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As summer dwindles and fall approaches the first tinges of color, we enter the peak season for food. Summer sun has fueled growth, vitamins, and yes a little sweetness everywhere. Fruits and vegetables are peaking and it is time to enjoy the full force of their flavor.

Patricia Wells published Vegetable Harvest in 2007. For almost a decade, this book’s very French, and quite Provence, focus has pleased countless thousands. It’s a grand tour of vegetable cuisine, whether they are the centerpiece of the dish or serve to supplement to other elements. Chapters here are devoted to:

  • Appetizers, Starter and First Courses
  • Salads
  • Soups
  • Fish and Shellfish
  • Poultry and Meat
  • Pasta, Rice, Beans and Grains
  • Vegetables
  • Potatoes
  • Eggs, Cheese, and Friend
  • Bread
  • Desserts

Somehow, someway those veggies on your kitchen island have a role in the recipes Patricia shares. Here is a selection of recipes that caught my eye and have testing away again. You’ll see old friends here, like mint, employed in sparkling new fashion:

Artichoke and Parmesan Soup

Asparagus with Gruyere and Smoked Ham

Chicken Breasts with Mint, Capers, and White Wine

Chilled Beet Gazpacho

Chunky Eggplant Cumin Spread

Potato and Chive Waffles with Smoked Salmon, Capers and Crème Fraiche

Potatoes in Chicken Stock with Mint and Butter

Pumpkin and Sage Risotto

Roast Leg of Lamb with Honey and Mint Crust

Roasted Orange Pepper Soup

Savory Mixed Herb and Goat Cheese Sorbet

Steamed Leeks in Mustard and Caper Vinaigrette

Tomato and Strawberry Gazpacho

There are some ideas here that you may need to shelve until next spring, like that Roast Leg of Lamb. But there are surely ideas here to consider now and into the fall. Chilled Beet Gazpacho is a dish for this moment. The Pumpkin and Sage Risotto and the Roasted Orange Pepper Soup are destined for our long Thanksgiving weekend — but we may cheat and do that soup before November.

These recipes carry the charm of Patricia Wells, those little adornments of flavor that make her recipes not just distinctive but happily delicious. If you walk past your farmers market this weekend, you might want this book under your arm. See what is fresh and ready for your kitchen. Then enjoy Vegetable Harvest.