The Elements of Cooking: Translating the Chef’s Craft for Every Kitchen (Hardcover)

May 31, 2009 by TheChef  
Filed under Artistic Culinary Art Styles

The Elements of Cooking: Translating the Chef's Craft for Every Kitchen

Amazon.com Review
Amazon Best of the Month November 2007: Inspired by the Strunk and White classic, Michael Ruhlman’s The Elements of Cooking will quickly prove to be an essential culinary reference for both seasoned cooks and novices who might not know gravlax from gremolata. After a thorough “Notes on Cooking,” Ruhlman, a prolific cookbook author and popular blogger, settles in for an opinionated and informative A-Z roundup (from Acid to Zester) of cooking terms, lessons, and techniques reduced to their essential essence. Even with only one recipe (for veal stock), it’s a must-have for every kitchen library–a book that will help you re-think your approach to food. –Brad Thomas Parsons



From Publishers Weekly

Ruhlman’s slim 12th book, inspired by Strunk and White’s classic The Elements of Style, would more accurately have been titled Selected Elements of French Cooking. Organized in dictionary format, the book offers short definitions of culinary terms most likely to be encountered in a Continental restaurant kitchen: à la ficelle, jus lie, lardo, mise en place, oblique cut, oignon pique, rondeau, roulade. Entries for ladle, rolling pin and other common implements seem almost superfluous, while international items such as wok, tandoor, udon and cardamom are nowhere to be found (though to be fair, nam pla, kimchi and umami are included). An opening eight-page section announces, with finger wagging, that veal stock is the essential and discourses on eggs, salt and kitchen tools. Ruhlman (The Soul of a Chef) is an elegant writer and the entries he does include can be useful and sometimes entertaining. The real problem is the idiosyncratic, highly personal approach: you just don’t know what you’ll find in this book and what you won’t. (Nov.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.



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Cooking for Two: 2009,The Year’s Best Recipes Cut Down to Size (Hardcover)

May 29, 2009 by TheChef  
Filed under Culinary Cooking Books

Cooking for Two: 2009,The Year's Best Recipes Cut Down to Size

Product Description

Frustrated by wasting food you just can’t eat or ingredients you can’t use up? Tired of trying to figure out how to scale down a recipe so it doesn’t serve an army?

For this innovative cookbook, the editors and cooks at America’s Test Kitchen thought big but cooked small. We revamped our best recipes from the year to serve two. You’ll find everything from simple weeknight fare to special occasion dinners to salads, soups, sides and desserts. Birthday cake for two? We’ve got you covered!

A great gift for empty nesters, newlyweds, single people, young families (because new moms & dads are sick of eating mac-n-cheese) and more. Cooking for Two includes our guaranteed and much-loved equipment recommendations, Notes from the Test Kitchen feature, and ingredient ratings. The Smart Shopper’s Guide in the front of the book instructs your grocery shopping and meal planning by helping you make the most of ingredients.


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Mastering The Art of French Cooking, Volume One (1) (Fortieth - 40th - Anniversary Edition) (Hardcover)

May 28, 2009 by TheChef  
Filed under Culinary Cooking Books

Mastering The Art of French Cooking, Volume One (1) (Fortieth - 40th - Anniversary Edition)

Review

“Has it really been 40 years since Julia Child rescued Americans from dreary casseroles? This reissue, clad in a handsome red jacket, is what a cookbook should be: packed with sumptuous recipes, detailed instructions, and precise line drawings. Some of the instructions look daunting, but as Child herself says in the introduction, ‘If you can read, you can cook.’”
- Entertainment WeeklyReview



Review

“Has it really been 40 years since Julia Child rescued Americans from dreary casseroles? This reissue, clad in a handsome red jacket, is what a cookbook should be: packed with sumptuous recipes, detailed instructions, and precise line drawings. Some of the instructions look daunting, but as Child herself says in the introduction, ‘If you can read, you can cook.’”
- Entertainment Weekly



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Cooking Light Fresh Food Fast: 250 Incredibly Flavorful 5-Ingredient 15-Minute Recipes (Paperback)

May 27, 2009 by TheChef  
Filed under Culinary Cooking Books

Cooking Light Fresh Food Fast: 250 Incredibly Flavorful 5-Ingredient 15-Minute Recipes

Product Description

With over 250 incredibly flavorful 5-ingredient, 15-minute recipes at your fingertips, you’ll discover how simple it is to serve a healthful home-cooked meal on a busy weeknight. Cooking Light Fresh Food Fast expert pairings of superfast, super simple main and side dishes provide over 160 simply mouthwatering menus.  Organized by traditional food categories including Soups, Sandwiches, Salads, Meatless Main Dishes, Fish and Shellfish, Meats, and Poultry, Cooking Light Fresh Food Fast offers recipes that are not only great for you, but one’s that taste great, too!

With short ingredient lists, straightforward procedures, fresh ingredients, and delicious results, the recipes and meals in this cookbook will be the most requested, often repeated solutions in your weeknight repertoire. Every recipe guarantees success. Each one has been tested at least twice, often three or four times, to ensure that it’s not only supremely healthy, tasty, and easy to prepare, but that it also has the all-important “yum factor.”


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Cooking Up a Storm: Recipes Lost and Found from The Times-Picayune of New Orleans (Paperback)

May 26, 2009 by TheChef  
Filed under Culinary Cooking Books

Cooking Up a Storm: Recipes Lost and Found from The Times-Picayune of New Orleans

Product Description

After Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans thousands of people lost their keepsakes and family treasures forever. As residents started to rebuild their lives The Times-Picayune of New Orleans became a post-hurricane swapping place for old recipes that were washed away in the storm. The newspaper has compiled 250 of these delicious authentic recipes along with the stories about how they came to be and who created them. Cooking Up a Storm includes the very best of classic and contemporary New Orleans cuisine from seafood and meat to desserts and cocktails. But it also tells the story recipe by recipe of one of the great food cities in the world and the determination of its citizens to preserve and safeguard their culinary legacy.


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Giada’s Kitchen: New Italian Favorites (Hardcover)

May 25, 2009 by TheChef  
Filed under Culinary Cooking Books

Giada's Kitchen: New Italian Favorites

Amazon.com Review
Book Description
She’s taught us every facet of Italian cooking–from traditional and regional to seasonal and contemporary. She even made us fall in love with pasta again by opening us up to lighter, healthier versions that don’t weigh us down. Now the Food Network star and bestselling author of Everyday Pasta, Giada De Laurentiis, takes us down a new path, sharing her love of food with clean, vibrant, simple flavors and bursts of bright colors that look as beautiful on the plate as they are delicious.

Yes, you will still find those fabulous recipes she remembers so fondly from family meals, but you’ll also find updated twists on classic trattoria favorites–California-inflected, hearty but not overwhelming, and with the perfect balance of healthfulness and terrific flavor. Wouldn’t you love a faster, lighter take on osso buco (here made with turkey instead of veal), a salad with real substance (like one of cantaloupe, red onion, and walnuts), and fish that gets an Italian makeover by way of lots of fresh veggies and accents such as fennel and grapefruit salsa? And let’s not forget dessert. After all, what’s not to adore about little doughnuts dipped in chocolate sauce?

Ranging from soups and snacks to easy entres and elegant dinner-party fare, Giada’s recipes are perfect for any day of the week. And for the first time, she includes a full section of dishes that the little ones will love making as much as they love eating (like mini chicken meatballs). With something to please everyone at your table, Giada’s Kitchen deliciously demonstrates why Giada De Laurentiis has become America’s best-loved Italian cook.

Italy meets California in Giada De Laurentiis’s collection of 100 new recipes. She focuses on fresh ingredients, simple preparation, and bright flavors. Anyone who wants to indulge in the pleasures of Italian food without feeling weighed down will find inspiration for delicious, hearty yet healthy weekday meals. Giada’s recipes satisfy both our desire to eat with gusto and to feel good about what we eat.

Giada De Laurentiis’s Whole-Wheat Linguine with Green Beans, Ricotta, and Lemon

Not all cream sauces are super-rich. This pasta gets its creamy sauce from a combination of part-skim ricotta and pasta water, which come together to make a really easy, lighter cream sauce. Don’t leave out the lemon zest; it brightens the flavor and adds a wonderful lemony aroma as well. –Giada De Laurentiis





Whole-Wheat Linguine with Green Beans, Ricotta, and Lemon
(4-6 servings)




















1 pound whole-wheat linguine
1/2 cup part-skim ricotta cheese
3 tablespoons olive oil
1/2 pound French green beans (haricots verts), trimmed and halved lengthwise
1 garlic clove, chopped
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 cup halved cherry tomatoes
Zest of 1 lemon

Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil over high heat. Add the pasta and cook until tender but still firm to the bite, stirring occasionally, 8 to 10 minutes. Drain the pasta, reserving 1 cup of the cooking water. Transfer the hot pasta to a large heat-proof bowl and add the ricotta. Toss to combine.

Meanwhile, in a large, heavy skillet, warm the olive oil over medium-high heat. Add the green beans, garlic, salt, and pepper and sauté for 4 minutes. Add the reserved pasta cooking liquid and continue cooking until the beans are tender, about 4 more minutes. Add the ricotta-coated pasta to the pan with the green beans and toss to combine. Add the tomatoes and toss gently. Transfer to a serving plate and sprinkle with the lemon zest. Serve.

Giada De Laurentiis is the star of Food Network’s Everyday Italian, Giada’s Weekend Getaways, and Giada in Paradise. She attended Le Cordon Bleu in Paris and worked at Wolfgang Puck’s Spago restaurant in Los Angeles. This is her fourth book.



From Publishers Weekly

In her usual bright and cheery manner, De Laurentiis (Everyday Italian) offers her newest collection of accessible Italian-accented recipes. The host of Food Network’s Everyday Italian and Giada’s Weekend Getaways brings to the table recipes with basic, readily available ingredients like ricotta and canned beans, with which she whips up a surprisingly diverse array of dishes, like Hearty Tomato Soup with Lemon and Rosemary, and Asparagus Lasagna. Now and again she goes out on a limb with a contemporary twist—Tomato, Watermelon and Basil Skewers or Butternut Squash and Vanilla Risotto, while an entire chapter devoted to kids’ food brings out her sense of whimsy with dishes like Pizza Pot Pies. Throughout, Giada celebrates food that’s refreshingly simple. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.



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Cooking for Two: 2009,The Year’s Best Recipes Cut Down to Size (Hardcover)

May 25, 2009 by TheChef  
Filed under Culinary Cooking Books

Cooking for Two: 2009,The Year's Best Recipes Cut Down to Size

Product Description

Frustrated by wasting food you just can’t eat or ingredients you can’t use up? Tired of trying to figure out how to scale down a recipe so it doesn’t serve an army?

For this innovative cookbook, the editors and cooks at America’s Test Kitchen thought big but cooked small. We revamped our best recipes from the year to serve two. You’ll find everything from simple weeknight fare to special occasion dinners to salads, soups, sides and desserts. Birthday cake for two? We’ve got you covered!

A great gift for empty nesters, newlyweds, single people, young families (because new moms & dads are sick of eating mac-n-cheese) and more. Cooking for Two includes our guaranteed and much-loved equipment recommendations, Notes from the Test Kitchen feature, and ingredient ratings. The Smart Shopper’s Guide in the front of the book instructs your grocery shopping and meal planning by helping you make the most of ingredients.


Buy Cooking for Two: 2009,The Year’s Best Recipes Cut Down to Size (Hardcover) at Amazon

Cooking Light Annual Recipes 2009: Every Recipe…A Year’s Worth of Cooking Light Magazine (Hardcover)

May 25, 2009 by TheChef  
Filed under Artistic Culinary Art Styles

Cooking Light Annual Recipes 2009: Every Recipe...A Year's Worth of Cooking Light Magazine

Product Description

Cooking Light Annual Recipes 2009 is jam-packed with more than 1,000 mouthwatering, indulgent recipes. It’s also so much more than just a recipe collection! This 496-page book is a comprehensive must-have resource for all the latest cooking techniques, quick tips, fresh ingredients, and innovative kitchen equipment.

Within this 13th volume of Cooking Light Annual Recipes you’ll find:

Over 1,000 great-tasting, kitchen-tested recipes! Every recipe from Cooking Light magazine 2008 can be found in these pages. Don’t worry, you don’t need to be a chef to cook like one. The glory of these recipes is that you can make them with confidence! Our Test Kitchens staff rigorously tests all the recipes, often two or three times, to ensure that they’re not only healthy and reliable, but also rich, filling, and supremely scrumptious.

Over 100 menus to help you plan for every occasion! From weeknight suppers to supper club entertaining, Cooking Light helps you round out your favorite recipes with excellent menu pairing suggestions.

More than 70 bold and bright color photos! Just take another glance at the cover! If the Chocolate Mint Brownies doesn’t scream gorgeous, then we don’t know what does. And that’s just the beginning!

Over 50 staff favorite recipes! Peek inside to see the best-of-the-best recipes from a year’s worth of Cooking Light. Look for other top-rated winners in Our Favorite Recipes (page 2).

From its spectrum of over 1,000 recipes to its endless number of captivating ideas for both the fresh and familiar, Cooking Light Annual Recipes has never been better.



About the Author
Cooking Light, America’s leading epicurean magazine and authority on healthy cooking, is dedicated to helping its more than 12 million readers eat smart, be fit, and live well. With a staff of registered dietitians and culinary professionals-and over 20 years of experience-Cooking Light is unrivaled in identifying emerging food trends and providing flavorful and healthful recipes as well as detailed information about healthy cooking techniques and tips. 


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Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone (Hardcover)

May 24, 2009 by TheChef  
Filed under Culinary Cooking Books

Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone

Amazon.com Review

The elegant simplicity and exquisite flavor of Deborah Madison’s food make her one of America’s leading cooks. In Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone, she offers more than great food: her book includes comprehensive information about ingredients and techniques, plus more than 800 recipes. The recipes range from dishes as familiar as Guacamole to those as distinctive as Green Lentils with Roasted Beets and Preserved Lemons, and Cashew Curry. The 124-page chapter titled “Vegetables: The Heart of the Matter” is a virtual book of culinary revelations; you could use it as a manual on buying and preparing vegetables. Madison provides equally inspired recipes and guidance for everything from grains and soy to dairy foods and desserts.
–This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Library Journal

Madison, whose The Greens Cookbook sold more than 300,000 copies, offers recipes that will please even nonvegetarians.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
–This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


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Ratio: The Simple Codes Behind the Craft of Everyday Cooking (Hardcover)

May 23, 2009 by TheChef  
Filed under Culinary Cooking Books

Ratio: The Simple Codes Behind the Craft of Everyday Cooking

From Booklist

Ruhlman, who explained the basic ingredients, tools, and cookbooks essential to the home chef in The Elements of Cooking (2007), now offers an illuminating read on the magic numbers that lie at the heart of basic cookery. He divides the book into five parts (doughs, stocks, sausages, sauces, and custards). In each section he explains what essential properties make the ratios work and the subtle variations that differentiate, for instance, a bread dough (five parts flour, three parts water) from a biscuit dough (three parts flour, one part fat, two parts liquid). While making his case that “possessing one small bit of crystalline information can open up a world of practical applications” gets a little repetitive, it’s certainly a lesson worth taking to heart. This revealing and remarkably accessible read offers indispensible information for those ready to cook by the seat of their pants; with a handy grasp of these ratios (and a dash of technique), willing chefs should have no excuse to remain tethered to recipe cards and cookbooks.



Review

“Cooking, like so many creative endeavors, is defined by relationships. For instance, knowing exactly how much flour to put into a loaf of bread isn’t nearly as useful as understanding the relationship between the flour and the water, or fat, or salt . That relationship is defined by a ‘ratio,’ and having a ratio in hand is like having a secret decoder ring that frees you from the tyranny of recipes.
Professional cooks and bakers guard ratios passionately so it wouldn’t surprise me a bit if Michael Ruhlman is forced into hiding like a modern-day Prometheus, who in handing us mortals a power better suited to the gods, has changed the balance of kitchen power forever.
I for one am grateful. I suspect you will be too.” — Alton Brown, author of I’m Just Here for the Food



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