This is what happens when you google your own book: I want to thank Peter Bouckaert for taking the time to do this review and Ed from California! Fouad  Kassab, of the Food Blog and finally Mama's Lebanese Kitchen. Choucran. 
5.0 out of 5 stars
An excellent, inspirational book, July 21, 2011
By Peter Bouckaert – This review is from: Mouneh (Preserving Foods for the Lebanese Pantry, Volume 1) (Hardcover)
  I came across this book on a recent visit to Lebanon, and it has  quickly become a favorite. It isn’t a cookbook, so don’t expect to find  recipes for Lebanese food inside. But it is a great work, documenting  Lebanon’s fascinating traditions of food preservation through pickling,  brining, drying, and various other procedures. If you like having food  in the pantry, this is a work for you. In Lebanese, Palestinian, and  Syrian culture, almost every household still preserves much of its  foodstuffs, harvesting or buying produce at the height of the season and  processing them for the rest of the year–whether it is vegetable  pickles or mulberry syrup. One of the more exciting developments in  recent times in Lebanon is how a new generation of chefs have embraced  this, and started incorporating more traditional Lebanese products into  their modern cuisine, championing their national diversity. This is an  important work of documenting that unique national diversity, and an  inspiration to read and use.
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Tradition Documentation, September 27, 2011 By Ed “Ed” (Santa Clara, CA) – This review is from: Mouneh (Preserving Foods for the Lebanese Pantry, Volume 1) (Hardcover)
I got this book as a gift and was very happy and impressed with it. It  documents in details, and in a very cool and smooth writing style old  Lebanese traditions of keeping “Mouneh”, ie preserving food. It goes  through produce and foods by seasons, and documents places, people, and  procedures used to preserve those foods the traditional way. It is such a  gift to the Lebanese culture and is a well written book! I highly  recommend it.
This is my first ever book review. My intention is to introduce you,  dear reader, to books that inspire me to cook, ones that teach me new  things, or ones that contain extremely valuable information. It so  happens that this first book, Mouneh, does these things all at once.
Book Highlights
- A comprehensive work
- Contains recipes for lesser-known aspects of Lebanese food
- A one-of-a-kind book which has, for the first time, made these recipes publicly available
- Chefs and cooks will be inspired and educated about old techniques and obscure dishes that are absolutely stunning
- Has beautiful photography
- A must have for anyone serious or even slightly interested about Lebanese food
Book Review
To call the task of putting together a book like Mouneh daunting  would be a gross understatement.  Mouneh is the Lebanese word for the  larder, the supplies and provisions that saw village people through the  rough Lebanese winters. Weighing in at 592 pages, Mouneh is a  comprehensive work, encompassing recipes for pretty much all Lebanese  pantry items, from the well-known to the obscure. Author Barbara Abdeni  Massaad is an American born of Lebanese parents and she is more than  passionate about preserving both pantry items and Lebanese traditions.  It takes individuals like Barbara who feel a connection to a country but  see it through an outsider’s perspective to fully appreciate the value  and need to document its fragile traditions. This work is the result of  years of research and experimentation to produce accurate, authentic  recipes categorized by month to give the reader an idea of what can be  preserved at that time of year. Many of the recipes contained in Mouneh  have never been previously documented or made this easily available.
In the style of her first book Man’oushé, which is dedicated in its  entirety to manakish, the Levantine pizza, Barbara has written Mouneh in  a personal tone. The recipes, it becomes obvious, are not her own, but  belong to the farmers and artisan producers she introduces us to. She  relays her stories and encounters with heart, and shares the recipes she  has gathered from numerous people living all over Lebanon.
In addition to doing all the writing, Barbara has also done most of  the photography. Her portrayal of wonderful and often exotic ingredients  largely contributes to the pleasure of reading Mouneh. The book  explodes with colour and the images of farmers in their fields or  producers preparing their recipes speak a thousand words.
I aim to provide honest, balanced reviews, so here’s some dwelling on  the negatives. In my opinion, the book could have used an editor to  give it the once over as sometimes, the sentences could be better  structured and there are some minor, infrequent spelling mistakes. My  second criticism is common to most books I’ve seen come out of Lebanon,  though it is observed less with Mouneh. Here, the layout and the  typography could be better handled. A more suitable font could have been  selected, the images are sometimes placed in awkward positions on the  page, and in some cases the text clashes with its background and becomes  difficult to read.
All in all, these are minor issues that would not stand in the way of  Mouneh becoming a true classic. To me, Mouneh has become my first  reference for Lebanese preserves. No other book has gone to such lengths  to describe these recipes in such a serious, well-researched manner.  Non-Lebanese readers will truly enter a new and colourful world of  Lebanese food, one that is very distinct from any other Lebanese cook  book, as it relates to a completely different facet of our cuisine. You  won’t find a recipe for hummus here, but instead, you will learn how to  make orange blossom petal jam, pickled green almonds, candied pumpkin  and a plethora of other Lebanese classics that until now have been known  mostly to a handful of the Lebanese. Barbara has done the Lebanese  people a great service in producing Mouneh, and I, for one, am very  grateful.
You can buy the book here: 
http://www.buylebanese.com/browse.asp?pr=596&x=2&y=4
Book Score
Content: 7.5/10
Recipes: 10/10
Layout: 7/10
 Total: 24.5/30
Additional Information
- I heard about Barbara when she left a comment on my Manakish post
- Barbara is also a blogger. Her blog can be found here: http://myculinaryjourneythroughlebanon.blogspot.com
- In the interest of full disclosure, Barbara is one of my Facebook  contacts, but I personally purchased the book and have written this  review with no bias or favouritism.
Mama's Lebanese Kitchen Mouneh Review:A  few days ago our mother arrived from Lebanon for a visit.  Aside from  the many edible delights that she brought with her including her freshly  made 
Zaatar,  Baklava from AbdulRahman Hallab Sweets, fresh batches of Lebanese  7-spices and Sumac spice, she brought us something unique this time,  Barbara Massaad’s recent book titled “Mouneh, Preserving Foods for the  Lebanese Pantry.”
Background: 
“Mouneh” is a Lebanese slang word coming from the Arabic word “Mana”  which means to preserve food. Mouneh is a living Lebanese tradition  refined through the generations by culture and creativity. And what  makes the Lebanese Mouneh specifically so special is the rich mixture  and inheritance of civilizations that Lebanon and its surroundings have  had over thousands of years, including but not limited to the  civilizations of the Phoenicians, Babylonians, Persians, Romans,  Byzantine, Islamic Caliphates, Ottoman and up to the recent French  colonization.With that in mind, the people of Lebanon learned to  preserve hundreds of food items and staples across seasons, and this is  what Barbara’s book is meant to archive.
Barbara's Mouneh: 
Barbara took over 5 years to write and publish this book. She moved  from one Lebanese village to the other, sat down with the old and the  young, and she took her time in not only listening to and writing their  stories, but also in actually helping out the villagers in their  processes of preserving their local foods. Hence, her experience is  practical and is first hand.
So this is not a typical “recipes”  cookbook. “Mouneh” documents the stories of the people and the  traditions behind its recipes as well.
Content and Style: 
The book “Mouneh” is organized into sections according to the 4  seasons that Lebanon enjoys. Each section contains recipes and methods  of naturally preserving vegetables, fruits, grains, crops, spices and  dairy products according to seasonal availability. The book has about  590 pages, is full color, and features hundreds of Barbara’s  professionally taken photographs, along with photographs by other  professional photographers. The book’s images are quite vivid and  impressive, and give the book another dimension by helping the reader  get fully immersed in the story.
Typically villagers in Lebanon  tend to focus on preserving their own local crops and foods, with some  exceptions. So it’s not  common to find one village that aced it all  since nature, weather and even history play a big role in dictating what  type of produce or food products each village grows.  And that is why  Barbara’s work is quite important: it gathers all those precious methods  from hundreds of Lebanese villages and people and puts its all in one  place. The content is rich.
In terms of writing style, “Mouneh” is  a very easy and lively read, despite its intimidating volume. Barbara  overviews vividly the personal experiences she’s had in many villages.   She talks about people, and their stories, and she talks about their own  traditions in preserving local foods, and in some case she talks about  villages and their history. From this perspective, the book is quite a  piece of cultural archive.
Conclusion: 
As a final word on Barbara, she is a founding member of Slow Food  Beirut, a delegate of the International Terra Madre Community, and Slow  Food Italy. She is a contributing editor to local and international  publications. She has also worked on an extensive portfolio dealing with  children’s portraiture. She lives in Beirut with her husband and three  children who are very much involved in her culinary journey.
We  found Barbara’s work to be quite impressive and in our opinion, her book  is a service to Lebanon’s future generations as it preserves a slowly  fading aspect of their culture in such a beautiful and detailed way.