The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.2003, Qupperneq 41
Vol. 58 #1
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN
39
again, altering the proportions of the ingre-
dients until it works. You probably won’t
mind. I am told that Edna Staebler, one of
Canada’s most famous and successful
cooks and cookbook writers, simply wel-
comed corrections to her recipes and
inserted them in subsequent editions. That
never stopped her cookbooks from being
best-sellers. This book is going to be in
print for a long time; at least, I hope so.
There’ll be time to add any necessary cor-
rections as time goes on. I hope, too, in
subsequent editions, that a few of the pages
might be made clearer. Some of them are
hard to read because they’re printed over
reproductions of hand-written recipes or
old photographs. It’s a very small com-
plaint for an enchanting cookbook. Before
you start cooking from it and get it dirty,
take it to bed and read it right through.
Editor’s Note: Kristin Olafson-
Jenkyns won two awards at this year’s
Northern Bounty conference for Cuisine
Canada for her book The Culinary Saga of
New Iceland. Culinary Book awards are
presented annually in three categories for
cookbooks published in Canada during the
previous year. The awards were a Gold
Award, Special Interest Food & Beverage
Category, and a Silver Award, Canada
Food Culture Category. The awards were
presented at a gala dinner in Guelph,
Ontario, for the 2002 Cuisine Canada
Culinary Book Awards. The “Best ot the
Best” was the evening’s menu, using
recipes taken from each of last year’s win-
ning cookbooks, matched with some of
Canada’s finest wines.
H .P.Tergesen $D Sons
H.P.
TERGESEN
Sons
GENERAL MERCHANT
Established 1899
Box 1818
82 1st Avenue
Gimli, Manitoba
ROC 1B0
Tel (204) 642-5958
Fax (204) 642-9017
The Ice-shirt
by William T. Vollman
The time is the tenth century A.D. The
Norse have advanced as implacably as a
glacier from Iceland to the wastes of
Greenland and from there to the place they
call Vinland the Good. There they encounter a
different race of people, people who have not
yet discovered iron and still see themselves
as part of nature.
As William T. Vollman tells the converging
* stories of these two peoples, he creates a tour
de force of spectulative history that yields an
utterly original version of our continent and its
Past- $22-50
SyJ Penguin Paperback, 432
I pages, 142 x 20 mm,
March 2003
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