- The book is hard-cover, and the design around the spine and wrapping around the front and back gives the appearance that it has been lovingly gift-wrapped - such a special touch. The cover photo of the stuffed squash immediately brings autumn, Thanksgiving, and the holidays to mind.
- Which brings me to the food photos, courtesy of Susan Voisin. Most of you likely follow her blog already, and know how vividly she brings food to our screens. Her contribution to this book is outstanding. The photos are colorful, rich, and enticing.
- Which leads me to the colors used throughout the book. The layout is really unique. Each chapter can be easily identified by a highlighting color. For instance, Thanksgiving uses an orange color as the background for each subsection, recipe names, and other accents. Red is used for Christmas, blue for Jewish holidays, purple for Easter, and so on. I tried to scan an example, but it doesn't do it justice. All I can say is that as a reader, it is very useful to quickly eye a section based on color and flip to it. It's something I've wanted myself in a cookbook, but it is rare for a publisher to use more than one accent color because of printing costs. No scrimping here, it is a visual feast!
- Layout. The layout of the chapters is clear and clean, and the layout of the recipes follows suit. A fresh page for each recipe, with the ingredients listed in bold on the left, and the directions numbered on the right. Easy to read, easy to follow.
Vegan Holiday Kitchen deserves a place on your cookbook shelf. Or, on your living room table. Maybe buy two copies - one that can get splattered in your kitchen, the other than can create conversation on your coffee table. It is that beautiful a book. In fact, before we started packing, that's exactly where my copy was sitting. And, now that I think about it, for our last showing, I had left the book out in full view on our coffee table. Nava, you might have helped us sell our house. ;)