprika, for example.

I called this comfort food. I did that because Suzen and I have a fondness for chile, and complexity. These recipes reflect their world-wide origins. There are more than a few ingredients, more than a little time may be required. But, the results are feasts and you can serve these dishes equally for a dinner party at the high end as well as for your family on one of those comfort food night.

There is diversity in the origins, the heat, and the complexity level across the spectrum of recipes here. No matter your food mood, you are sure to find something here that will intrigue you and surely become a favorite.

Along this Spice Odyssey, Paul offers some enlightening notes on his travels, spice gardens, and how to buy and store and employ spices: grinding, deep-frying, rubbing, or marinating. All the techniques are here.

There is even, and I love this, a section on how to make your own tandoor oven using a metal garbage pail. I don’t know. It doesn’t look that hard. Suzen and I always order Tandoori Chicken. This may be the first cookbook where, after you buy it, your first stop in Home Depot before the hitting the spice section of your supermarket.

Look for the book. You’d have to be color blind to miss it!