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Shop
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Cooking with Courgettes (Marie Fougère)
Every spring, the intrepid gardener makes his choice of plants and produce. Invariably, a few courgettes will be among things chosen for his patch and, if the weather is fine, they will yield more vegetables than the keenest cook can know how to deal with. This is the famous glut: runner beans and Jerusalem artichokes are two other types that threaten kitchen sanity, but courgettes are perhaps the most insistent.
Their particular problem is that if you leave them for a few days they don’t remain courgettes but develop into giant, and dreadful, marrows: watery, horrid and inedible. Marie Fougère was first published in France but her recipes were so creative and inventive that translation was considered very important. English readers can now rustle up courgette flower fritters, and even courgettes for dessert.