Wednesday, December 31, 2008

The South American Table or Salsas Tacos

The South American Table: The Flavor and Soul of Authentic Home Cooking from Patagonia to Rio de Janeiro, with 450 Recipes

Author: Maria Baez Kijac

This book has over 450 recipes from 10 countries for everything from tamales, ceviches, and empanadas that are popular across the continent to specialties that define individual cuisines.

Publishers Weekly

This authoritative and admirably comprehensive cookbook recalls the seminal work of culinary pioneers Diana Kennedy and Madhur Jaffrey. Assuming the responsibility of introducing specific and authentic South American cuisine to the American cook, Kijac (Cooking with a Latin Beat) offers a thorough volume that is part reference book and part cookbook. Long chapters about the geography of South America and its pre-Columbian civilizations, as well as a history of cooking in South America precede the hundreds of recipes. A glossary of South American ingredients as well as a dictionary of ingredients are included as well. The recipes are wonderful, if overwhelming in number. Beverages such as Cachaca Sour, salads such as Watercress, Lupini Bean and Avocado, and Mariana's Chicken are must-tries. The Condimentos section will appeal to anyone who loves the zest and bright flavors of salsas. Many of the recipes are homey (Coconut Bread Pudding), making the book even more attractive. Ambitious and informative, this volume belongs on the shelf of the serious cook. (Oct.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

The cuisines of South America are becoming increasingly popular in the United States, but although there are more than a handful of good cookbooks on various individual countries, other than Felipe Rojas-Lombardi's Art of South American Cooking (1991) and Elisabeth Lambert Ortiz's 1979 Book of Latin American Cooking, there are few on the cooking of the region as a whole. As such, Kijac's big new book, obviously a labor of love, should become a classic. She has drawn on both Spanish-language cookbooks and recipes from home cooks and restaurant chefs to present authentic versions of dozens of dishes, many of which appear in differing forms in the regional cuisines of South America. A number of the recipes will be new to North American cooks, and Kijac's thoroughly researched, readable text will serve as an invaluable culinary resource as well. Highly recommended. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.



Book review: RFID or Misbehavior in Organizations

Salsas & Tacos

Author: Susan D Curtis

Hot and Smoky Shrimp Tacos, Roasted Wild Mushroom Tacos with Queso Fresco, Fire-Roasted Corn and Poblano Chile Tacos-these are a few of the most taste-tempting tacos you'll ever put in your mouth. And what to top them with-of course, it must be the perfect salsa!

This book combines mouth-wateringly unique taco recipes with tried-and-true salsa recipes that add an extra kick to any dish, from the definitive experts of southwestern cuisine at the Santa Fe School of Cooking.

"Hold onto Your Hat" Habanero Salsa

Chicken al Carbon and Avocado Wrap

Grilled Pineapple Salsa

Apple Pie Tacos

Grapefruit-Orange Salsa

Baja-Style Fish Tacos with Chipotle Mayonnaise

Roasted Pepper Relish with Raisins and Pinon Nuts

Tomatillo-Papaya Salsa

Plus recipes for fresh tortillas, authentic Mexican sauces, techniques for roasting and toasting, info on chiles, and much more!

With inventive flavor combinations, full-color photographs, and resources for ingredients, this hot little book offers endless ideas for tacos and their perfect toppings.



Themes Dreams and Schemes or Chefs Book of Formulas Yields and Sizes

Themes, Dreams, and Schemes: Banquet Menu Ideas, Concepts, and Thematic Experiences

Author: G Eugene Wigger

Are you looking to put more fun in your functions? More bang in your banquets? Now real help is at hand—with Themes, Dreams, and Schemes, the complete guide to menu and theme management for banquet, catering, and meeting/event planning operations.

Filled with practical advice and using a step-by-step approach, this hands-on reference contains everything you need to know in order to design unique theme parties, develop winning menus, write compelling proposals, and negotiate effectively.

The book features over 375 theme experiences and is packed with hundreds of innovative menu suggestions to get you started. There are menus for meeting breaks, receptions, and theme parties, as well as sit-down and buffet breakfasts, luncheons, and dinners—including low-cholesterol, low-fat, low-sodium, and kosher menus. New food combination and presentation ideas let you take the "blahs" out of menu planning and put the imagination back in.

Drawing on over 30 years of international catering expertise, G. Eugene Wigger brings his well-informed perspective and tremendous enthusiasm to every aspect of the management process, from attendee and staff involvement strategies to smart ways to save on food and budget costs, prop purchase, and more.

So why wait? Transform your dreams into wonderful themes, and devise the schemes that will make them come true. With this comprehensive sourcebook, you're on your way to memorable special event planning.

"Gene is a genius! This book will be THE resource for every caterer or special event manager who wishes to go beyond the ordinary and expected to produce a visual and culinary medium of delight." —Richard E. Marriott, Chairman ofthe Board, Host Marriott Corporation.

"Gene Wigger is one of the most creative people in the business of 'Experience Creation.' This book is a wonderful resource." —Paul R. O'Neil, Vice President, Managing Director, Sheraton New York Hotel, Sheraton Manhattan Hotel.

"Bravo! We have needed a book like this for a long time! It will be a valuable resource to stir up the creative juices of caterers and meeting planners alike." —Patti J. Shock, Associate Professor/Department Chair, Tourism & Convention Administration Department, William F. Harrah College of Hotel Administration, University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

"Putting on a successful event that truly meets your objectives is both a science and an art. Gene Wigger is considered the 'Doctor of Creativity' of our industry. His work is a superb guide on how to get it done with taste, flair, and professionalism." —Frederic V. Malek, Chairman of the Board Thayer Capital Partners (Ritz-Carlton Hotels and Resorts).

"When it comes to creative catering and special theme party events, Gene Wigger didn't just write the book, he invented it!" —Scott A. Dillion, President SDI Travel and Incentives.



Table of Contents:
The Theme and Scheme of Things.
Raise Food and Beverage Management to a Higher Level.
Don't Kneel to Propose.
Creative Thematic Meeting Breaks.
Breakfast Appetizers.
Lunch/Dinner Appetizers.
Soups.
Salads.
A Guide to Vegetable Dishes.
Desserts.
Breakfast Entrees.
Seated Breakfast Menus.
Buffet Breakfast Menus.
Buffet Bruncheon Menus.
Luncheon Entrees.
Seated Luncheon Menus.
Luncheon Buffet Menus.
Dinner Entrees.
Seated Dinner Menus.
Buffet Dinner Menus.
Signature Line Gourmet Dinner Menus.
Reception Menus.
Low-Cholesterol, Low-Fat, Low- Sodium Menus.
The Fantasy Factory(r) Theme Menus.
Kosher Menus.

Book review: 50 Classic Japanese Recipes or Wedding Showers

Chef's Book of Formulas, Yields, and Sizes

Author: Arno Schmidt

The ultimate quick-reference cost control resource for busy kitchens

The Chef's Book of Formulas, Yields, and Sizes is a powerful tool for controlling food costs in any foodservice operation. Now in an updated third edition, this encyclopedic reference is packed with helpful, practical information, including kitchen yields for more than 2,000 ingredients listed by food groups, sample purchase quantities, suggested serving sizes, tips and tricks for working with various ingredients, and other helpful tools for getting the most out of any size budget.

This Third Edition broadens the knowledge of seasoned chefs and novices alike with new material on 150 previously unlisted ingredients, as well as:



• Coverage of ingredients unique to Indian, Chinese, Latin, and Japanese cooking

• Information on caloric counts, nutrition, and seasonal foods

• Serving sizes accepted in most fine restaurants A versatile, exhaustive resource, the Chef's Book of Formulas, Yields, and Sizes also offers many informative, easy-to-read tables for quick access to facts on can and bottle sizes, weights and measures, steam table pan sizes, and table and tablecloth sizes, as well as more than fifty basic, large-quantity recipes for mousses, soups, dough, cakes, and much more.

The Chef's Book of Formulas, Yields, and Sizes, Third Edition is absolutely indispensable for any foodservice professional who must calculate costs for inventory management or determine exact measurements for portion control.



Tuesday, December 30, 2008

El Jardin Culinario or Cocina divertida para ninos

El Jardin Culinario: Como Cultivar Sus Propios Frutales,Hierbas Y Hortalizas,Cualquiera Que Sea El Tamano de SU Jardin (Guias Practicas de Jardineria)

Author: Andi Clevely

Each beautifully illustrated book in this collection covers an important topic of gardening, including selection and location of plants, garden design, gardening tools, and vegetable and flower gardens.
 

Una colección de guías hermosamente ilustradas y explicativas sobre las labores de jardinería y horticultura, que incluyen desde la planificación y el diseño de jardín, pasando por la labor práctica del jardinero, hasta la selección de las plantas y hortalizas más adecuadas.



Look this: The Moral Leader or Organization Theory

Cocina divertida para ninos: Recetas llenas de imaginacion para fiestas inolvidables

Author: Edimat

For chefs and novices alike, this handy series makes cooking a delight and eating a pleasure. Featuring cuisines from around the world, each recipe is depicted with clear instructions and illustrated sequences. The versatility and use of everyday ingredients to enhance and enrich meals is explored in each book.
 

Si comer es un placer, cocinar puede ser un deleite con esta colección de recetas mundiales, está pensado para cocineros y para los novatos. Todas las recetas incluyen claras instrucciones que se completan con ilustraciones. Estos libros revelan la versatilidad de los ingredientes más cotidianos así como estos trucos que enriquecen la comida.



Worth Tasting or Boston Uncommon

Worth Tasting: A Culinary Tour through the Architecture of the Palm Beaches

Author: The Junior League of the Palm Beaches

Worth Tasting will take you through a culinary tour of Palm Beach. While enjoying the delicious flavors of South Florida, you will also read about the extravagant and beautiful buildings where high society continues to gather as they celebrate Florida living.



Interesting book: The Herbal Handbook or Stop Your Cravings

Boston Uncommon: A Culinary Journey through Boston's Distinctive Neighborhoods

Author: Junior League of Boston Staff

An "uncommon" look at Boston, this recipe collection tours the city's neighborhoods and offers a taste of the rich history, culture and food traditions that are unique to Boston. This culinary tour features recipes highlighting local New England flavors.



Cheese Deck or Cooks Tour of Scotland

Cheese Deck: A Connoisseur's Guide to 50 of the World's Best

Author: Max McCalman

As the maître fromager of New York City's acclaimed Picholine restaurant, Max McCalman has selected, tasted, and studied hundreds of cheeses, serving them to thousands of cheese lovers. This deck contains fascinating and practical information about fifty of his most highly rated cheeses: how each one is made, who the best producers are, where to store it, and how to serve it for maximum enjoyment (including unprecedented guidance on which wines are most compatible with each cheese).
From the book Cheese: A Connoisseur's Guide to the World's Best by Max McCalman and David Gibbons.



Book review: My French Vue or Power Juices

Cook's Tour of Scotland: From Barra to Brora in 120 Recipes

Author: Sue Lawrenc

Award-winning food writer Sue Lawrence journeys the length and breadth of Scotland to meet the people who farm and produce its food in this charming cookbook. An Orkney barley miller, an Isle of Mull cheese producer, a Dundee sausage-maker, and a Brora jam-maker are just a few of the many food heroes she meets along the way. In a cornucopia of recipes inspired by Scotland's sublime ingredients, Lawrence serves up dishes such as Frittata with Smoked Salmon; Lamb Shanks with Asparagus and Mint; Bean, Kale, and Sausage Crusty Hotpot; and Orkney Fudge Cheesecake. Celebrating the Scottish landscape and history as well as its food, this beautifully illustrated volume is a must for visitors or anyone who loves fresh, seasonal fare.



Monday, December 29, 2008

The Wine Lovers Healthy Weight Loss Plan or Meals in Minutes

The Wine Lover's Healthy Weight Loss Plan: 100 Recipes That Let Your Enjoy the Health Benefits of Your Favorite Wines

Author: Tedd Goldfinger

Now there's a heart-healthy weight loss program that lets you enjoy the benefits of your cherished Chardonnay

For some time the media has been abuzz with news of the health benefits of wine, but until now there has been no authoritative source for those interested in making wine part of a healthy diet. Coauthored by a noted cardiologist and an award-winning chef, The Wine Lover's Healthy Weight Loss Plan shows how you can easily shed unwanted pounds, while maximizing the health benefits of your favorite wines.

Sample recipes include:

  • Scampi with Chipotle-Orange Sauce, paired with a 2004 Marquis-Philips "Holly's Blend," Verdelho, McLaren Vale, Australia
  • Roast Duck with Lavender-Lemon Honey Sauce, paired with a Bergstrom Winery 2004 Willamette Valley Pinot Noir

Tedd Goldfinger, M.D., is a physician certified in cardiovascular disease and internal medicine.

Lynn F. Nicholson graduated from Le Cordon Bleu Program at the Western Culinary Institute.



Book review: Guide to Economic Indicators or With All Your Possessions

Meals in Minutes: Fast and Fun Recipes in a Flash... Plus Lots of Timesaving Tips

Author: Gooseberry Patch

Need something hearty in a hurry? Check out Meals In Minutes Cookbook for plenty of recipes for speedy dinners and desserts. Cook up some zippy ziti, salisbury steak, crispy chicken fingers, alfredo pasta with chicken, butterscotch brownies and chocolate eclair squares. A handy pantry list makes sure you always have the right ingredients on hand...time-saving conversions will help you translate recipes into shopping lists in a flash. Full of simple meal ideas too!



Moms Big Book of Cookies or Party Cakes

Mom's Big Book of Cookies: 200 Family Favorites You'll Love Making and Your Kids Will Love Eating

Author: Lauren Chattman

This book is a follow-up to Mom's Big Book of Baking, with a fun 4-color design and color photos that make it even more appealing and user-friendly. This book features 200 kid-tested recipes, and is written by a mom for moms, so the recipes are accessible and easy. Mom's Big Book of Cookies also includes helpful sidebars with suggestions for involving kids in the baking process and fun occasions to make cookies, making it the perfect family cookie book!



Book about: Magic Lantern Guides or Microsoft Visual Basic 2008 Express Edition

Party Cakes: Exquisite Treats for Celebrating Special Occasions

Author: Mich Turner

Mich Turner is London's top cake designer for society and celebrities alike. She has refined a simple and modular approach to entertaining-start with a dozen basic recipes and let the art of icings, glazes, and finishing touches be the key to perfection. This versatile guide is a sourcebook of ideas for celebratory treats, such as cakes, petit fours, and canapes for any event, formal or informal. The book begins with how to choose the right cake design (reflecting the venue and the season as well as the guest list and flower arrangements) and then details establishing the theme, the shape, the icing, and the flavor of the cake. The heart of the book is the step-by-step section on decorative techniques and designs that enable anyone, regardless of experience, to create show-stopping cakes with confidence and style.



Sunday, December 28, 2008

Florida Cookbook or Traditional Scottish Cookery

Florida Cookbook: From Gulf Coast Gumbo to Key Lime Pie--Kca Pbk

Author: Jeanne A Voltz

Here is a delicious and generous sampling (more than 200 recipes) of the cooking of Florida, along with an entertaining excursion into the land where the story of American food began and where today one can find the most interesting culinary diversity in the U.S.A. Jeanne Voltz and Caroline Stuart take us through all six areas of Florida as they explore: The Northeast in search of An Oyster Roast, Florida Smoked Beans, and Peanut Butter Pie; The Panhandle for Shrimp Stuffed Eggplant, Baked Cheese Grits, and Blackberry Dumplings; The Space Coast, Gold Coast, and the Keys for Florida Conch Salad, Broiled Yellowtail with Orange Butter, and Mango Tarte Tatin with Lime Custard Sauce; The Big Bend and the Sun Coast for Coastal Crab Boil, Ybor City Calabaza Salad, and Rum Spanish Flan with Caramelized Oranges; Central Florida for Smothered Rabbit, Greens with Corn Meal Dumplings, and Strawberry Cobbler; Florida's Great Lake for South Florida Frog's Legs, Hoppin' John with Trimmings, and Fresh Banana Layer Cake; and many, many other delectable recipes. The authors tell tales of bygone times - from the early homesteads to the opulent hotels of the Gold Coast - and about ethnic food festivals that take place the year round. They note the changes in cooking styles as different waves of immigrants - Minorcans, Jews, Greeks, Cubans - all left their mark; and they relish the winds of change as home cooks and young chefs today are assimilating new Caribbean and Far Eastern tastes that make the most of fresh tropical ingredients, the good local seafood, and the abundance of citrus and peppers. Anyone who loves good food will welcome the delights to be found in these enticing pages. And Floridians - newcomers, old-timers, and those just passing through - will discover a wealth of information about where and how to enjoy the riches of land and sea.

Publishers Weekly

Dispelling the stereotype of Florida as a Disney void or geriatric Levittown, Voltz ( Barbecued Ribs and Other Great Feeds ) and Stuart, southerners both, offer an entertaining overview of a cuisine that has ``more ethnic diversity than any in America, and possibly the world.'' Dividing Florida into six regions, they illustrate the character of each through recipes and vignettes. Interspersed between instructions for the Spanish-, French- and African American-influenced foods of the Panhandle, like boiled peanuts and smothered quail, are tales of Gulf Coast oysters and cockfighting in Pensacola. Like all cookbooks consorting with native kitchens and restaurants, this book is a voyeur's delight. Its recipes tickle readers with imaginary viewings of local legendary feats--building the titanic Greek salad at the Louis Pappas Restaurant in Tarpon Springs--and also treat us to the more homespun: throwing together a mess of pineapple coleslaw at barbecues for Florida rodeo riders. Although the book lacks the singular voice that could imbue this kind of collection with emotional meaning, its precision and comprehensiveness make it a valuable historical document, reminiscent of the WPA guides of the 1930s. Photos not seen by PW. (Feb.)



Book about: Canon Speedlite System Digital Field Guide or Essential Sharepoint 2007

Traditional Scottish Cookery

Author: Sheila MacRa

This is the perfect cookbook for all Scots scattered across the globe -- and for everyone else who realises they might have missed something. It's a chance to recreate those special dishes remembered from childhood, or discover something new to enrich your taste experience. Envied for its first-class game, beef and honey, blessed with an abundance of fish, fruit and cereals, Scotland has a reputation for simple, wholesome and satisfying foods.

This is the country that pioneered the first tea shop and introduced the world to porridge -- the home of shortbread, baps, potato scones and clootie dumplings -- where a lack of ingredients in budget-conscious times could have been a challenge to creativity, good nourishment and good taste, but produced lasting favourites that have passed down through generations.

Shaped by a climate that is unpredictable and demanding, it's a culinary culture that warms the cockles of your heart and makes the most of available resources. Using this book you can recreate them all -- from everyday favourites to the adventurous and the unusual. It's a taste tradition too good to lose.



Bread Bread Bread or Cilantro Secrets

Bread, Bread, Bread

Author: Ann Morris

What kind of bread do you eat? A bagel? A tortilla? A baguette? All over the world, wherever there are human beings, someone is eating bread. Ann Morris's simple text and Ken Heyman's dazzling full-color photographs reveal for young readers how people eat -- and how people live -- the world over.



Interesting textbook: ActionScript 3 in Adobe Flash CS3 Professional Hands On Training or A Practical Guide to Ubuntu Linux

Cilantro Secrets (Cook West)

Author: Gwyneth Doland

Used by the ancient Greeks, Vietnamese, and Latin American cultures, cilantro is savored by millions around the world.

This title is a must-have for cilantro lovers. Providing just the right touch in a Grilled Pineapple Chipotle salsa, or in appetizers such as Crab Cakes with Cilantro Aioli, cilantro moves to the main course with recipes including Barbecued Chicken Manchego Pizza and Chile-Braised Lamb Shanks with Cilantro Gremolata. Experiment with this fabulous flavor and you're sure to become a fan! 24 color photos.

About the Cook West Series: Savor the flavors of the West. Each book in the Cook West Series celebrates the tastes, colors, aromas, and ingredients that create the food of the American West. Home cooks and industry professionals alike will welcome these single-ingredient cookbooks into their kitchens. Each title in the Cook West Series offers 50 original recipes and helpful tips to impress, inspire, and invigorate. Western cuisine is gaining in popularity, and rightly so! Where, but in the West, can one experience the marital bliss of chile and chocolate? Or a refreshing glass of prickly pear lemonade on a hot summer day? Soothe your soul with the creaminess of avocado or allow your taste buds to dance around a tantalizing olive. Enjoy the pleasantly stimulating aroma of roasting garlic or the zesty tang of cilantro. From rubs and sauces to delightful desserts, Western cooks have laid claim to a culinary art as original and distinct as the landscape itself. Conveniently sized and affordably priced, each book in the Cook West Series is the perfect addition for every cookbook library.



Saturday, December 27, 2008

Moms Favorite Recipes or M773 Country Quick and Easy

Mom's Favorite Recipes: What Moms Are Making Every Day, from All Across the USA!

Author: Gooseberry Patch

All-American favorites, straight from Mom's kitchen...you'll love this collection of irresistible recipes from our Mom's Favorite Recipes Cookbook! Try delicious, hearty dishes like seashell salad, cheesy corn chowder, flaky chicken pot pie, skillet supper and apple bread pudding, or check out our chapter filled with canning recipes for jellies, jams, pickles, preserves and more! We've sprinkled creative tips and ideas throughout for turning flea market finds into treasures plus we've included a chapter of fun-filled crafts.



Go to: Health Policy in a Globalising World or Leaders and Healthcare Organizational Change

M773 Country Quick and Easy: Fast Family Favorites and Nothing-to-It Meals That Are Simple, Satisfying and Delicious

Author: Gooseberry Patch

Savory dishes in no time flat! Country Quick & Easy Cookbook shares tasty homestyle recipes just like Grandma used to make...only easier. You'll love trying quick (and yummy) recipes like state fair pork chops, old-fashioned potato soup and five-minute fudge. With charming illustrations and clever time-saving tips, you won't be able to put this soon-to-be favorite down!



The Edible Herb Garden or Welsh Heritage Food and Cooking

The Edible Herb Garden

Author: Rosalind Creasy

Explore the world of fragrant and savory herbs and get tips on how to grow them abundantly. Learn how to use herbs in cooking as well as in blends, herbed oils and vinegars, and even herb-flavored vodka! Includes interviews with Carole Saville, an herb specialist, and Rose Marie Nichols McGee, an herb gardener.

Rosalind Creasy, a resident of Los Altos, California, is a landscape designer and leading authority on appropriate gardening techniques as well as a widely published garden writer and popular lecturer. Creasy specializes in residential landscapes that include edible, native, and drought-tolerant plants. She is a winner of the Garden Writers of America's award for excellence, and her articles have appeared in Organic Gardening, Family Circle, Woman's Day, Country Living Gardener, and Horticulture magazines. In addition to Cooking from the Garden, Creasy is the author of Earthly Delights: Twelve Distinctive Theme Gardens, The Gardener's Handbook of Edible Plants and a book for young gardeners, Blue Potatoes, Orange Tomatoes. Her Complete Book of Edible Landscaping received a Garden Writers Association of America's award and has become a contemporary gardening classic.

Library Journal

A plethora of herb gardening and cooking books is available, some by Creasy herself. But if your collection needs a new one, this work, combining gardening information with recipes, is recommended. The price is a bargain for an attractive, well-designed package with over 70 color photographs and illustrations. Included are sections on growing herbs and designing an herb garden. An appendix addresses pest and disease control, and there is a selection of recipes using fresh herbs. The heart of the book, though, is the "Encyclopedia of Culinary Herbs: From Angelica to Thyme." Here each plant is pictured in color with text explaining how to grow and prepare it. Both Creasy and the "Edible Garden" series are well regarded; Creasy's The Complete Book of Edible Landscaping (LJ 5/1/82) was named one of the 75 Great American Garden Books by the American Horticultural Society. Her new book is a visual treat that also offers useful, well-organized, and well-presented information.--Carol Cubberley, Univ. of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg



New interesting book: Indian Summer or Alice

Welsh Heritage Food and Cooking

Author: Annette Yates

Capture the tastes and traditions with over 75 easy-to-follow recipes and 250 stunning photographs, including step-by-step instructions.



Slow Mediterranean Kitchen or Fast Appetizers

Slow Mediterranean Kitchen: Recipes for the Passionate Cook

Author: Paula Wolfert

From one of the leading lights of contemporary gastronomy comes an irresistible collection of slow-cooked, flavor-drenched dishes from the cuisines of the Mediterranean
Who can resist the sensuous delights of a slow-simmered stew, salmon fillet slow-roasted until it is soft as silk, or leg of lamb braised until it is meltingly tender? Slow cooking is the hottest new trend in food, and no one better captures the art of sumptuous, unhurried cooking than renowned food writer Paula Wolfert. In The Slow Mediterranean Kitchen, she returns to her favorite culinary regions and shares an enticing treasure trove of more than 150 authentic recipes that wend their way from North Africa and the Eastern Mediterranean to Italy, Spain, and the South of France. With her trademark passion for detail and curiosity about cultural traditions and innovations, she offers loyal fans and new converts the secrets to simmering, slow roasting, braising, poaching, and marinating their way to flavor-drenched dishes that capture the enchanting tastes and aromas of the Mediterranean table. Perfect for anyone who loves to cook, this rich resource is a must-have for the bookshelf of everyone who is serious about food.
Paula Wolfert (Sonoma, CA) is widely acknowledged to be the premier food writer in America. Her writing has received many awards, including the Julia Child Award, the M.F.K. Fisher Award, and the James Beard Award. She has a regular column in Food & Wine magazine, and her articles have appeared in such major publications as the New York Times, Saveur, Bon Appétit, and Cook's Illustrated. She is the author of six other cookbooks, including Couscous and Other Good Food from Morocco,Mediterranean Cooking, and The Cooking of South-West France.

Publishers Weekly

Mediterranean cooking expert Wolfert invites readers to sit back and relax, in this, her eighth book (the first has been in print for 30 years)-a charming paean to the kinds of foods that require time to prepare, but are worth the wait. That doesn't mean these are complicated recipes. In fact, most are paragons of the simplicity and highlighting of flavors that have made Mediterranean cooking so popular. Dishes such as a classic Cassoulet use long periods in the oven to produce meltingly soft meat. The dough for Turkish Flatbread Stuffed with Melted Cheese needs to rise overnight, but is produced in a food processor with little effort. A chapter on soups celebrates simmer-it-and-forget-it dishes such as Turkish Red Lentil Soup with Paprika and Mint Sizzle and Mediterranean Marinated Fish Soup, which calls first for soaking fish filets in a mixture of Pernod, wine, thyme and garlic, then covering them with hot broth to cook off any residual rawness. Other recipes simply need to sit for their flavors to meld, as is the case with Cypriot Fresh Fava Bean and Purslane Salad and El Churrasco's Gazpacho with Pine Nuts and Currants. Wolfert does her usual practiced job of seeking out unusual flavors in all corners of the Mediterranean, such as a Butternut Squash and Potato Pie with Tomato, Mint, and Sheep's Milk Cheese from Crete, and providing interesting historical background, like the headnote for Seven-Hour Garlic Crowned Lamb, a recipe culled from a 1929 cookbook of the foods of France's Perigord region. (Sept.) Forecast: Wolfert has become the brand name for Mediterranean cooking, and this polished effort should sell well on the basis of name recognition and general excellence. The only possible impediment is its title and subtitle, which may scare off potential buyers who fear overly complicated recipes or even give the impression that these recipes require a slow cooker. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

In her many previous books (e.g., the now-classic Couscous and Other Good Foods from Morocco), Wolfert wrote about the Mediterranean lifestyle, and here she seeks to recapture that way of life whose "friendly but voluptuous eating experiences" are no longer so easy to find, regrettably. To that end, she offers recipes intended to be both satisfying to prepare and delicious to eat, homey and comforting dishes from all the countries of the region: brodetto Pasquale (Italian Easter Lamb Soup), Expatriate Roast Chicken with Lemon and Olives from Morocco, and Catalonian Fall-Apart Lamb Shanks. Although many recipes call for braising, stewing, and other techniques of long cooking, others are not limited to those techniques, for Wolfert's definition of slow cooking also encompasses marinating and similar techniques-i.e., cooking that requires forethought but not necessarily hours at the stove: Overnight Gorgonzola with Saba Spread, for example, or Mediterranean Marinated Fish Soup, prepared in two stages. Slow-cooked food has become popular with home cooks and restaurant diners alike, and Wolfert's celebration of the pleasures of that approach, with its dozens of delicious and unusual recipes, is highly recommended. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.



New interesting textbook: Living It Up or Principles of Inventory and Materials Management

Fast Appetizers

Author: Hugh Carpenter

Each of the 100 recipes in "Fast Appetizers, " from spring rolls to pizza to caviar, can be made in a flash--most in under 15 minutes. Full-color photos.

Library Journal

From the prolific authors of The Great Ribs Book and numerous other titles, here are recipes for 100 easy appetizers, and ideas for even more. Many of them can be made in minutes and most can be prepared completely in advance. Martha Stewart's much more ambitious Hors d'Oeuvres Handbook (LJ 3/15/99) is the definitive book on this subject, but anyone who entertains will appreciate Carpenter and Sandison's quick and sophisticated recipes. For most collections. Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.



Friday, December 26, 2008

Making Artisan Gelato or Winemakers Dance

Making Artisan Gelato: 45 Recipes and Techniques for Crafting Flavor-Infused Gelato and Sorbet at Home

Author: Torrance Kopfer

The word gelato, in Italian, simply means “ice cream,” but its meaning has shifted to define a type of high-end frozen dessert, made with milk, not cream. Gelato also has 35% less air whipped into it than ice cream, heightening its rich mouthfeel without tipping the scales. Gelato, in all its luxury, is simple to make at home with a standard ice-cream maker.


 


Making Artisan Gelato, following on the heels of Making Artisan Chocolates, will offer 45+ recipes and flavor variations for exquisite frozen desserts, made from all-natural ingredients available at any grocery store or farmer’s market.


 


From pureeing and straining fruit to tempering egg yolks for a creamy base, the gelato-making techniques included in Making Artisan Gelato ensure quality concoctions. Recipe flavors run the gamut—nuts, spices, chocolate, fruit, herbs, and more—with novel flavor pairings that go beyond your standard-issue fare. 



Book review: RealAge Diet or Cortisol Connection Diet

Winemaker's Dance: Exploring Terroir in the Napa Valley

Author: David G Howell

There is a saying among winemakers that "great wine begins with dirt." Beginning from this intriguing premise, The Winemaker's Dance embarks on an eye-opening exploration of "terroir" in one of the greatest places on earth to grow wine--California's Napa Valley. Jonathan Swinchatt and David G. Howell weave a tale that begins millions of years ago with the clash of continental plates that created the Napa Valley and go on to show how this small region, with its myriad microclimates, complex geologic history, and dedicated winemakers, came to produce world-class wines. A fascinating look at the art and science of winemaking and the only comprehensive book that covers Napa's geology, history, and environment, The Winemaker's Dance will help wine enthusiasts better understand wine talk and wine writing and, most importantly, wine itself.
The Winemaker's Dance is animated by the voices of Napa's winemakers talking about their craft. The book also contains two driving tours through the valley that highlight the landscapes and wineries discussed. An array of unique illustrations--including shaded relief maps overlaid with color aerial photographs--provide a new and illuminating look at the region: its bedrock, sediments, soils, sun, wind, and rain. The expansive narrative considers how these elements influence wines from particular vineyards and how specific winemaking practices can bring out or mask aspects of terroir. It concludes with a discussion of the state of the winemaking industry today.
Unraveling the complex relationship between the people, the earth, and the vines of Napa Valley, The Winemaker's Dance brings the elusive concept of terroir to a broad audience, adding avibrant dimension to the experience of the valley's wines. It also provides insights that enhance our understanding of wines and winegrowing regions the world over.



Waiting or Six Ingredients or Less

Waiting: The True Confessions of a Waitress

Author: Debra Ginsberg

Many people can tell horror stories about their teenage or college stints waiting tables. For Debra Ginsberg, struggling writer and single mother, waitressing has been a means of survival-and she has the scars to prove it.

In Waiting: The True Confessions of a Waitress— part memoir, part social commentary, part guide on how to behave when dining out-Ginsberg takes readers on an intimate journey of her twenty years as a waitress at the dingiest of diners, a soap-operatic Italian restaurant, an exclusive five-star dining club, and more. While chronicling her parallel evolution as a writer and single mother, the book also takes a behind-the-scenes look at restaurant life-revealing that, yes, when pushed, a server will spit in food, and, no, that's not really decaf you're getting-and at how most people in this business are in a constant state of waiting to do something else.

Colorful, insightful, and often irreverent, Ginsberg's stories truly capture the spirit of the universal things she's learned about human nature, interpersonal relationships, the frightening things that go on in the kitchen, romantic hopes dashed and rebuilt, and all of the frustrating and funny moments in this life. Waiting is for everyone who has had to wait for their life to begin-only to realize, suddenly, that they're living it.

Newsday

A lively, often funny tale.

Business Week

As this account shows, there's a lot of life in the waiting game.

Dallas Morning News

[Ginsberg's] poignant, gently written stories of waitressing are metaphors for life.

Associated Press

This book is more than a saga about workplace woes...Ginsberg relives her personal struggle, waiting for her life to 'happen.'

New Orleans Times-Picayune

[A] wonderful book. It was worth waiting for.

USA Weekend

Ginsberg not only shares delicious stories...but also dishes out advice that will make you laugh.

People

Ginsberg got her education in restaurants, and she doles it out just right in this entertaining account.

Detroit Free Press

[Ginsberg] tells the story with enough honesty and wry humor to connect with other people—especially women.

San Francisco Chronicle

A lively and insightful look into restaurants...Ginsberg is a charming and talented writer.

Hartford Courant

Hilarious...colorful.

Oregonian

[Ginsburg's] triumph, in this book, is that she shows us how the beautiful and the base coexist.

Seattle Times

A knowing memoir...[Ginsberg] is great on dining-room debacles she's endured.

Publishers Weekly

Ginsberg has spent nearly 20 years, more on than off, as a waitress, developing a love/hate relationship with a career most of her college-educated peers see either as a way station or a pink-collar province. Though neither a fully ripe memoir nor a truly spicy dish on the food biz (for that, see Anthony Bourdain's Kitchen Confidential; Forecasts, April 24), her collection of anecdotes, covering subjects from her father's luncheonette to fancy restaurants, conveys the unpredictability and humanity of this humble but essential work. Ginsberg sketches co-workers, both lively and burnt out, and her inspired and irresponsible bosses. A good view of the "parallel mating dances of staff and patrons" is one perk of her perch; she posits that the risk-taking, gregarious types who work for tips foster mutual attractions. In the "feudal pyramid" of the waitstaff, busboys are at the bottom and managers at the top, but waitresses must keep both happy to make sure things run smoothly and that tips ensue. Some scenes are wild: as a cocktail waitress during manic "Buck Night," she saw patrons drink the potent (and free) "Bar Mat," made up of bar spillage. Readers might pick up some pointers: bad-tipping regulars will suffer subtle server sabotage; customers who harangue staff for decaf might end up with regular. Ginsberg's more personal segments, which can be aimless, portray an intelligent single mom, fiercely committed to her son, with worries about her potential as a writer and her future. She quits waitressing only to return a year later, concluding that "the act of waiting itself is an active one" and that there is beauty and simplicity in the small acts of her work. (Aug.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

Library Journal

In this memoir of 20 years of waiting tables to support herself and her son, Ginsberg, who also writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune, wavers between justifying her choice of occupation and attempting to shock or titillate readers with tales of the chaos, unsanitary conditions, and sexual harassment she experienced while working in a restaurant. She is often defensive about her work, which requires special skills and personal qualities and can be lucrative in the short term, though it is not especially respected and leaves no lasting evidence of the effort expended. However, Ginsberg does not connect her situation to the larger problems of the service economy or of women's work in general. Nor does she contribute to our understanding of how to survive in her occupation or even how to get better service in a restaurant. The section on images of waitresses in film and on television is particularly limited in insight. Not recommended.--Paula R. Dempsey, DePaul Univ, IL. Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

School Library Journal

YA-As a child, Ginsberg marveled at her father's stories about waiting tables, which made restaurants seem exciting and glamorous. At 16, she started working in a luncheonette and has spent over 20 years in all types of eating establishments from a diner to a "prestigious" club. As she recounts the different jobs that she has held, readers discover what it really takes to be a waitress. Ginsberg feels that she must be an actress, a good listener, and a nurturer. She examines the complex physical, mental, and psychological skills required to deal with demanding customers, unscrupulous managers, and uncooperative cooks and busboys. Throughout her career, Ginsberg felt that waiting tables was only a means to her real goal of being a writer. However, over time, she realized that the work allowed her to spend real quality time with her son. With a new insight into this profession, readers will see their next waitperson in an entirely new light.-Jane S. Drabkin, Potomac Community Library, Woodbridge, VA Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

The New York Times Book Review - Bruno Dagens

[Ginsberg] writes positively but not Pollyannaishly and has told an attractive story about coping with a life that has been different than what she expected.

Entertainment Weekly - Daneet Steffens

...the overall effect is often funny and ultimately satisfying.

Redbook - Julia Dahl

Ginsberg's clear eye and calm voice make Waiting an insightful piece of social history as well as a delightful read.

Kirkus Reviews

A fresh new writer and seasoned waitress will be your server for this memoir of a life measured out with coffee spoons. It's not the same story as Prufrock's. This plat du jour is as mundane as meat loaf and, even loaded with filler, as easy to digest. Starting in her teens, Ginsberg has served in her family's borscht belt luncheonette and in a stodgy, WASPy private club. For over 20 years she's delivered slices in pizzerias, drinks in bars, and good eats in restaurants nationwide. It's been no piece of cake. It's true: some provoked servers may spit in an insensible customer's soup, stomp on a returned steak, or tamper with a cheapskate's doggy bag contents. But patrons may just as frequently be remarkably nasty or truly stupid. Looking for a free meal, they may plant bugs in their food. Worst of all, they may even stiff their waiter or waitress and leave no tip at all. Discussing the theory and practice of waiting tables, Ginsberg updates the Federal "Occupational Outlook Handbook" and deconstructs films and TV shows that feature food servers. She notes the value of adopting a persona, true or false, and presents, with considerable verisimilitude, the sounds, the smells, the panic, the steamy drama of a busy kitchen. It's not the savage scene once limned by dishwasher George Orwell, down and out in London and Paris, and there are no small servings of sex. It's close and feverish, after all, in Ginsberg's domain. As well as a guide to acceptable table manners, this is a memoir of people she's worked with and for—of blighted romances and of growing up in an apron, order pad in hand. On the whole, she seems to have enjoyedthejob. Not a definitive study of the profession, but simply one woman's tale of table service and, equally, of her lovers, her friends, and her family. Served with a smile.. . .

What People Are Saying

Kim Chernin
The debut of a new and compelling writer is always a cause for celebration. Debra Ginsberg culls from a lifetime of waiting a humor, insight, and compassion that places her in the tradition of fine old tale-spinners. We have here, perhaps for the first time in literature, a true portrait of the demanding art of waiting on tables, from which Ginsberg has fashioned a wise, page-turning commentary on the human condition.
— (Kim Chernin, author of In My Mother's House)


Janet Fitch
Every time I go to a restaurant now, I think of what must be happening behind the scenes. Ginsberg's stories really stay with you. A great read from start to finish.
— (Janet Fitch, author of White Oleander)


Antonya Nelson
Debra Ginsberg's great gift is the quiet way she's able to point up the truths that reside in the innocent setting of the restaurant, in the harmless summer job that becomes the lifelong career, in the transitory exchanges that oftentimes have lasting effects, and in the character that develops while pursuing the philosophically complex occupation of waiting. This book reminds the reader that the waitress taking your order is also, maybe, noting much more with her pen. This is a strong debut.
&$151;(Antonya Nelson, author of Nobody's Girl)


Lisa Schiffman
Debra Ginsberg's Waiting touched me, made me laugh, made me hunger—so to speak—to know more and more about the ups and downs of her life. It's a life of cups and saucers, shouting diners and lunatic restaurant owners, the tug and pull of single motherhood, romantic hopes dashed and rebuilt and finally, the many, many beautiful notes of epiphany she so wonderfully renders.
— (Lisa Schiffman, author of Generation J)




Look this:

Six Ingredients or Less: Cooking Light and Healthy

Author: Carlean Johnson

Six Ingredients or Less: Cooking Light and Healthy is a real life approach to low-fat everyday eating. Learn to count fat grams and eat in moderation, while continuing to enjoy the foods you love.



Thursday, December 25, 2008

Keto Kid or Jellies Jams and Chutneys

Keto Kid: Helping Your Child Succeed on the Ketogenic Diet

Author: Deborah Snyder

For more than half of all children with epilepsy, the only reliable way to control seizures is through the ketogenic diet, a rigid regimen that strictly limits both calories and liquid intake. Keto Kid details the daily management of the diet -- where one extra bite of food can have serious repercussions on a child's health -- while also addressing the emotional struggle children encounter with the loss of their favorite foods and the necessity of learning rigorous self-denial at a very young age. The book also provides recipes for keto-friendly meals and tips for making this limited diet more interesting; time-saving strategies such as pre-weighing and freezing meals; and a day-by-day account of life on the ketogenic diet; and more. Calm, direct, and above all, hopeful, Snyder helps families successfully adopt the diet while making the experience as pleasant as possible for both child and parent.

Doody Review Services

Reviewer:John Willis, MD(Ochsner Clinic Foundation)
Description:This is a personal book written by a doctor about administering the ketogenic diet to her son. It is essentially a book of recipes plus many helpful and, no doubt, hard-won insights into making the diet tolerable and workable.
Purpose:The author proposes to help children succeed on the ketogenic diet, a worthy objective that is ably accomplished.
Audience:This book is for parents, but practitioners and dieticians may find many helpful tips.
Features:This is a practical guide to using this diet to feed a child with seizures -- menus, strategies, special holidays, and psychological tips. Parents should find all of this helpful. The recipes alone are golden.
Assessment:This is a very useful book. I will recommend it to every parent who may use the diet for a child with difficult to control epilepsy.



Interesting textbook:

Jellies, Jams and Chutneys: Preserving the Harvest

Author: Thane Princ

A classic guide to preserving the harvest, Jellies, Jams, & Chutneys is divided into ten chapters. Nine of the chapters cover a wide range of recipes as well as providing detailed information on selecting and making the best use of ingredients. At the front of the book, illustrated sections cover equipment and cooking techniques in detail.

Key techniques such as soil testing and potting safely are explained so clearly that everyone will feel confident. The reader is guided through the year season by season-at any time, there are delicious preserves, sweet or savory, that can be made. Jams, jellies, chutneys, relishes, pickles, cordials, syrups, vinegars, and ketchups are all covered.

Food lovers will adore creating something amazing out of humble (and exotic) fruit and vegetables. Gardeners will love gathering their produce and turning a glut into a stockpile. Stressed-out executives everywhere will relish the satisfaction of slowing down long enough to make delicious chutneys and jams.



400 Wok and Stir Fry Recipes or Meet Us in the Kitchen

400 Wok and Stir-Fry Recipes: Discover The Delights And Simplicity Of Successful Stir-Fry Cooking With Sensational Classic And Modern Wok Dishes For Every Meal And Every Occasion

Author: Jenni Fleetwood

Everything you could ever want to know about cooking with a wok in one sumptuous volume, with a comprehensive guide to getting the most from your wok and over 400 wok and stir-fry recipes.



Interesting book:

Meet Us in the Kitchen: A Collection of Recipes and Stories from the Junior League of St. Louis

Author: Junior League of St Louis

The kitchen is the center of the home where families and friends gather. Meet Us in the Kitchen is a collection of wonderful recipes and remembrances from St. Louis Junior League Members. Throughout the book women share kitchen stories that are heartwarming and humorous. This book includes recipes from old family favorites as well as special dishes from local restaurants. Color artwork throughout the book, by local artist Julie Heller Rosenfeld, makes this a true showpiece for your kitchen. Create your own special memories in your kitchen as you sample several selections from Meet Us in the Kitchen.



Table of Contents:
Preface8
Community Service9
Steering Committee10
Sponsors11
Acknowledgements12
Beginnings13
Brunch39
Soups & Salads57
Meats85
Poultry & Seafood111
Pasta & Grains139
Side Dishes161
Sweet Endings181
Cookbook Committee224
Contributors225
Recipe Testers229
Index232
Order Form240

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Whole Grain Breads by Machine or Hand or Bobby Flay Cooks American

Whole Grain Breads by Machine or Hand: 200 Delicious, Healthful, Simple Recipes

Author: Beatrice Ojakangas

"Possibly the best such bread book on the market . . . every recipe a winner."–New York Times

This accessible book gives new and experienced bakers the freedom and flexibility they need to make excellent homemade loaves, with more than 190 recipes that range from a simple Sourdough Bread to a fancy Finnish Cardamom Coffee Braid. Celebrated as a "reliable and inventive recipe writer" by Publishers Weekly, Beatrice Ojakangas shares four ways to make each delicious whole-grain recipe step by step: by hand, mixer, food processor, and bread machine.

Beatrice Ojakangas (Duluth, MN) is a well-known food writer, author, and consultant whose articles have appeared in Gourmet, Bon Appétit, Redbook, and other magazines. Her many books include the James Beard Award—winning Light and Easy Baking. She has been a guest on radio and television, including CNN, Martha Stewart Living, and Baking with Julia.



Interesting book: Leadership in NonProfit Organizations or Management Text Only

Bobby Flay Cooks American: Great Regional Recipes with Sizzling New Flavors

Author: Bobby Flay

Celebrate the tastes that make our country great — a lá Bobby Flay.

The bestselling author of Boy Meets Grill now provides recipes inspired by the great flavors of our country. Bursting with mouthwatering, full-color photographs and packed with 150 original and tantalizing recipes, Flay's latest cookbook reflects America's passion for bold, exciting food, and his own preference for sophisticated dishes that don't take hours to prepare. Flay tempts novice and experienced cooks alike with recipes for:

— Succulent Texas dry-rub barbecue
— Little Havana-style Cuban sandwiches

— Slow-roasted Pacific salmon

— Reuben sandwich only an Irish boy from New York can make

In addition, he kick-starts old favorites like tomato soup, chicken pot pie, baked ham, and apple fritters, giving them the kind of surprising, innovative twists that have made him one of the most emulated chefs in America. As elegant to look at as it is fun to cook with, Bobby Flay Cooks American will entice Bobby's multitude of fans, and is certain to bring him a host of new ones.

Author Biography:Bobby Flay is the owner of the Mesa Grill and Bolo restaurants in New York City; the star of two cable cooking shows, Food Nation and Hot off the Grill; is the food correspondent for The Early Show on CBS; and is the author of three previous cookbooks, Boy Meets Grill, From My Kitchen to Your Table, and Bold American Food. He lives in New York City. Julia Moskin has co-authored with Chicago chefs Gale Gand and Rick Tramonto, American Brasserie: Butter Sugar Flour Eggs; and with Rafael Palomino, Bistro Latino. She has contributed to New York, Saveur, and Metropolitan Home magazines. She lives in New York City.

William Rice

. . . highly personal. . . . His food is flavorful and fun to eat. The boy and the grill are well matched.

Jerry Shriver

His multitude of fans drool over his spiced-up cookbooks. . . And they flock to his New York restaurants.

Meredith Berkman

Celebrity chef Bobby Flay's new book, Boy Meets Grill, is becoming a barbecue bible . . .



Arab Table or Zingermans Guide to Good Eating

Arab Table: Recipes and Culinary Traditions

Author: May Bsisu

It is one of the world's oldest and most intriguing cuisines, yet few have explored the diverse dishes and enchanting flavors of Arab cookery beyond hummus and tabouleh. In 188 recipes, The Arab Table introduces home cooks to the fresh foods, exquisite tastes, and generous spirit of the Arab table.

May S. Bsisu, who has lived and cooked in Jordan, Lebanon, Kuwait, England, and now the United States, takes you along a reassuringly down-to-earth and warmly personal path through exciting culinary territory. The Arab Table focuses intimately on the foods of Arab countries such as Lebanon and Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Syria.

The book offers a bountiful range of appealing dishes: cold and hot mezza, or little dishes; vibrant salads and fresh vegetable preparations; savory soups, stews, and hearty casseroles; baked and grilled meats, poultry, and fish; cooling drinks; and ambrosial desserts. There are recipes for familiar dishes including Falafel, Chicken and Lamb Kebabs, and Baklava, as well as a diverse selection of lesser known delights greatly enjoyed around the world, such as Eggplant Pomegranate Salad, Zucchini with Bread and Mint, Grilled Halloumi Cheese Triangles, and Arab Flatbread. Celebration dishes, the cornerstone of Arab cuisine, include Moroccan and Lebanese Couscous, Baked Lamb with Rice and Chickpeas, and Baked Sea Bass with Rice and Caramelized Onions. No Arab cookbook would be complete without an ample selection of soups and stews, the customary way to break the fast at the end of each day during Ramadan. The Arab table is also well known for its sweets: Semolina Pistachio Layer Cake, Milk Pudding, and, of course, date-, nut-, andcream-filled pastries perfumed with rose and orange-blossom water are just a sampling of the desserts included here.

Along with these treasured recipes collected from May's extended family, friends, neighbors, and her own discoveries, The Arab Table is also a resource for learning about the traditions and customs associated with this time-honored cuisine. Throughout, essays on Arab holidays, from Eid Al Adha, the feast celebrating the end of the pilgrimage to Mecca, to Ramadan and Mubarakeh, the celebration for the birth of a baby, are explained and menus are provided for each. May enlightens readers as to customary greetings (How do you say Happy Ramadan?), gifts (What do you bring to an Arab home during Ramadan?), and wishes (How do you acknowledge the birth of a baby?) that are traditionally extended during these special occasions.

Now you can bring the abundance and flavors of The Arab Table to your table.

Publishers Weekly

Bsisu, an Ohio chef by way of Jordan, Lebanon, Kuwait and England, sets out to define the cuisine of the Arab world. As she points out, a quarter of the globe is covered in her treatise, and she lovingly explores and clearly explains dishes from Morocco, Tunisia, Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine, Yemen and the Arabian Gulf. What's most apparent is that Arab meals are elemental in nature, more often reliant upon foodstuffs than technique. There are perhaps a dozen key ingredients on which most of these 160 recipes are based. Bulgur (cracked wheat) gives rice a run for its money as the grain of choice and is integral in making Kibeh, an all-purpose dish that also employs beef or lamb, and a mix of spices, and can be made into skewers, balls or cooked in a baking dish. Yogurt is ubiquitous, and pomegranate finds its way into many courses, too, including Meatball Stew, and Saut ed Chicken Gizzards. There are also plenty of classics at hand, including a couple of different couscouses, Grape Leaves Stuffed with Lamb and Rice, and Chicken Shawarma. American home cooks will find this a family-style, down-to-earth, insider exploration of Arab cuisine and culture. Color photos. (On sale Sept. 6) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.



Interesting textbook:

Zingerman's Guide to Good Eating: How to Choose the Best Bread, Cheeses, Olive Oil, Pasta, Chocolate, and Much More

Author: Ari Weinzweig

Hailed by the New York Times, Esquire, and the Atlantic Monthly as one of the best delicatessens in the country, Zingerman's is a trusted source for superior ingredients — and an equally dependable supplier of reliable information about food. Now, Ari Weinzweig, the founder of Zingerman's, shares two decades of knowledge gained in his pursuit of the world's finest food products.

In this fascinating resource guide, he tells you everything you need to know about how to choose top-quality basics that can transform every meal from ordinary to memorable: oils, vinegars, and olives; bread, pasta, and rice; cheeses and cured meats; seasonings like salt, pepper, and saffron; vanilla, chocolate, and tea.
How do you tell the difference between a great aged balsamic vinegar and a caramel-flavored impostor? How do you select an extraordinary olive oil from the bewildering array of bottles on the grocery shelf? Which Italian rice makes the creamiest risotto (and what are the tricks to making a terrific one)? Is there a difference between traditionally made pastas and commercial brands? How do English and American Cheddars compare? How do you make sense of the thousands of teas in the world to find one you love? What should you look for on the label of a good chocolate?
In Zingerman's Guide to Good Eating, Ari Weinzweig provides the answers -- and includes approximately 100 recipes, many collected from artisan food makers, from Miguel's Mother's Macaroni to "LEO" (lox, eggs, and onions) to Funky, Chunky Dark Chocolate Cookies.
This book is not only an indispensable guide to pantry essentials, it's an enthralling read. You'll visit artisanfood producers, learn fascinating facts, find sources for the best brands and food suppliers, and get valuable advice that will change the way you cook forever.

Publishers Weekly

Weinzweig is a founding partner of Zingerman's, a famed Ann Arbor, Mich., deli. His guide instructs on how to shop, not how to cook, and he opens up a world of gourmet particulars: he tells not just how to select a good olive oil or a real balsamic vinegar from the thousands on the shelf, but explains the differences among varietal honeys like chestnut, eucalyptus and lemon blossom; hot-smoked and cold-smoked salmon; Spanish and Iranian saffron; dry-cured and brine-cured olives. Weinzweig, who has a certifiable obsession with artisanal products, is at his best describing the often painstaking processes that transform raw ingredients into culinary phenomena. If globalization has made many imported foods both more available and less authentic, Weinzweig's paeans to San Daniele prosciutto and Cabrales blue cheese do much to restore the romance of the table. Weinzweig occasionally waxes pedantic or obvious ("better fish tastes better"), but his mouthwatering brand of fanaticism speaks for itself. Does it make sense to spend money buying a book that simply impels you to increase your grocery budget by 50%? Well, as Weinzweig would have it, "good food is for everyone"; when it comes to the luxuries of the table, there's no disputing taste. (Nov.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

What People Are Saying

Mario Batali

Ari Weinzweig is my favorite go to source for every single great gastronomic treasure on the planet, both for information and the actual stuff itself.  Zingerman's is the mecca for all foodies who really know that taste is not about fashion or style, but about flavor and impact. This book is the New Testament for the religion of the palette and should be used with a certain sacrament and a pinch of the profane


Paula Wolfert
In this marvelous book, the great food importer Ari Weinzweig of Zingerman's draws on his great depth of knowledge about the many fabulous new culinary ingredients now suddenly available in the U.S.A. For anyone serious about food, this book will be a treasure.
author of Mediterranean Grains and Greens


Rick Bayless
What a massive and wonderful book. It'll be a cherished resource in our library forever. Ari Weinzweig is our Indiana Jones, intrepid and wise, as he takes us to the heart of honest, delicious craftsmanship. Peppering Ari's chronicles and clear advice are concise, approachable recipes.
author of Rick Bayless's Mexican Kitchen


Deborah Madison
This book is brilliant and so well informed that it only adds to the allure of the fundamental foods we love. Certainly anyone who seasons with salt, cooks with olive oil, bakes bread, or loves chocolate should have this in the kitchen.
author of Local Flavors: Cooking and Eating from America's Farmers' Markets




Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Southern Elegance or Great American Hot Dog Book

Southern Elegance: A Collection of the Best of Carolina Cuisine

Author: Junior Leagu

Weaves the legacy of Southern heritage with the pace of contemporary lifestyles. Time honored, traditional recipes and menus reflecting a rich and varied fabric of southern life.



Interesting textbook: Vodka 1000 or Ayurvedic Cookbook

Great American Hot Dog Book

Author: Becky Mercuri

The Great American Hot Dog Book is not only loaded with frank recipes from across the nation but also has recipes for out-of-this-world fries, sauces, sides, and more!



Table of Contents:

Acknowledgments 6

Introduction 8

The Real Story of the American Hot Dog: Debunking the Urban Legends11

Hot Dogs of the Northeast: Pushcarts Roll and Mustard Rules19

Hot Dogs of the Southeast: Slaw Dogs and a Slathering of Sauces59

Hot Dogs of the Midwest: Coneys, Chicago-style Hot Dogs, and Pronto Pups89

Hot Dogs of the Great Plains: Corn Dogs, Chile Dogs, and Buffalo Dogs105

Hot Dogs of the West and Southwest: Some Like it Hot115

Hot Dogs of the Pacific: Hollywood Glamour Dogs and Succulent Sausage 131

Photography Credits 142

Index 143

Cooks Bible or Magic of Fire

Cook's Bible: The Best of American Home Cooking

Author: Christopher Kimball

The Cook's Bible takes the mystery out of preparing a great meal. What's the ideal ratio of oil to vinegar in a vinaigrette? Kimball gives you the answer: 4 1/2 to 1. What's the secret to perfect roast chicken? A 375[degree] oven and a 170[degree] internal temperature for the thigh. How about the toughest kitchen challenge of all, piecrust? Kimball makes it easy with the right ingredients (including Crisco and butter) and illustrated step-by-step instructions. For these and the rest of America's best-loved dishes - vegetable soup, poached salmon, roast beef, barbecued ribs, homemade pizza, waffles, chocolate chip cookies, and many others - Kimball has tested and retested to deliver the definitive recipes. In addition to these master recipes, Kimball also serves up a generous helping of appealing variations - nearly 450 recipes in all. Throughout, Kimball elucidates kitchen procedures - butterflying a chicken, for instance, or dicing an onion - with more than 250 beautifully rendered step-by-step illustrations. And he also provides lucid guidance on what kitchen equipment you need and what you can live without - a microwave oven is optional, but good knives are essential - including brand names, model numbers, and prices. From recipes to techniques to equipment, here is a one-volume master class in American home cookery, a cooking school in print for beginners and experienced cooks alike.

Publishers Weekly

What Gideon is to the hotel room, Kimball will soon be to the kitchen: inspirational, informative and probably ubiquitous. In this compendium of facts and firm opinions, the founding editor of Cook's Illustrated magazine details the research that informs his positions on the best pots, thermometers and knives and the value of pasta machines, microwaves and ice-cream makers. This evaluative approach extends to the 400 intensively tested recipes that advocate preferred methods for cooking rice, grains, fish, meat, poultry, sweets and more. Kimball dispels many widely held misconceptions as he asserts that an overnight soaking of dried beans is "vastly preferable" to a quick-soak and that a tightly trussed bird will roast unevenly. It took 33 tries in Kimball's count before he achieved the perfect pie crust; following his progress is like solving a delicious mystery. Some bread bakers may question the author's praise for rapid-rise yeast and his declaration that saltless bread is "inedible" (thereby dismissing a tradition of Tuscan bread-making), but these are quibbles about a highly personal book that tells not only how to prepare specific foods but why. For many, Kimball, who comes across as a purist's Martha Stewart, will be the ultimate source for such kitchen basics as the best method for roasting beef (a speedy 400 degrees for tenderloin; a more leisurely bout at 250 for tough bottom round). Kimball's experiments demonstrate that even experienced cooks don't know all the answers, although everyone will know more after reading this impressive compilation. 200 halftone illustrations not seen by PW. 40,000 first printing; BOMC/Good Cook selection; author tour. (Oct.)

Library Journal

Kimball was the founding editor of the original, much-loved Cook's magazine, which he revived several years ago as Cook's Illustrated. Here he offers his culinary knowledge in 50 chapters, from What To Buy for the Kitchen to Baked Fruit Desserts, with dozens of photographs and step-by-step line drawings. The approach follows that of the magazine, where, for example, chicken may be roasted 15 different ways to determine "the best" way to cook it, or 40 batches of chocolate chip cookies are baked to find "the best" recipe. Some readers will find the detailed accounts of all the retesting and experimenting fascinating, while others will probably prefer just the recipes that resulted and less of the background. Sometimes the emphasis seems a bit oddfor example, there's a chapter on pasta sauces and another on how to make ravioli, but none on making basic pasta dough and using it for different shapes. Kimball is a man of strong opinions ("very few home cooks have a salt box, but everyone needs one"), and his very personal book will not be for everyone. Recommended for larger collections.



Books about: Our Endangered Values or What Every American Should Know About Whos Really Running America

Magic of Fire: Hearth Cooking

Author: William Rubel

Hearth cooking is a hobby with almost no entry barrier. With basic pots and pans, the shovel and tongs from a standard fireplace set, a Dutch oven with legs, a small barbecue grill, two bricks, and a hook with a length of looped string, you can cook every recipe in this book. Hearth cooking can be as simple as pushing a saucepan or bean pot up against the fire. The Magic of Fire explores the techniques of hearth cooking and the poetry of hearth and flame. Through an extensive text, one hundred innovative recipes, and extraordinary paintings by master realist Ian Everard, The Magic of Fire establishes itself as the definitive work on hearth cooking. Included are recipes for vegetables roasted on embers, stews slowly simmered in the light of the fire, roasted meats, soups, breads, fish, cakes, mulled beverages, and much more. The Magic of Fire is the book for anyone who appreciates an open fire, whether in the fireplace, barbecue, or campfire.

Publishers Weekly

Open-hearth cooking is probably the least-explored atavism in the modern kitchen. Culinary purists who unflinchingly butcher their own fowl or grind their spices with a mortar and pestle tend to draw the line at the hearth; even campers do what they can to make their fires more like stoves. But traditional cooking specialist Rubel's pursuit of "the poetry of fire" makes a compelling case for the allure of hearth cooking. Despite the prerequisites basic firebuilding technique and an arsenal of equipment that would not look out of place in a medieval dungeon Rubel's recipes are surprisingly straightforward. They run the gamut from delicate desserts (steamed custards, clafouti) to the inevitable roast beasts (wild duck, leg of lamb), and he describes the type of flame necessary for each dish (as in, "a mature fire with gentle to moderate flames"). The erudite and apparently well-traveled Rubel intersperses recipes for Gigot la ficelle and Ember-baked Trout with anecdotes that begin "when I was in Northern Kenya..." or "while studying mushroom cookery in China, near Myanmar...." He does not address the impracticalities of fireplace cooking (the hazards of unintended conflagrations, the purgatorial heat), merely recalling that a guest once had to remove his shirt in midwinter at one of Rubel's meals. Those brave enough to follow Rubel's footsteps will undoubtedly consider this book a classic work of its kind. It may also appeal to readers who want to take the manly art of barbecue to a new level, and it will be irresistible to slow-foodies. (Sept.)

Library Journal

This unusual book tells you everything you need to know to cook an entire Thanksgiving meal in your fireplace, should you be so inclined. Restaurants featuring wood-burning ovens have become trendy, and many people love to grill outside, but few of us cook on the hearth these days. Rubel, a longtime devotee of open-hearth cooking whose other interests encompass a wide range of subjects, from wild mushrooms (he's foraged for them all over the world) to bread ovens to homemade alcohol, makes a fascinating case for this style of cooking. His entertaining and thoughtful text provides a vast amount of information on history, technique, equipment, and so forth, and the recipe descriptions are likely to make any cook with a fireplace eager to experiment with this new/old method of preparing food. Highly recommended. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.



M771 Hometown Favorites or The Taste of Dreams

M771 Hometown Favorites: Small Town Recipes, Nostalgic Memories and Fresh Ideas to Enjoy Year 'Round

Author: Gooseberry Patch

You can go home again...back to Main Street, the local diner and the bakery on the corner with Hometown Favorites Cookbook. We've gathered a collection of simple, all-American recipes like roast beef sandwiches, old-fashioned cream of tomato soup, country potato bake and caramel crunch apple pie. You'll also find nostalgic memories of home and a sprinkling of vintage photos to take you back to your own hometown.



Books about: Cook and the Gardener or Hemingway Baileys Bartending Guide to Great American Writers

The Taste of Dreams: An Obsession with Russia and Caviar

Author: Vanora Bennett

and/or stickers showing their discounted price. More about bargain books

Monday, December 22, 2008

How Sweet It Is without the Sugar or Desserts

How Sweet It Is without the Sugar: Delicious Desserts for Diabetics and Others

Author: Jean C Wad

By carefully experimenting with different sweeteners, Wade has come up with nearly 100 great dessert recipes that can be made without sugar, honey, corn syrup, or molasses.



Interesting book: Leadership Wisdom or Ethics for CPAs

Desserts: Cook Books from Amish Kitchens

Author: Phyllis Pellman Good

Lighten up a meal with apple strudel or sunbeam tapioca! A refreshing dessert can be the right finish to any dinner. Sometimes graham cracker pudding. Sometimes apricot sponge.

One of 12 cookbooks from Amish kitchens! The recipes in this series overflow with the good, old-fashioned food which comes from some of the world's best cooks. These handsome cookbooks have sold more than 800,000 copies!



Girls Night or Mediterranean Light

Girls' Night: Over 1,000 Drinks for Going Out, Staying In and Having Fun!

Author: Jaclyn W Foley

Girls' Night is chock-full of cocktail recipes distinctly designed with women in mind. Featuring over 1,000 cocktails and a wealth of bartending tips, this book is sure to please ladies who love libations.

Featuring recipes from America's best bartenders, the readers of Bartender magazine and bartender.com, this book contains the best women's drinks served in professional bars.

Recipes include:
--La Bomba
--Spring Fling
--Pink Cadillac with Hawaiian Plates
--Apple Puckerita
--Southern Lady



Interesting textbook: Group Leadership Skills or Agricultural Prices and Commodity Market Analysis

Mediterranean Light: Delicious Recipes from the World's Healthiest Cuisine

Author: Martha Rose Schulman

The cuisines of the Mediterranean are famous for taking humble ingredients and transforming them into savory masterpieces. Finding inspiration in every region of the Mediterranean basin, from the ever-popular dishes of France, Italy, and Spain to the more exotic fare of North Africa and the Middle East, Martha Rose Shulman offers innovative recipes that use less olive oil and other high-fat ingredients while retaining every drop of sun-drenched flavor.

The results: meatless yet hearty pasta sauces; refreshing salads of beans, grains, and vegetables; sizzling grilled fish dishes; aromatic chicken stews; refreshing fresh fruit desserts; virtually fat-free renditions of ratatouille and hummus; and updated, slimmed-down versions of traditional classics like paella, salade Nicoise, and lasagne. These satisfying recipes will become the cornerstone of a long-lasting commitment to healthful eating.

Colman Andrews

Martha Rose Shulman thinks her dishes through, tells charming stories about their provenance, and offers a wealth of practical advice. —Saveur

Patricia Wells

Like Martha, her food is wholesome, happy, unpretentious, and filled with energy. This is one of her finest works yet, a book that sings of the sun.

Publishers Weekly

These dietetic-but-not-dull recipes, culled from Shulman's friends and fellow cooks, feature Italian, Greek, Middle Eastern and Southern French cuisines. Using relatively little olive oil, few fats and lean chicken and rabbit, Shulman (Supper Club Chez Martha Rose) "lightens'' traditional fare. She claims that these recipes are designed for slow, steady weight loss, and, without putting forward a program of exercise, promises that "you won't gain the weight back.'' That's a strong claim for a diet cookbook that doesn't always specify exact portions for each dish. (Any 1200- to 1500-calorie-per-day diet requires strict portion control.) Dieters may be misled. For example, Shulman suggests eating bread with meals, but portion sizes are not in every instance listed clearly above each recipe's nutrient analysis. And ample menus--one includes crostini with porcini mushrooms, pasta e fagioli, swiss chard, a small green salad, and oranges with mint, plus one slice of bread, yielding approximately 830 calories--could lead easily to overindulgence. (May)



Sunday, December 21, 2008

201 Cocktails or Ultimate Little Martini Book

201 Cocktails: Elegant and Exotic Cocktails for the Discerning Drinker

Author: Maria Costantino

Offering a wide variety of delicious recipes, 201 Cocktails will prove an essential guide for even the most adventurous cocktail-mixer! From sophisticated liqueur-based cocktails to smooth and creamy concoctions; from tall, cooling summer drinks to shooters, and from fruity flavors to iced delights, 201 Cocktails has something to tempt and delight all tastes.

With mixing and equipment advice, together with details on ingredients and some fascinating cocktail history - and specially commissioned photography on every page - this is an entertaining and practical guide for all parties and special occasions.



Interesting book: Christina Cooks or Nathalie Duprees Shrimp and Grits Cookbook

Ultimate Little Martini Book

Author: Ray Foley

The Ultimate Little Martini Book brings more than 1,000 recipes to the martini lover, such as:

--Desert Sunset Martini
--Four Alarm Martini
--Jamaican Martini
--Orange Truffle Martini
--Snowcone Martini

Ray Foley is the ultimate authority on bartending. He is the publisher of Bartender Magazine, the No. 1 magazine in circulation for the bartending trade. This book is the result of his years of experience working with bars and bartenders across the country to find the ultimate martinis.



Table of Contents:

A Short History of the Martini
Top 10 Instructions
Over 1,000 Martini Recipes

American Culinary Federations Guide to Culinary Competitions or Backyard Grilling

American Culinary Federation's Guide to Culinary Competitions: Cooking to Win!

Author: American Culinary Federation

Endorsed by the American Culinary Federation (ACF) and written by ACF and ACF Culinary Team USA member, Certified Master Chef Edward G. Leonard, American Culinary Federation’s Guide to Culinary Competitions provides an exclusive glimpse into the world of culinary competitions. This essential text features a full-color insert of awe-inspiring competitive food displays and dozens of useful illustrations outlining plate and buffet presentation. It provides exceptional coverage of every step of competition, including practice and preparation, competition strategies, judging, the international arena, and much more. From key foundation recipes and scoring sheet samples to insights and hints from experienced judges, American Culinary Federation’s Guide to Culinary Competitions is packed with the tools that professional chefs and culinary students need to make a grand showing at any competition, worldwide.

Doody Review Services

Reviewer: Alan Cahill, Ph.D.(Thomas Jefferson University)
Description: Redox proteomics is the branch of proteomics that identifies oxidatively modified proteins in order to gain insights into normal and abnormal functions of cells. Oxidative modifications of proteins accompany aging and are seen in many disease states. Since oxidative modifications inhibit protein function, the authors contend that identifying oxidatively modified proteins will provide essential insights into the molecular pathways of human disease. This book includes 27 chapters on topics ranging from "modification of proteins by reactive oxygen species" to "oxidation of artery wall proteins by myeloperoxidase." It is divided into three parts: part I describes chemical processes involved in the oxidation of proteins; part II covers redox proteomics in normal cell physiology and pharmacology; and part III describes applications of redox proteomics to various disease states. The focus of this book is on chemistry and cellular biochemistry.
Purpose: According to the editors, the aim of this book is to "provide researchers with new insights into normal and altered physiology, and molecular mechanisms of disease...and provide a core reference text for experts in cellular physiology and proteomics." The editors also believe that this book could serve as a basis for a graduate-level course in proteomics.
Audience: The book is written for research scientists interested in proteomics and oxidative metabolism or proteins. Clinicians interested in neurodegenerative diseases will also find this topic (redox proteomics) particularly fascinating and relevant to their field ofstudy. Students and laboratory staff will appreciate the depth of focus and extensive lists of references. It provides a gateway to this new and exciting field and is written by leading experts for a wide audience interested in chemistry and biochemistry.
Features: This book provides an extensive collection of state-of-the-art redox proteomics methodologies, and serves as an informative guide to cellular mechanisms of protein oxidation. Each chapter provides an introduction, conclusion, and helpful list of abbreviations. The black/white illustrations and line drawings are well done. A key feature is the invaluable collection of references, which cover all aspects of oxidative protein modification. The final set of chapters make a convincing case for the important role of oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of a number of disease states.
Assessment: This is a very informative resource that is sure to draw attention to oxidative damage as a key mediator of disease and aging. This book provides detailed and extremely informative insights into cellular mechanisms of protein oxidation. It illustrates how state-of-the-art redox proteomics can be used to identify oxidatively-modified proteins in a number of specific disease states. Its extensive collection of references and expertise makes it an invaluable resource for established scientists, students, and laboratory personnel alike. Every laboratory that uses redox proteomics in both clinical and academic research should possess a copy of this excellent book.



New interesting textbook: Threads or The Principles of Political Economy and Taxation

Backyard Grilling: For Your Grill, Smoker, Turkey Fryer and More

Author: Jim Casada

The Ultimate Cookbook for Cooking Outdoors!

Preparing meals outdoors is becoming more and more popular. It's not restricted to burgers-any food can be a success. The recipe can be simple or elegant; the process quick or slow.

This book covers all types of grilling equipment and other outdoor cookers with tips for using each one. More than 150 recipes include complete cooking instructions for beef, poultry, pork, and fish-with a variety of substitutes for wild game and fish.

  • Grill Types - hibachi, open-style, covered kettles, homemades
  • Fuel Types - propane, hardwood, charcoal, composed briquettes
  • Cooking Methods - wet or dry, indirect or direct
  • Hot or Cold Smoking - using brines, rubs, marinades
  • Roasting - spit and in-ground
  • Deep Frying - turkey, goose, duck, pheasant, whole fish

Want more reasons why you will love this book?

  • Each co-author has outdoor industry recognition as a cookbook expert.
  • All regions of the country are represented in specialty ingredients, cooking methods and utensils.
  • Includes 150 recipes for domestic meat, poultry, and fish along with game substitutes-venison and other big game, upland gamebirds, waterfowl, saltwater and freshwater fish.
  • All ingredients and recipes are fully cross-referenced in the Index.
  • Complete nutrition information for each recipe.



Table of Contents:

Backyard Grilling Contents

Introduction: What is Backyard Cookery

Chapter 1: Grilling

  • Types of Grills (hibachi, open grill, covered kettle and other elaborate grilling systems such as Holland Grills and Life Tyme grills)
  • Discussion of fuel options (propane, hardwood, charcoal, composed briquets)
  • Wet vs. dry grilling; indirect vs. direct
  • Special techniques and grilling aids (including rotisserie, cedar plank grilling, grill-wok, hinged grilling basket)
  • Smoking in a covered grill
  • 65 recipes for meat, poultry & fish (including game), plus vegetarian
Chapter 2: Smoking
  • Types of smokers:
    • Low-tech (garbage cans, cardboard boxes)
    • Mid-level (covered grill used as smoker, Luhr Jensen Little Chief type smoker)
    • High-end (insulated hot smokers, special two- and three-chambered charcoal-fired smokers)
  • Hot smoking vs. cool smoking vs. cold smoking; brining
  • 25 recipes for meat, poultry, & fish (including game)
Chapter 3: "Low-and-Slow" Barbecue, Roasting and Special Techniques
  • Methods:
    • Pig roasters (homemade from oil drums or pull-behind rental units)
    • Spit-roasting
    • Ground cooking (pit)
  • 12 recipes for meat, poultry, & fish (including game)
Chapter 4: Deep Frying and Boiling
  • Basic technique and information
  • 9 recipes for meat, poultry, & fish (including game)
Chapter 5: Rubs, Marinades, Sauces and Butters
  • 25 recipes
Chapter 6: Vegetables, Side Dishes and Desserts
  • 20 recipes
Nutrition Information

Index

Saturday, December 20, 2008

A Great American Cook or Essential Mormon Cookbook

A Great American Cook: Recipes from the Home Kitchen of One of Our Most Influential Chefs

Author: Jonathan Waxman

To Alice Waters, Ruth Reichl, Thomas Keller, Bobby Flay, Deborah Madison, and other movers and shakers of the food world, Jonathan Waxman is a culinary giant who has helped invent contemporary American cooking. His exuberant style ushered in a new spirit of excitement in food. The forceful flavors of his dishes are unabashedly rustic and engagingly straightforward.

In A Great American Cook, Waxman presents his greatest recipes to the home cook for the first time. They include

Red Pepper Pancakes with Corn Sauce and Smoked Salmon, a classic appetizer he created when he ran the kitchen of Chez Panisse

Crispy Chicken and Goat Cheese Burritos, one of his most-ordered items

His signature Grilled Chicken with JW Fries, the dish that made him famous

Pizza with Bacon, Scallions, Parmesan, and Tomatoes, his favorite family supper

"Restaurant-Style" Vegetables, the colorful accompaniment to any main dish

Publishers Weekly

Waxman, hailed as one of the founders of New American cuisine, brought California cookery to the East Coast. After stints in Paris and at Chez Panisse in Berkeley, Calif., Waxman went on to found several prominent restaurants, including Manhattan's Jams and Sonoma's West Country Grill. In this handsome cookbook, his first, he offers recipes ranging from simple to complex, a tantalizing mix of rustic, ethnic and regional cooking that includes Wild Mushroom and Leek Soup, Pulled Beef and BBQ Sauce Sandwich, and Pork Tenderloin with Portobello Mushroom Sauce. Recipes are relatively short and easy to prepare, and instructions are clear and concise. Some dishes, such as Perfect Roast Chicken with Mashed Potatoes and Spinach, are pleasantly familiar, while others, like Pheasant with Oyster Stuffing, are somewhat beyond the standard fare but still appealing. Waxman also includes a chapter on sandwiches and pizza. Bobby Flay, a Waxman disciple, provides a foreword. More than 50 color photos not seen by PW. Author tour. (Sept.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information



Table of Contents:
Foreword   Bobby Flay     xii
Introduction     1
Edicts on Selected Ingredients and Techniques     5
Starters     13
Soups     51
Salads     68
Sandwiches and Pizza     94
Pasta     119
Poultry     138
Meat and Game     164
Fish     196
Shellfish     218
Vegetables     239
Desserts     257
Index     274

Interesting textbook: Ultimate Weight Solution Cookbook or Candy Making Basics

Essential Mormon Cookbook

Author: Julie Barder Jensen

The Essential Mormon Cookbook is a time-honored collection of recipes not found in standard cookbooks- family favorites passed down from generation to generation, traditional potluck dishes served at Church gatherings, and other gifts from the kitchen shared by neighbors and friends. This is the perfect source for these hard-to-find recipes you remember from your childhood, such as Christmas Morning Casserole, Pot Roast with Gravy, and Fresh Peach Cobbler. Also included are recipes to feed a crowd, compassionate service casseroles, and a conference-weekend brunch. More than 200 recipes, gathered from four generations of family cooks, are divided by seasons and event in this unique collection of Mormon comfort food.

Author Bio

Julie Badger Jensen has had a lifetime passion for cooking and entertaining.  She began a recipe box at age eight with the entry of "Lovable Lime Jell-O."  As a young teenager, she published her first recipe in the Deseret News food column.  She graduated from the University of Utah and has been food editor of Utah.

What People Are Saying

Sheri Dew
This is the coolest cookbook I have ever seen. It has actually made me WANT to cook...well, almost.




Catering like a Pro or Provence Cookbook

Catering Like a Pro: From Planning to Profit

Author: Francine Halvorsen

Covers budgeting, legal, sanitation issues, menu and event planning, adding new accounts and more. Includes worksheets, menus and recipes to help streamline paperwork, organize each event and ensure profitability as you go. A comprehensive resource section lists who to call for a variety of supplies, services and crucial information. Also offers practical advice from some of America's most successful caterers.



Book review: Financial Market Rates and Flows or Treasure of the Land of Darkness

Provence Cookbook: 150 Recipes and Select Guide to the Markets, Shops, and Restaurants of France

Author: Patricia Wells

No matter where you live, or how gloomy it may be outside, Patricia Wells will brighten your kitchen with the sunny flavors of France's bountiful south with The Provence Cookbook. A French-food expert and longtime Provence resident, Patricia offers readers an intimate guide to the culinary treasures of this sun-drenched landscape and dishes that will transport you and your guests with every flavorful bite.

The Provence Cookbook's 175 enticing recipes reflect Patricia's long and close ties with the farmers and purveyors who provide her and her neighbors in Provence with a kaleidoscope of high-quality foods. Their year-round bounty is the inspiration for these exciting, healthful Mediterranean-French dishes,which Patricia shares with home cooks everywhere. Over the past twenty years, it is Patricia who has often been the student, learning Provencal ways and regional recipes directly from the locals. With The Provence Cookbook, her readers benefit from this rich inheritance, as she passes along such recipes as My Vegetable Man's Asparagus Flan, or Maussane Potter's Spaghetti.

Along side authentic and flavorful dishes for every course from hors d'oeuvre to dessert, as wellas pantry staples, The Provence Cookbook features eighty-eight of Patricia's artful black-and-white photographs of Provence's farmers, shopkeepers, and delightful products. More than a cookbook, this is also a complete guide and handbook to Provencal dining, with vendor profiles, restaurant and food shop recommendations and contact information, and twelve tempting menus -- delight in An August Dinner at Sunset or perhaps A Winter Truffle Feast.

Whether you are a home cook, atraveler, or an armchair adventurer, enjoy Provence as the locals do, with Patricia Wells and The Provence Cookbook as your guides.

Publishers Weekly

Wells is one of the most famous American culinary expats living in France, and she's carved out quite a niche for herself as the voice of France for American home cooks. Provence, a sunny region in the hills above the Riviera, is not a new subject for Wells; although her last book focused on Paris, she authored Patricia Wells at Home in Provence in 1996. For this lively volume, she seems to have combed the villages surrounding her and her husband's "rewarding little farmhouse" in northern Provence to come up with recipes and culinary tips from farmers, winemakers, tradesmen, shopkeepers and restaurateurs. It's a robust collection (with over 200 recipes), encompassing all manner of food, wine and preparation techniques, and a highly personal one too. For example, in the Salads section, the recipe for Mireille's Tomato, Green Pepper, Olive, and Anchovy Salad prompts Wells to expound on her favorite olive oil; while the recipe for the Maussane Potter's Spaghetti, which comes from some of the author's potter friends in the village of Maussane-les-Alpilles, leads Wells to write about her favorite pottery shops in Provence. This could be bothersome if Wells were not so instructive, but her personal digressions serve as important lessons to cooks and to those planning a trip to the area. To that end, Wells includes plenty of travel information, giving the various locations and hours of Provence's many markets and contact information for restaurants and shops. Altogether, this is a lovely cookbook, a celebration of simple, delectable cuisine. (May) Forecast: Wells's name alone will sell this cookbook, and sales will be aided by radio interviews (including NPR), a national media campaign and author appearances in 14 U.S. cities. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Wells spends much of the year in Provence, where she and her husband bought a farmhouse 20 years ago. At Home with Patricia Wells chronicled their enviable existence there; now she offers more of her own recipes, along with some from her butcher, fishmonger, other merchants, neighborhood restaurants, and other sources slightly farther afield. Most of the dishes are simple, allowing the flavors of Provence's wonderfully fresh produce and other ingredients to come through, e.g., Salad of Garden Sorrel and Fresh Mint, Six-Minute Salmon Braised in Viognier, and My Vegetable Man's Asparagus Flan. Wine suggestions are included throughout-sometimes for Wells's own label, since her vineyard is now productive-and she provides addresses and other relevant details about her favorite restaurants and purveyors. Highly recommended. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 1/03.] Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.