jamie Olivers latest Cookbook...

Submitted: Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 17:08
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Don't know if any of you have recieved an email in regards to this.. but recieved an email from a friend with an attachment .. whic happens to be Jamie Olivers new cookbook..
The story goes... some guy in the publishing of this new book emailed it to the wrong person.. and now it's getting sent all over the world on the www... for free..
That guy got the sack i was told..
Have a copy if anyone wants it... just member msg me.. or post ur email.
Mozza.

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Reply By: Member - Blue (VIC) - Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 18:38

Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 18:38
That's how I got his last 2 books... You'd reckon they would've sorted it out by now... I don't think I require a third, I've hardly looked at the first 2.
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Reply By: Steve - Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 18:56

Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 18:56
cheers. Not wild about him but he sure is a good cook

stevemac9@bigpond.com
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Reply By: Jayk - Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 19:00

Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 19:00
I suspect that this cookbook might be a bit half baked ... :-)

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Why? ... Why not?

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AnswerID: 123411

Follow Up By: Member - Blue (VIC) - Wednesday, Aug 03, 2005 at 02:53

Wednesday, Aug 03, 2005 at 02:53
That one's new to me, I got The River Cafe and another who's title I can't remember off hand... Printed them at work and stuck them in a binder.
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Reply By: Nudenut - Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 20:41

Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 20:41
he's the bloke who spits (when talking) over everything when he cooks is'nt he?
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Reply By: Steve - Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 21:04

Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 21:04
hoax?
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Reply By: Jimbo - Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 21:10

Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 21:10
He's entertaining, but cooks trendy, half filling meals. That seems to be the way these days.

Order a Steak at a Restaurant these days and that is all you get. Extra for vegies or salad? Is that fair dinkhum?

When I owned a Restaurant and worked as a Chef we used to pride ourselves on the accompaniements. A fine steak came with vegies that were something special. These days you pay six dollars for a bowl of parsley buttered potatoes or another six for a bowl of lettuce leaves.

I went to a Restaurant in Launceston on my last business trip. Supposed to be amongst Australia's finest. Five course dinner and a few drinks $230 for two and I left hungry. Glad I wasn't paying.

To me, the thought of going out for dinner is to be fed. You should never leave hungry.

No wonder we eat out rarely these days. We can do better at home.

Chefs have lost it IMO.

Cheers,

Jim.
AnswerID: 123450

Reply By: Steve - Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 21:41

Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 21:41
Disagree there mate. He cooks traditional as well as modern cuisine and hearty versions of either. Unlike the trendy Neil Perry types "we're just going to do something really simple" followed by a nice piece of fish accompanied with 500 ingredients with a blob of ice cream on the top and a tower of "salad" with olive oil dotted around the plate for decoration.
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Follow Up By: Steve - Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 21:43

Tuesday, Aug 02, 2005 at 21:43
Take the point, though.
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Follow Up By: Jimbo - Wednesday, Aug 03, 2005 at 07:28

Wednesday, Aug 03, 2005 at 07:28
Fair call Steve,

I do understand he does some real cooking.

But, I was watching a tape of his in a shop promoting Tefal fry pans. He cooked a steak, sliced it up and sprinkled it with lettuce leaves.

That's not my idea of a "meal".

Cheers,

Jim.
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FollowupID: 378513

Reply By: Steve - Wednesday, Aug 03, 2005 at 08:12

Wednesday, Aug 03, 2005 at 08:12
hmmm....doesn't sound like his usual style but I'm sure he has his "inspirational" moments. Don't know if you've seen those Foxtel progs where he's going to all the local councils and trying to get the schools to serve decent "tucker". (He uses the Aussie? term) The schools often serve dinners over there, but they consist, usually, of burger & chips etc and he's re-educating the dinner ladies and the local councils, and in turn, the kids. Despite considerable barriers from all parties he's won them over successfullyand is hoping it will spread to the rest of the country. Bearing in mind some kids only ever see food out of a box for the microwave, it's often the only decent, fresh meal they get.He's also embarked on a programme where he is introducing kids from poorer areas (some pretty hopeless cases, too) into his restaurants for a 12 week intro cooking course in the hope of finding them worthwhile jobs with good chefs. He has amazing energy and deals with problems admirably. I still find him a bit irritating but can't help admire him.
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Reply By: slave - Wednesday, Aug 03, 2005 at 14:04

Wednesday, Aug 03, 2005 at 14:04
Sounds too good to be true
I'll take a copy at

lil_giggle_girl2 at hotmail.com

Mrs Slave
AnswerID: 123573

Reply By: fj60inOakford - Wednesday, Aug 03, 2005 at 16:25

Wednesday, Aug 03, 2005 at 16:25
When in doubt I always check snopes.com - the best source of Urban Legends around. Sure enough, there's a page about the Jamie Oliver cookbook email: http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/hoaxes/nakedchef.asp

Looks like the recipies are really Jamie's, just that someone has scanned all their favourites into a Word doc.
AnswerID: 123604

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