I'll admit - the first time I thumbed through this book (on a visit
to Ruth's popular Toronto veg chain restaurant, Fresh) I was a
little peeved. What gives? I thought. There are so many repeat
recipes (from Ruth's first two cookbooks). Do I really need this
one for just a few new recipes? It wasn't until I read the preface
at a later date that I learned that this book is actually a
polished-up do-over of Ruth's first, and far more modest two-colour
cookbook that came out in 2000 under the title JuiceForLife (which
is also the former name of her resto).
Best bits: Especially if you don't have JuiceForLife, this book is
one that's well worth getting your hands on. It's beautiful and
glossy and there's an immediate feeling that if you make the
recipes that line its pages you will blossom into a virtuous,
healthy being. It's full colour throughout with lots of beautiful
photographs - a better reflection of Ruth's restaurants, really. It
offers lots of tasty options for vegetable-packed meals (though as
a nutritionist I'd say to just be sure to use only 2/3 of the rice
called for in any of the Rice Bowl recipes). The recipe titles are
creative, though not obscure-sounding. The recipe methods aren't
complicated. I made the Fresh Burger and they tasted pretty good
(though they didn't hold together as well as I hoped they would -
and that they do when you order them at the restaurant, and the
batch I made yielded 8 patties, not 6 as the recipe says, for what
it's worth).
Less-wonderful bits: Like I said, there's a decent amount of recipe
overlap with her first book - it's the ones that are labeled "New!"
that appear only in this edition. I'd like to see more of a push
for local and organic ingredients in the book, but the lack of it
is also in line with the resto's approach from what I know of the
place. I might also note that some of the measurements are a little
vague for my liking, like "1 shake cinnamon" or "4 slices
pineapple" - I'd have to ask, what sized slices? or what if my
cinnamon isn't in a shaker?