This is one epic cook book! It contains a large amount of information on how to cook healthy and sustainable food. If you are already committed to a sustainable and/or ancestral-type diet, then you will likely love this book. The recipes bridge the gap between lofty modern health cookbooks and basic-level standard western diet cookbooks. However, if you are new to this way of eating, this book is overwhelming. It is just a dump of fermenting, sprouting, top-to-tail, bulk cooking instruction and doesn’t really offer much of a roadmap on how to actually implement it all together. There’s sporadic advice on that front, but nothing concise. My hope is that this is addressed in the sequel to this book, “Simplicious Flow,” which is on my “to read” list.
Stylistically the book is also busy. The use of “hand-written” text throughout the book is off putting. I can understand why the author has used this device. It helps personalise the book and make it feel like a family cookbook, rather than a store-bought one. However, visually it’s very busy and is frustrating at times when the handwriting takes some effort to decipher. It also effects the flow of the book as it almost constantly interjects the text. I would personally prefer the amount of handwritten notes be toned down quite a bit. The annotated content could by-and-large remain, but in a mostly printed format would be better. But the idea is endearing.
On the whole there is a lot to love about this book and I would actually recommend everyone own a copy. I just wish it had a little more hand-holding for those just starting out in this lifestyle, and was visually a bit less frenetic.