The beloved Anglo-French bakery's hit cookbook. -InStyle Online
A perfect marriage between French style and sensible English cooking. -The Independent
Manages to convey the sense that baking a good cake and placing it on a counter, still warm, is a wonderful way to show love and make people happy. -The Guardian
There's so much here you actually want to cook. Which is what food writing is all about. -Evening Standard
So evocatively written and beautifully shot, you can almost sniff the delicious scent of baking as you leaf through the pages. -The Sunday Tribune (Ireland)
...Fine compilation of rustic French foods. -Publishers weekly
Nowadays, with artisan bakeries and posh cake shops opening up and down the country, it's easy to take salted caramel doughnuts and passion fruit macarons somewhat for granted. But even as recently as 2006, Rose Carrarini's simple but inventive recipes for ricotta cheesecake, pistachio cake, caramel tarts and hot gingernut biscuits - miles away from both formal French patisserie and the home baking of the local village fete - were a rarity. It's not just cakes and bakes that make this book so special. Breakfast Lunch Tea's recipes for homemade granola, buckwheat pancakes and quinoa salad predated the craze for avocado toast and its ilk by several years, quietly bringing imaginative brunch recipes into the home. If Breakfast Lunch Tea didn't exactly create the current enthusiasm for baking, it was certainly one of its leading lights, paving the way for a modern, unfussy aesthetic that's now almost standard in both cafes and homes across the UK, and the world. -Observer Food Monthly