Wednesday, December 31, 2008

New Cook or Preserving Summers Bounty

New Cook

Author: Donna Hay

Whether you are a beginner, an occasional cook or an accomplished one, The New Cook will guide and inspire you to create great food without fuss. Begin with the basics if your kitchen confidence needs a boost or go straight to the easy-to-follow recipes to make a new kind of meal where the approach is simple, the ingredients are fresh and the flavors are unforgettable. Complicated, time-consuming recipes and hard-to-get ingredients will become a thing of the past when The New Cook takes over your kitchen.



Look this: Reach of a Chef or Chinese Kitchen

Preserving Summer's Bounty: A Quick and Easy Guide to Freezing, Canning, Preserving, and Drying What You Grow

Author: Susan McClur

Preserving Summer's BountySurefire techniques and great recipes for keeping the harvest!"Preserving Summer's Bounty takes a giant step ahead in preserving advice. This up-to-the-minute guide pays tribute to your grandmother's techniques for 'putting up' vegetables, but what I like best are the quick and easy modern methods using the microwave, the freezer and more. These fast answers should lure even the busiest among us into storing the precious harvest of the garden."--Marian Morash, Author of The Victory Garden Cookbook"Preserving Summer's Bounty is a treasure trove of sage advice and enticing recipes. It's a delightful book that will let you enjoy your garden's harvest all year long."--Carol Hupping, Editor of Stocking Up III



All American Low Fat and No Fat Meals in Minutes or Betty Crockers Great Grilling

All-American Low-Fat and No-Fat Meals in Minutes: 300 Delicious Recipes and Menus for Special Occasions for Every Day--In 30 Minutes or Less

Author: M J Smith

America’s Favorite Low-Fat Recipes are Now Even More Delicious. With hundreds of tasty recipes and plenty of low-fat tips and tricks, this updated best-seller makes healthy eating a snap. Registered dietitian M.J. Smith has perfected ingredient combinations and cooking methods that make healthy foods delicious and satisfying—and most of these dishes can be prepared in less than 30 minutes. This new edition features more than 100 new low-fat and fat-free recipes, new food exchanges, and new time-saving tips and convenient ingredient substitutions. It also includes seasonal menus to help you plan a variety of healthy meals and complete nutrition information for each recipe. "Quick and innovative recipes." —USA Today "‘Common folk’ recipes that your family will enjoy eating." —JoAnna M. Lund, author of Healthy Exchanges®Cook book



Look this: Candida Control Cookbook or The Complete Idiots Guide to Getting a Tattoo

Betty Crocker's Great Grilling: 200 Tantalizing, Easy-to-Prepare Recipes

Author: Betty Crocker Editors

  • 200 tempting recipes, from special burgers and kabobs to chicken, steak, chops and roasts. The book branches into exciting grilling territory with recipes for pizzas and sandwiches, fish and seafood, fruits and vegetables - even dessert!
  • A chapter on marinades, sauces, salsas and relishes give extra zest to everyday cooking.
  • A complete chapter on smoker cooking lets people expand their recipes in this area.
  • Complete coverage of grilling basics - from the types of grills, how to start a fire and tend it safely, food safety tips for grilling and fire safety tips for great grilling.
  • Complete glossary of grilling terms.
  • Menus to help plan entertaining, including a Thanksgiving Fiesta and a Kabob Buffet.
  • 40 full-color photographs showcase the tempting recipes.



Table of Contents:
Let's Get Grilling.

1. Burgers, Sausage and Kabobs.

2. Steaks and Chops.

3. Ribs and Roasts.

4. Chicken and Turkey.

5. Fish and Shellfish.

6. Pizza, Sandwiches and Bread.

7. Vegetables and Fruits.

8. Marinades, Sauces, Salsas and Relishes.

9. Smoker Cooking.

Helpful Nutrition and Cooking Information.

Index.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

David Rosengarten Entertains or Domestic Bliss

David Rosengarten Entertains: Fabulous Parties for Food Lovers

Author: David Rosengarten

As an award-winning Food Network television host, cookbook author, cooking teacher, and food and wine writer, David Rosengarten clearly knows a thing or two about food and drinkânot to mention putting on a great show. Now he brings all three together in an imaginative collection of dinner parties that can transform even a casual get-together into a memorable occasion. Each party features a complete menu of delicious-yet-doable recipes that are centered around a specific food or ethnic themeâa Texas BBQ, Cassoulet ("Show up chez-moi for beans and wienies!"), or a Tapas Time night featuring Spanish Ham and Chorizos. Planning and presentation ideas show how to make a gathering truly special, from table-setting tips to music suggestions and more. Top photographer Quentin Bacon captures the food and the celebratory mood with style and dramatic flair. Throughout the book, Rosengarten is the perfect host, with a style that is as bold, lively, and entertaining as the parties themselves.

Publishers Weekly

As gourmands well know, food and love are inextricably intertwined; and, says Rosengarten, dinner parties enhance that connection. Such events involve a great deal of work for the host, but Rosengarten has gone to great lengths to think of, and address, every detail of 16 themed f tes representing a variety of cuisines and settings, from "It's Tapas Time" to "Zydeco Thanksgiving." Rosengarten honed his skills during his seven-year stint on Food Network's Taste show, and he has authored several cookbooks, including The Dean and Deluca Cookbook. Here he combines creative yet doable recipes with clever decorating suggestions and tips for entertainment and beverages. For each party, he focuses on "The Ingredient": the one, perfect food that will make the party authentic and, well, fabulous. Rosengarten's knowledge of food esoterica is broad and impressive; a discourse on Spanish ham, for example, is detailed and fascinating. The author's enthusiasm for entertaining is evident in both the specificity and care taken with each party plan, and the exuberant asides that make readers feel like cooking compatriots ("One taste of the old-fashioned antipasto salad... laden with crunchy hearts of iceberg lettuce, and you'll likely say-as I've been known to-`Exactly what is so great about radicchio?' "). Photos. (Oct. 18) Forecast: Wiley is hoping to score holiday sales, supporting the book with a 20-city radio tour and national ads. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

If a dinner party is an opportunity to show warmth, affection, and respect for guests, as Rosengarten states, this book indeed offers a wealth of opportunities. Sixteen distinct parties are outlined, including recipes, fitting beverages, set dressing, table dressing, entertainment, and sources (with web sites and toll-free phone numbers) from which to purchase the hard-to-find specialty ingredients and design elements. Each party section contains plentiful recipes, any of which could be used to enhance an everyday meal or serve as an element in a party scheme. Most of the themes are casual, e.g., "Totally Frank Party," but the "Devon Cream Tea" would satisfy anyone's yearning for old-fashioned elegance. Parties such as "Cassoulet" and "Show Up Chez Moi for Beans and Wienies" may be rustic in setting but require a fair amount of preparation time and a fully stocked pantry. Unlike Christopher Lowell's Christopher Lowell, the Hassle-Free Host, Rosengarten's work focuses on authentic preparation in lieu of "cheating" with prepared and packaged goods. Though this is not for last-minute party planners, experienced cooks will enjoy the challenge of obtaining the elusive ingredients-not to mention the satisfaction of serving the genuine article. Recommended.-Ann Weber, Bellarmine Coll. Prep., San Jose, CA Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.



Interesting textbook: Job Hunting Online or Secrets of Social Media Marketing

Domestic Bliss: Simple Ways to Add Style to Your Life

Author: Rita Konig

The low-stress, high-fun way to entertain, shop, decorate and indulge your way to domestic nirvana.

What is domestic bliss? It's bringing the office party home just because you have fresh mint and a secret mojito recipe. It's making your houseguest feel like he's at the Ritz even when he's crashing on your sofa. It's retreating home after a harried day and taking solace in a perfectly placed flea market find.

Home is the new hot spot and in Domestic Bliss, London's favorite young style expert makes all your nesting fantasies come true. This blueprint for domestic bliss will work whether your posse is coming to your castle or you're planning an evening for one. With wit and savoir faire, Konig shows how to:

  • Mix family hand-me-downs and new treasures

  • Tackle clutter with simple solutions

  • Turn your world around even when you feel fat, lonely and hate all your clothes and furniture.

Domestic Bliss is about creating moments of perfection in an otherwise chaotic world.



Table of Contents:
Introduction6
Chapter 1Playing hostess8
Chapter 2After-dinner treats36
Chapter 3Parties52
Chapter 4Camping and picnics68
Chapter 5Me, me, me, me and how to spoil oneself92
Chapter 6Presents: giving and wrapping116
Chapter 7Contractors and starting out164
Chapter 8The details180
Chapter 9Flea markets and antique shops208
Chapter 10Storage solutions220
Chapter 11Domestic chores244
Acknowledgments278
Index283

Simple Soirees or Shameless Carnivore

Simple Soirees: Seasonal Menus for Sensational Dinner Parties

Author: Peggy Knickerbocker

Peggy Knickerbocker lives in two of the greatest food cities in the world, Paris and San Francisco, and she loves to give dinner parties wherever she is. In Simple Soirees: Seasonal Menus for Sensational Dinner Parties, the food journalist, former caterer, and restaurateur shares her passion, her welcoming spirit, and her secrets for creating a memorable party, whether it's a romantic dinner for two, a birthday party for a special friend, or a cocktail fundraiser.

The book includes 100 of the author's favorite recipes, organized into seasonal menus such as Warm Figs Wrapped in Serrano Ham, Roasted Salmon with Peas and Mint, and Heirloom Tomato Salad for summer, or Steak au Poivre, Braised Fennel and Garlic, and Double-Ginger Gingerbread for fall. With an emphasis on fresh, local ingredients, the menus are always stylish and often feature an element of surprise. Knickerbocker also offers planning and preparation suggestions, as well as time-saving advice to make entertaining easy and fun. With beautiful photographs that capture the essence of the simple soiree, this delightful book will appeal to food lovers and party lovers alike.



Look this: 150 Things to Make with Roast Chicken and 50 Ways to Roast It or Edible and Useful Plants of Texas and the Southwest

Shameless Carnivore: A Manifesto for Meat Lovers

Author: Scott Gold

The average American consumes 218.3 pounds of meat every year. But in the face of concerns about Mad Cow disease, dubious industrial feedlot practices, and self-righteous vegetarians, the carnivorous lifestyle has become somewhat déclassé. Now, Scott Gold issues a red-blooded call to arms for the meat-adoring masses to rise up, speak out, and reclaim their pride. 

The Shameless Carnivore explores the complexities surrounding the choice to eat meat, as well as its myriad pleasures. Delving into everything from ethical issues to dietary, anthropological and medical findings, Gold answers such probing questions as: Can staying carnivorous be more healthful than going vegetarian? What’s behind the “tastes like chicken” phenomenon?  And, of course, what qualities should you look for in a butcher? The author also chronicles his attempt to become the ultimate carnivore by eating thirty-one different meats as well as every part, cut and organ of a cow (including tasty recipes), describes hunting squirrels in Louisiana, and even spends an entire, painstaking week as a vegetarian.

From the critter dinners he relished as a child to his adult forays into exotic game and adventures in the kitchen, Gold writes with an infectious enthusiasm that might just inspire readers to serve a little llama or rattlesnake at their next dinner party. This is the definitive book for meat lovers.

Publishers Weekly

In his first book, former literary agent Gold sets out to probe the joys and mysteries of meat eating. According to his research, the ability to track and hunt for meat, whether hooved, clawed or winged, aided in the development of human intelligence, so we are destined to eat it. But as a carnivore with few qualms about meats, Gold is better equipped than most for this celebration of the meat-eating life. The bulk of the book chronicles his self-described month of meat, in which the author ate 31 kinds of meat in as many days. Alternating between the mundane (chicken) and the exotic (llama), he takes his culinary pilgrimage as seriously as a journey through a country or subculture, something many food writers are doing these days. The result is a hipsterish, lad-lit quasi-travelogue à la Julia and Julia. He takes on filet of ostrich and bull pizzle, vegetarianism and veganism, and argues that the indirect effects of such ethical and dietary lifestyle choices sometimes do more harm than the decision to butcher a single animal. The last and best part of his book is the Tour de Boeuf, which takes Gold through the butchering of a live bovine to the eating of various innards and offal. Fun, though somewhat frivolous, with recipes and sidebars. (Mar)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information



Easy Thai Cookbook or Steven Raichlens Healthy Latin Cooking

Easy Thai Cookbook: The Step-By-Step Guide to Deliciously Easy Thai Food at Home

Author: Sallie Morris

This wonderful collection guides you through every step, demonstrating all the basics needed to master this delicious cuisine. There are more than 70 recipes for salads, curries, stir-fries, fried, steamed, and grilled foods, and desserts: such luscious meals as Tom Yam soup, fish cakes, steamed mussels, green chicken curry, and stir-fry duck are all made tantalizingly easy. Also provided is a cross-referenced collection of 12 meal plans, from simple dinners for you and your family to exotic feasts for friends and guests. With stunning photography throughout and a CD of evocative music to cook and eat to, this is the one-stop Thai cookbook for beginners.



Go to: Coming to Term or Its Not Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Steven Raichlen's Healthy Latin Cooking: 200 Sizzling Recipes from Mexico, Cuba, Caribbean, Brazil, and Beyond

Author: Steven Raichlen

The New Look of Latin-- Lighter, Quicker, Better

Three Empanadas (Pages 80, 81, and 82)
Midnighter Sandwich (Page 182)
Flan (Page 300)

Also available in Spanish under the title Salud y Sazón.



Monday, December 29, 2008

Crazy about Crockery or Dining Out

Crazy about Crockery: 101 Easy and Inexpensive Recipes for Less than .75 a Serving

Author: Penny E Ston

In this collection cookbook, Stone brings 101 of her family's favorite dinner recipes to the kitchen table for 75 cents or less per serving.



Books about: Intermediate Perl or Rune Factory 2 Official Strategy Guide

Dining Out: Secrets From America's Leading Critics, Chefs, and Restaurateurs

Author: Andrew Dornenburg

"This book will enrich and enlighten anyone with an interest in dining out." —Patrick O'Connell, chef-owner, The Inn at Little Washington

"The King of Spain is waiting in the bar, but your table is ready." —Sirio Maccioni of Le Cirque to New York Times restaurant critic Ruth Reichl

"If you've invested $1.5 million in a project and certain people can crush you like a bug if they have a bad time, you're a fool if you're not trying to find out who these people are, what they look like, and when they're in." —Bob Kinkead, chef-owner, Kinkead's

Just as food has become our national obsession, so has dining out virtually become its own sport. Dining enthusiasts, eager to get the take on new restaurants and the status of old favorites, look to restaurant critics and their discerning palates for guidance. So, who are these secretive personalities who often dine incognito and whose public judgments can make or break a restaurant or chef? Be a guest at their private table in DINING OUT: Secrets from America's Leading Critics, Chefs, and Restaurateurs, the first book to demystify the critical process and to unlock the secrets of a great restaurant experience.

Drawing on extensive interviews and research, co-authors Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page expose the wide-ranging experiences and insights of dozens of the most powerful palates in America, among them Gael Greene of New York, John Mariani of Esquire, Ruth Reichl of The New York Times, Phyllis Richman of The Washington Post, David Rosengarten and Caroline Bates of Gourmet, Patricia Unterman of The San Francisco Examiner, S. Irene Virbila of The Los Angeles Times, and Dennis RayWheaton of Chicago. They reveal their occasionally outlandish schemes for remaining anonymous—and what happens when their covers are blown! The critics also divulge how they review restaurants, what they think about the star system, and how they temper their personal biases when judging food, service, and ambiance.

Then Dornenburg and Page turn the tables, sharing the sentiments of well-known chefs and restaurateurs from across the country as they review the restaurant critics, from their credentials and rating systems to the forceful impact of their reviews. The chefs and owners of dozens of celebrated restaurants including Al Forno, Campanile, Chez Panisse, East Coast Grill, Fleur de Lys, Frontera Grill, Le Cirque 2000, Red Sage, and Stars offer their own definitions of excellence in food, service, and setting, and reflect on the role that the customer plays in the total dining experience.

Special features of the book include:


• A guide to leading food critics' favorite restaurants across America
• Restaurant review resources available on the Internet
• Advice from renowned sommeliers Larry Stone of Rubicon and Jean-Luc Le Dû of Daniel, and maître fromager Max McCalman of Picholine
• Musings by Pulitzer Prize-winning critics of architecture, media, and music on how they might approach restaurant criticism
• Special interviews with Danny Meyer on Providing Hospitality and Mark Miller on The Progress of American Gastronomy



"Finally, the best insider's view of our business for the discerning restaurant goer. Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page do a wonderful job of exploring the 'behind-the-scenes' side of professional cooking. As [New York Times restaurant critic] Ruth Reichl would say, 'HHHH'!" —Daniel Boulud, chef-owner, Restaurant Daniel and Cafe Boulud

"DINING OUT is a fascinating story, one that absolutely needed to be written. I found this book to be a compelling, revealing, and utterly entertaining look at what the critics, and those they criticize, had to say." —Michael Romano, chef-partner, Union Square Cafe

"This is no fair—it took me a lifetime to learn all these insights into the restaurant business! Well done!" —Ella Brennan, owner, Commander's Palace

"DINING OUT is both entertaining and educational, and can make your restaurant experience the same. The sommeliers' comments add to the pleasure." —Robert Mondavi, owner, Robert Mondavi Winery

"Not unlike theater, restaurants have been made or destroyed by the words of a critic. DINING OUT goes beyond the words to explore the underlying logic of the restaurant critic. It is an invaluable addition to the library of those who like to dine out." —Leonard A. Schlesinger, professor, Harvard Business School

"Don't start this book if you're hungry—the guide to leading critics' favorite restaurants across the country is a challenge to start one's own food odyssey and eat at least one meal in them all!" —Jeanette S. Wagner, vice chairman, The Estée Lauder Companies Inc.

"Michael Donnelly's photographs of restaurant life shimmer with élan, bursting on the page in glints and daubs of light and shade. If you are a connoisseur of fine cuisine and artful photography, you will delight in these pictures." —William Wegman, artist and photographer

"DINING OUT is an intriguing foray into the secret and powerful world of restaurant criticism. Michael Donnelly's photographs confer an element of high style and high drama to this intelligent and absorbing book." —Nancy Novogrod, editor-in-chief, Travel & Leisure

Dwight Garner

In the food world, Nora Ephron has written, nothing is what it seems. "People who seem to be friends are not. People who admire each other call each other Old Lemonface and Cranky Craig behind backs. People who tell you they love Julia Child will add in the next breath that of course her husband is a Republican and her orange Bavarian cream recipe just doesn't work." Ephron wrote those words in 1968, but little has changed in the intervening 30 years. While spats between members of the food establishment draw headlines only rarely -- chef David Bouley's nasty break-up with business partner Warner LeRoy is the latest example -- knives are kept sharp in private. Gossip and intrigue are at a constant, rolling boil.

Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page's new book, Dining Out, promises to deliver the dish on the restaurant world circa 1998. The authors fanned out across the country, interviewing dozens of prominent critics (Ruth Reichl, Patricia Unterman), chefs (Alice Waters, Daniel Boulud) and owners (Danny Meyer, Sirio Maccioni), and they've returned with a book that's like a giant and slightly undercooked cassoulet -- the tasty bits are in there, but you've got to work to dig them out.

"Food has become our national obsession," the authors write, and thanks to the proliferating number of city magazines, web sites, Zagat guides and grungy 'zines, there's no escaping restaurant criticism -- everywhere you turn, somebody's pushing a steaming bowl of adjectives in your face. (Steve Forbes tosses in a few reviews at the close of his monthly columns; Consumer Reports now rates chain restaurants.) But as Dining Out makes clear, a handful of critics -- usually those at major daily newspapers -- continue to wield an almost monopolistic power. "The King of Spain is waiting in the bar," Le Cirque owner Maccioni is reported to have said to Times critic Reichl, "but your table is ready."

Dining Out is crammed with anecdotes about critics' lives and methods, and about the lengths restaurants go to in order to spot them and, ideally, make them happy. Reichl talks about her outsize wig collection (she's the lady in black on Dining Out's cover, by the way), and the authors report that more than one restaurant has offered a reward to any employee who spots her at a table. Outside of New York, most critics say disguises aren't necessary. As long as you make the reservation under another name, and don't draw undue attention to yourself, there's little chance you'll be identified. Once a critic is spotted, Dornenburg and Page write, chefs leave little to chance -- most cook two versions of everything the reviewer has ordered, and bring out the most successful plate.

Sometimes even that's not enough. Bad reviews happen, and a particularly negative one can put a restaurant out of business. San Francisco Chronicle critic Unterman has been threatened at knifepoint by a disgruntled chef; Houston Sidewalk's Alison Cook was once burned in effigy; the Philadelphia Inquirer's Elaine Tate has had rocks hurled through her windows. You may have noticed that all of the critics mentioned thus far are women; the authors note the current predominance of women in the field, as well as the odd fact that an unusually large number of food critics are both Jewish and musically inclined. Dornenburg and Page have an eye for this kind of stray detail. One sidebar is a list of the weirdest things critics have eaten. L.A. Weekly critic Jonathan Gold's weird list includes "braised goat penis" and, hopefully not in the same dish, "testicles of a bull that had fallen in the ring to the matador."

As enjoyable as Dining Out can be to browse through, it's a chore to read cover to cover. In lieu of a shapely narrative, the authors appear to have simply dumped out the contents of their tape recorders. A typical section begins with a few breathless questions ("Is there anyone out there who hasn't, at some time or another, fantasized about being a restaurant critic? ... And is the reality of their jobs as wonderful as our illusions?") and ends with critic after critic giving opinions, often at numbing length. Worse is the authors' disinclination to jump into the fray themselves. Unlike Nora Ephron in her 1968 article on "The Food Establishment," Dornenburg and Page draw few conclusions and offer little in the way of synthesis. The pair bring fresh ingredients to the table; you're left wishing only that Dining Out weren't quite so al dente. -- Salon

The New York Times Book Review - Michael Ruhlman

Offering insiders' knowledge and illuminating insights from some of the country's best chefs and food critics.

Publishers Weekly

Anybody who has ever dreamed of joining a restaurant critic's inner circle will thoroughly enjoy this gossipy, insider's view by the 1996 winners of the James Beard Award for Best Writing on Food (Becoming a Chef). Interviews with leading critics and restaurateurs are a major part of the author's investigation into the methods employed by critics and the effect they have on restaurateurs' culinary ideals. It's a (relatively) serious topic, but one Dornenburg and Page address in a vibrant, conversational tone. Thanks to the unexpectedly dramatic lives of the characters involved, the pages buzz with often surprising tension, humor and emotion. Readers hear from restaurateurs who have staked fortunes on a creative vision, only to find that success often rests in the hands of a single, highly opinionated, sometimes unpredictable writer. The critics, meanwhile (most notably the New York Times's Ruth Reichl, teasingly shown on the cover wearing a face-obscuring hat), don wigs to maintain anonymity, fend off attacks from knife-wielding chefs and eat such dubious delicacies as braised goat penis and worms fried in lard. After being regaled with so many tart and entertaining observations, the final 100 service-oriented pages (Internet review sites, critics' favorite restaurants in selected cities) are somewhat anticlimactic. But just treat them like the after-dinner mint and the rest of the meal will get high marks for its appealing presentation, spice and color. 50 photos. (Oct.)

Library Journal

Dornenburg and Page, coauthors of the award-winning Becoming a Chef (LJ 8/95) and Culinary Artistry (Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1996), move out of the kitchen and into the dining room, focusing on the restaurant critics whose opinions often determine where we dine on Friday night. While the authors demonstrate the same incisive culinary qualities as in their previous works, chapters and numerous sidebars on such topics such as "Cooking for Ruth Reichl" and spending a week in the restaurant lives of both Reichl and Gael Greene will hold little appeal for readers who aren't hard-core foodies. Mostly, the book presents food critics' comments about the review process as well as opinions from chefs and restaurateurs about the people who review them; like the Zagat guides, everyone gets to be a critic here. The book ends with a list of the top critics' favorite restaurants, a guide to restaurant review sources on the Internet, and biographies of interviewees, all fairly sugarcoated. Recommended only for specialized culinary collections due to some in-depth reporting and interviews with a few restaurant notables. Otherwise, "Where's the beef?"--Drew Ackers, New York

Michael Ruhlman

Offering insiders' knowledge and illuminating insights from some of the country's best chefs and food critics. -- The New York Times Book Review



Fear of Wine or Sweet Spot

Fear of Wine: An Introductory Guide to the Grape

Author: Leslie Brenner

In this friendly introductory guide, food and wine writer Leslie Brenner tells how to:
Pour and taste wine
Develop a taste memory
Order from a wine list
Select a wine at the store
Match food with wine

In addition, helpful sidebars illuminate such subjects as:
How--and why--to swirl without sloshing
Disarming a snotty waiter
Ten great wines to bring to a dinner party
Going beyond California Chardonnay
Starting your own cellar for under $100

Along the way, Lettie Teague's funny and informative cartoons enhance the text and make great devices for remembering the most important facts. Before long,
your old standby, Chateau Screwtop, will be a distant memory. Accessible and concise, Fear of Wine will appeal to anyone who wants to know a little bit about a subject that can bring great pleasure.

At last, a guide that is as fun to read as wine is to drink!

Library Journal

What sets this title apart is its tone. Brenner (The Art of the Cocktail Party, Dutton, 1994) and Teague understand that every wine connoisseur was once a beginner and never lecture to novices but guide them through the basics of knowledge and enjoyment of wine. There are, of course, discussions of winemaking, producer regions and countries, and the ordering and tasting of wine. Friendly advice is given on corkscrew selection and spotting an overpriced wine list, and main points are summarized at the end of each chapter. Throughout are cartoons, charts, and tables. Resource materials and organizations are suggested in the final chapter. Brenner takes a usually solemn subject and transforms it into an enjoyable crash course. Highly recommended.-Wendy Miller, Lexington P.L., Ky.



Books about: Food Fight or Saving Dinner Basics

Sweet Spot: Asian-Inspired Desserts

Author: Pichet Ong

When it comes to Asian desserts, most Americans think of fortune cookies. But, in fact, the Far East is home to a dazzling array of sweets rich with tropical fruits, crunchy nuts, aromatic spices, and, yes, even chocolate.

In The Sweet Spot, renowned pastry chef Pichet Ong presents a collection of one hundred recipes for cakes, cookies, pies, tarts, puddings, ice creams, candies, and more. There are traditional Asian desserts with innovative twists, such as Sesame Balls, Mango Sticky Rice, and Almond Tofu, and classic American favorites, like Spiced Coconut Brownies, Banana Cream Pie, and Cream Puffs, livened up with Asian ingredients and cooking techniques.

Eschewing the heavy use of butter and sugar, Ong instead highlights the vibrant flavors of Asia—jasmine, lychee, orange blossom water, passion fruit, yuzu, mangosteen, and sesame, to name just a few. And despite the complexity of flavors and textures, all of the recipes are easy enough to make in home kitchens, requiring minimal effort for maximum results. Dazzle dinner-party guests with elegant showstoppers—Thai Tea White Chocolate Tart, Coconut Cream Pie with Toasted Jasmine Rice Crust—or delight the family with simple weeknight treats—Pomegranate Sherbet, Ginger Oatmeal Raisin Cookies.

The Sweet Spot includes lush color photographs of almost all of the finished dishes, and a foreword from legendary restaurateur and chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten. Savory Asian cuisine has been popular in America for years. Now it's time to embrace the enticing range of exotic desserts.

Publishers Weekly

Finding a compilation of Asian-inspired desserts isn't always an easy task, as baking sections tend to be chockfull of Italian and French influenced titles. The good news is Ong (owner of NYC's P*ong) presents more than 100 accessible, top-notch recipes inspired from such countries as Japan (Honey Castella, or kasutera), China (Peanut Turnovers) and India (Pistachio Rose Thumbprint Cookies). Popular desserts from New York's famed Spice Market (where Ong has consulted)— Chocolate and Vietnamese Coffee Tart and Jasmine Rice Pudding—lend themselves to frequent repetition. Twists on American favorites such as the Cracker Jack–like Spiced Caramel Popcorn made with mukawa(Indian candied fennel seed) and Coconut "Twinkie" Cupcakes with Lemon Filling are presented alongside adaptations of recipes from renowned pastry chefs and include Dragon Devil's Food Cupcakes (Elizabeth Falkner) and Chocolate-Mango Cheesecake Parfait with Macadamia Cookie Crumbs (Vicki Wells). Those unfamiliar with Asian ingredients can read up on everything from mochi flour to mangosteens in the Sweet Asian Pantry chapter. Recipe steps are numbered, and each selection includes a chef's tip—where to find ingredients, technique advice, cultural notes. A sleek design with color photos makes this a visual treat as well as a culinary one. (June)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information



Sunday, December 28, 2008

Ogilvies Book for a Cook or Salut

Ogilvie's Book for a Cook

Author: Elizabeth Driver


Originally published in 1905, Ogilvie's Book for a Cook captures the history of the Ogilvie Flour Mills, founded in 1801. This new book in the Classic Canadian Cookbook Series brings the tradition of wholesome food back to the home. This collection includes over 150 recipes for breads, cakes, and pastries as well as soups, preserves and pickles, salads, lunches and suppers, candies, desserts and more. Heartwarming favorites include Potato Bread, Pot Roast Beef, homemade Vanilla Ice Cream, and Baked Apple Dumplings. The recipes for these classic dishes are easy to prepare, and make delicious, nourishing meals.



Go to: Integrated Business Projects or Intro to Business

Salut!: The Quebec Microbrewery Beer Cookbook

Author: Raymond Beauchemin

About the Author

Raymond Beauchemin has written about Quebec's microbrewery scene for the Gazette in Montreal since 1993. He is a home brewer and a member of the North American Guild of Beer Writers.



Mrs Whaley Entertains or Hometown Recipes for the Holidays

Mrs. Whaley Entertains: Advice, Opinions and 100 Recipes from a Charleston Kitchen

Author: Emily Whaley

Dig right in to the plucky octogenarian Emily Whaley and her passionate, endlessly quotable opinions on gardening and just about everything else." said The New York Times Book Review when Mrs. Whaley and Her Charleston Garden came out in spring 1997. Emily Whaley took the gardening world by storm--and a few other worlds as well.

It turns out Mrs. Whaley, at eighty-seven, had a good deal more on her mind that she had no intention of keeping to herself. Her other favorite hobby--cooking delicious meals and serving them to the people she loved--was ripe for the picking and her opinions on fostering friendship and love as quotable as ever: "What experience has taught me is that people consider it a special compliment to be invited to a meal. [But] if the hostess is all aflutter like a butterfly caught in a net, then as the Irish say, "I wish I was to home and the party was to hell!" So, here are all the admonishments of Mrs. Whaley passed along to generations of Charleston hosts and hostesses. Such as "Don't serve guests dishes you haven't made successfully two or three times--and quite lately." And after supper, "leave the dishes on the table, blow out the candles, shut the door and serve finger desserts and coffee in another room...do not let your supper guests help you clean up!"

Here, as well, are her favorite on hundred recipes--regional delectables like "Edisto Breakfast Shrimp," perfect summer party dishes like "Pawleys Island Crab Cakes," fine old-fashioned breads like "Little Thin Cornmeal Pancakes," her variations on old standbys like "Dancing School Fudge," and the recipes painstakingly collected for dealing with what the fisherman and hunter might bring home. Sprinkled throughout are more of her juicy little family stories and her priceless explanations of Southern parlance. For example: "We call it grits when it's in the box at the grocery and these same grits are called hominy when we have cooked it for an hour."

Just as he did in their first collaboration, William Baldwin pefectly captures the Whaley cadence and positive spirit: "I've got ot admit that eighty-seven doesn't figure out as middle age. All right, I'm no longer middle-aged anymore. But this categorizing of where old age starts and what it looks like should be kicked overboard. Mrs. Whaley Entertains indeed.



Interesting book: Latin Americas Economy or Latino Social Movements

Hometown Recipes for the Holidays

Author: American Profil

Hometown Recipes for the Holidays invites you to pull up a chair to America's dinner table and enjoy more than 250 cherished family recipes, special memories, and dozens of beautiful photographs. You'll find the perfect dish for each of your favorite celebrations: New Year's Day, the Fourth of July, Columbus Day, Passover, Easter, Memorial Day, Labor Day, President's Day, Hanukkah, Thanksgiving, and Christmas.

The editors of American Profile have compiled the nation's most delicious recipes—straight from their readers—in this book, which is modeled after the magazine's most popular section, “Hometown Recipes.” You'll find everything from breakfast with Grandma's Christmas Casserole and Wake-Up Casserole to the perfect additions to jazz up your buffet, such as Julia's Fresh Cranberry Relish and Aunt Peggy's Salmon Pasta Salad, to sit-down dinner options such as Almost Lasagna Zucchini Casserole and Ben's Swiss Steak. Top it all off with a decadent dessert, such as Butter Rum Cake, or something a little easier, such as No-Roll Sugar Cookies or Quick-and-Easy Family Peanut Brittle, to create an experience that your family and friends will remember for years.

American Profile, one of America's most widely circulated magazines, celebrates hometown life, and in Hometown Recipes for the Holidays editors Candace Floyd, Anne Gillem, Nancy S. Hughes, and Jill Melton do just that.



Saturday, December 27, 2008

Tamales or 30 Minute Asian Meals

Tamales

Author: Daniel Hoyer

Tamales have endured for millennia, and are currently enjoying a resurgence in popularity due to the renaissance in Latin American and Mexican cooking. Today, tamales remain an important part of the traditions of Mexico, Central America, South America and the southwestern United States.



Table of Contents:

8 Introduction

10 Necessary Items and Techniques for Making Tamales Equipment Ingredients Techniques Assembly Cooking Serving

Storing and Reheating

Roasting and Toasting

33 Masa

43 Fillings

63 Tamales

101 Sweet Tamales

111 Sauces & Salsas

126 Index

Books about: Marthas Vineyard Table or Pastery Cook

30 Minute Asian Meals: 250 Quick, Tasty and Healthy Recipes from Around Asia

Author: Marie M Wilson

This compendium of quick and easy Asian recipes is chock-full of healthy and flavorful variations on new and traditional foods. Each of the over 250 recipes included take no longer than 30 minutes to cook-the same amount of time it takes to make rice!

With chapters organized by country or region, and opening with a brief history and description of the food, 30 Minute Asian Recipes provides an accessible and enjoyable glimpse into the mysteries of Asian cuisine.



Cocktail Party Box or Creepy Crawly Cuisine

Cocktail Party Box

Author: Alessandra Redies

Here's your planner for hosting truly memorable parties and social gatherings. A set of cocktail recipe cards gives you easy directions for 50 popular drinks. The enclosed 80-page Cocktail Party Guide suggests five great party themes and advises on snacks to prepare and spirits to buy when making your party preparations. So open up Cocktail Party Box and get ready to party.



Look this: Massage or Silent Passage

Creepy Crawly Cuisine: The Gourmet Guide to Edible Insects

Author: Julieta Ramos Elorduy

 
An introduction to the world of edible insects, complete with recipes and color photographs. 

Includes an historical look at the use of edible insects in indigenous cultures. 

Provides information on where to obtain insects and how to store and prepare them. 

Includes over 60 gourmet recipes, complete with stunning color photographs. 

The most wholesome source of protein on earth cannot be found in any supermarket in the United States, but it can be found right in your backyard! Insects have been a staple food of almost every indigenous culture, not only because of their delicious flavor but also because they provide a more complete protein than soy, meat, or fish, and are concentrated sources of calcium, niacin, magnesium, potassium, the B-vitamins, and many other nutrients. As the world heads for food shortages in the next century insects can help meet humanity's growing nutritional needs. 

Creepy Crawly Cuisine tells you everything you need to know to make insects a part of your diet. It includes an overview of the use of edible insects by indigenous cultures, information on where to obtain insects and how to store and prepare them, and over 60 gourmet recipes, complete with stunning color photographs, that let you take the cooking of insects to dazzling culinary heights. As practical as it is unique, Creepy Crawly Cuisine is the ideal gift for followers of the Diet for a Small Planet, adventurous epicures, and cooks who think they have seen it all.

Christian Science Monitor

Includes color photographs, 60 recipes, and a history of edible insects. The author, a professor at the National University of Mexico in Mexico City, is arguably the world's leading authority on edible insects.



Classic Stars Desserts or Memphis Cookbook

Classic Stars Desserts: Favorite Recipes by Emily Luchetti

Author: Emily Luchetti

Renowned pastry chef Emily Luchetti has updated and compiled 150 of the best recipes from her hugely popular (and out of print) treasures Stars Desserts and Four-Star Desserts into one delectable cookbook. Those familiar with Emily's irresistible recipes will be thrilled to rediscover their favorites in a new, indispensable collection. And for those who have yet to enjoy these timeless treats, here's the chance to taste such unforgettable delights as rich chocolate French Silk; sweet, tart, and buttery French Apple Tartlets; and decadent Poached Pears with Walnut Cream. From puddings, pies, and cakes to cookies, candies, and confections, these sweets have stood the test of time. Tips on ingredients and equipment plus expert wine pairings for each recipe make Classic Stars Desserts a baking classic.



Read also Understanding It or Political Economy of Fairness

Memphis Cookbook

Author: Junior League of Memphis

Gracing homes for more than 40 years, the recipes have to be good! The wine chart, herb chart, and household hints make this a great gift for the new homemaker. Inducted into the Walter S. McIlhenny Hall of Fame.



Friday, December 26, 2008

Greysheet Recipes Cookbook 2009 Greysheet Recipes Collection From Members Of Greysheet Recipes or Good Housekeeping Great Baking

Greysheet Recipes Cookbook [2009] Greysheet Recipes Collection From Members Of Greysheet Recipes

Author: Greysheet Recipes

Readers will find complete information about the 12-Step Recovery Group, Greysheeters Anonymous, based on the principles of Alcoholic's Anonymous Inc., and the "Greysheet" Food Plan and Method, a food plan originally offered for suggestion by Overeater's Anonymous Inc. in the 1960's, a very low carb, high protein food plan, no breads, flour products, only products that list sugar at least fifth on the label, and quantities suggested in weighed and measured amounts. 347 pages.The Cookbook Recipes in the Greysheet Recipes Collection have been contributed by members of GreysheetRecipes. GreysheetRecipes is an online forum. The discussion group is for members to post and discuss recipes that meet the requirements of the food on the Greysheet Food Plan. There are 12 Step support groups, based on the principles of Alcoholics Anonymous Inc., that support the use of the Greysheet Food Plan. You can find links to these groups in the Greysheet Recipes Collection and more about some of the specialty foods like soynut butter, soy products, digital scales for weighing and measuring food amounts, and literature on recovery from compulsive overeating. The Greysheet Recipes Collection is not an official publication or official literature of GreySheeters Anonymous Inc. or GreySheeters Anonymous World Service Inc., Overeater's Anonymous or any other organization. While the book does not contain a copy of the "Greysheet" Food Plan, you can obtain a copy of the Greysheet by contacting a member of one of the Greysheet support groups through one of the links offered in the book.



New interesting textbook: Peppers Cookbook or American Culinary Federation

Good Housekeeping Great Baking: 600 Recipes for Cakes, Cookies, Breads, Pies, & Pastries

Author: Good Housekeeping

From sinfully delicious Boston cream pie to mouthwatering herb focaccia, here's every luscious recipe a baker could want--all triple-tested by Good Housekeeping for guaranteed success, the first time and every time.

More than 600 sweet and savory Good Housekeeping recipes, all shown in beautiful color photos, fill the pages of this home baker's must-have. These are the treats that bring back memories and create new ones for generations to come. They range from classic childhood favorites (moist and scrumptious brownies) to more unfamiliar delights like Oatmeal Quick Bread and tempting specialties such as elegant French fruit tarts. Of course, all the baking basics are here including useful information about: appliances from bread machines to immersion blenders; baking pans, sheets, and dishes that work best; plus the right ingredients and flavorings to have on hand. The book also features step-by-step techniques for each baking category. To please the nutrition-conscious cook, every cookie, cracker, soufflé, custard, pie, tart, and cake comes with a calorie count and key information on proteins, carbohydrates, fat, fiber, cholesterol, and sodium.



Simply French or Cake Book

Simply French

Author: Patricia Wells

How can a good cook become a great cook? It's all in the details.

Becoming a good cook means learning principles that will last you a lifetime in the kitchen; with Simply French, you will never cook the same way again.

  • Knowing when to season and how
  • Appreciating the simple process of reducing a sauce
  • Allowing meats and poultry to rest so they release maximum flavor
  • The simple art of straining a sauce for a refined condensed flavor
  • Knowing why dried herbs are no substitute for fresh

In Simply French acclaimed food critic and best-selling author of Trattoria Patricia Wells works side by side with award-winning French chef Joel Robuchon to distill the best of the French table for the American cook. Among the 125 exciting recipes youll find in Simply French are Potatoes "Chanteduc," a perfect Roast Chicken, Beef Tenderloin Roasted in Herb-Infused Salt Crust, Marbleized Chocolate Wafers, and Cinnamon-Chocolate Mousse.



Go to:

Cake Book

Author: John Uher

"There's something magical about the process of makinga cake from scratch, a process that transforms a few simple ingredients—butter, sugar, flour, and eggs—into culinary artistry."
—Tish Boyle

Library Journal

A cake makes a welcome addition to every occasion, and with nearly 200 original recipes for all skill levels and tastes, Boyle's eighth book offers something for everyone. Introductory chapters cover ingredients, equipment, technique, and d cor; eight subsequent chapters cover different cake types-from butter- and oil-based cakes to coffee cakes, flourless cakes, cheesecakes, and meringue cakes. Boyle, currently the food editor of Chocolatier and Pastry Art & Design magazines, offers her versions of numerous classics (e.g., German Chocolate, Carrot, and Chiffon), along with her own enticing recipes for Cinnamon-Swirl Buttermilk Pound Cake, Coconut Lime Mousse Cake, Orange Chiffon, and Chocolate Almond Coconut Cake. Each recipe is rated for difficulty, from simple to advanced, with the difference among them primarily being the time it takes rather than the technique involved. This title concludes with chapters on fillings and frostings and basic recipes that include buttercreams, ganaches, sauces, and ice cream. Well written, easy to read, and beautifully photographed, Boyle's book is destined to become a classic and is highly recommended for all collections.-Pauline Baughman, Multnomah Cty. Lib., Portland, OR Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.



Thursday, December 25, 2008

Vietnamese Fusion or The Book of Great Hors DOeuvre

Vietnamese Fusion

Author: Chat Mingkwan

Vietnamese cuisine is an intrigung fusion of French, Chinese and Indian influences. International chef and celebrated cooking instructor Chat Mingkwan explains the techniques and flavor combinations that characterize each region of Vietnam. Utilizing traditional techniques and flavors, Chat transforms time-honored recipes into vegetarian delights by using innovative animal-free alternatives.



Read also

The Book of Great Hors D'Oeuvre

Author: Terence Janericco

The Book of Great Hors d'Oeuvre Updated and Expanded Terence Janericco Now the last word on hors d'oeuvre has been fully revised, rewritten, and expanded to provide you with the most reliable source for menu selection, preparation, and presentation. The First Edition of The Book of Great Hors d'Oeuvre was widely praised by both professional chefs and reviewers, not only for its enormous selection of clearly and concisely written recipes but also for its Wealth of suggestions for entertaining. This new edition offers you hundreds of crowd-pleasing new ideas. More than 1,000 recipes help you to add a special culinary touch to every occasion—from the intimate Cocktail party to the most extravagant affair. You are shown how to create exotic and inventive menus using familiar ingredients at the lowest possible cost. The chapters include ideas for:

  • Spreads and dips
  • Marinated and pickled foods
  • Dim sum
  • Pastries
  • Canapes and toasts
  • Patés and terrines
  • Croquettes
  • Cheese balls, fish balls, and meatballs
  • Stuffed vegetables, meats, and breads
Want to fascinate your guests with delectable, easily prepared French puff pastry? A delightful yogurt pastry? An irresistible strudel? These are just some of the scores of offerings that will make your food stand apart from its competitors. Noted culinary author Terence Janericco makes it easy for you to assure that the amount, variety, flavor, and visual, appeal of your hors d'oeuvre are perfect. His side-by-side use of both small-yield recipes (eight servings) and larger ones (24 servings) allows you to adjust the quantities to suit your needs. Everything is here! How to adjust menus for the length of the party,the number of guests, the time of day, and the life-style of your client; how to select the foods that are just right as a prelude to lunch or dinner; how to promote the image your host or hostess wants. Janericco explains it all. All aspects of party planning are covered. Just follow the author's tips on presentation to create visually exciting food that is easily recognizable and readily accessible for the guests. Learn not only how to arrange food, but also which foods look good together (and which do not), as well as what are the best backgrounds. Turn here for advice on how to garnish platters, space foods appropriately, and present dips creatively. Discover how to situate buffets and bars in different settings, whether the event is in a banquet hall or small apartment. staff, equipment, utensils—you'll know exactly what you need simply by opening this "menu-to-success." Whether your hors d'oeuvre are the prologue to a meal or the meal itself, this guide makes your performance the star of the show.



Pillsbury DoughboyTM Slow Cooker Recipes or Asian Vegan Kitchen

Pillsbury DoughboyTM Slow Cooker Recipes: 140 New Ways to Have Dinner Ready and Waiting!

Author: Pillsbury Editors

Want to come home every night to a hot, hearty meal ready and waiting? Now you can. From America’s most trusted kitchens come a cookbook with 140 slow cooker recipes fro main dishes, side dishes, soups and more!



• Honey-Dijon Pork Roast

• Mango Chutney-Chicken Curry

• Creamy Butternut Squash Soup

• Winter Vegetables Stew

• Texas Chili

• Hot Turkey Sandwiches

• Old Fashioned Baked Beans

• Garlic Smashed Red Potatoes




Table of Contents:
Introduction: Top 10 Tips for Slow Cooker Success6
1Meaty Main Dishes10
2Busy-Day Chicken and Turkey54
3Super Soups, Stews and Chilies90
4Slow-Cooked Sandwiches130
5Very Easy Vegetables and Sides154
Index172

Go to:

Asian Vegan Kitchen

Author: Hema Parekh

The Asian Vegan Kitchen is a collection of recipes from across Asia, featuring the spices and the many tasty ingredients that have made these cuisines popular world-wide. It caters to the growing segment of people of all ages who have chosen to eschew animal products, yet still want to add some global spice and excitement to their diet.
There is one big difference between this and many other vegan cookbooks. These dishes do not use replacement ingredients for traditional recipes. Instead, author Hema Parekh - a noted teacher of vegetarian cooking styles in Tokyo - has selected recipes that were traditionally vegetarian, and have been enjoyed by diners for decades, even centuries. In doing so, she has had to make only minor changes, if any, for these recipes to be deliciously appealing to everyone: vegan, vegetarian or otherwise.
Over 200 dishes have been selected to cover a wide variety of tastes. Here readers will find vegan-ready recipes for everything from Japanss sushi to northern Indian curries, from Vietnamese spring rolls, to red-hot tofu, Chinese-style. Soups, noodle dishes and some desserts are also included.
The recipes are simple, with detailed explanations. Also included are over 50 mouth-watering photos and a comprehensive glossary.
Vegan cooking just became a lot more interesting.
A long-time vegetarian, Hema Parekh has been teaching vegetarian cooking in Tokyo for almost twenty years. She has written two popular books on vegetarian cooking in Japanese A Touch of Spice and Indian Vegetarian Cooking and is working on a third.
Parekh has lived in Japan for 27 years.



Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Jewish Cooking in America or My China

Jewish Cooking in America

Author: Joan Nathan

Here is a rich tapestry of more than three centuries of Jewish cooking in America. In this new book, Joan Nathan, the author of the much-loved Jewish Holiday Kitchen and the coauthor of The Flavor of Jerusalem, gathers together more than 300 kosher recipes, old and new. They come from both Sephardic and Ashkenazic Jews who came and settled all over America, bringing with them a wide variety of regional flavors, changing and adapting their traditional dishes according to what was available in the new country.

What makes Jewish cooking unique is the ancient dietary laws that govern the selection, preparation, and consumption of food by observant Jews. Food plays a major part in rituals, past and present, binding family and community. It is this theme that informs every page of Joan Nathan's warm and lively text. Every dish has a story—from the cholents (the long-cooked rich meat stews) and kugels (vegetable and noodle puddings) prepared in advance for the Sabbath to the potato latkes (served with maple syrup in Vermont and goat cheese in California) and gefilte fish (made with whitefish in the Midwest, salmon in the Northwest, haddock in New England, and shad in Maryland). Joan Nathan tells us how lox and bagels and Lindy's cheesecake became household words and how American products like Crisco, cream cheese, junket, and Jell-O changed forever the way Jewish women cook.

The recipes and stories come from every part of the U.S.A. They are seasoned with Syrian, Moroccan, Greek, German, Polish, Georgian, and Alsatian flavors, and they represent traditional foods tailored for today's tastes as well as some of the nouvelle creations of Jewish chefs from New York to Tucson. Alandmark cookbook bound to become a classic.

Publishers Weekly

You don't have to be Jewish to like the latest entry in the Knopf Cooks American series. You don't even have to like Jewish cooking. A food-lover's guide to Jewish American history and culture, it dishes up not just recipes but appetizing anecdotes, insights about various forms of religious observance and how they have been affected by transplantation to the New World, even a few jokes. Nathan ( Jewish Holiday Kitchen ), a skillful writer and an energetic researcher, evokes the greenhorn's astonishment at the plentitude of oranges; documents the ``revolution'' in kosher cooking inspired by the introduction of vegetable shortening in the '10s; explains how enterprising Jewish admen convinced various food manufacturers to tailor their products for kosher consumers; calls on Southern families who replace the walnuts and almonds of Eastern European cookery with pecans, and visits Maine cooks who prepare mock lobster salad. Her focus is expansive, covering not just standard Ashkenazic and Sephardic dishes and traditions but foods and customs from Bukhara, Salonika, Israel and Georgia as well as original Jewish American hybrids. The recipes themselves, clearly outlined if not always easy to execute, constitute something of a Jewish culinary hall-of-fame, with faithfully preserved instructions for homemade bagels and pickled herring, Lindy's cheesecake and contributions from chic restaurateurs (Wolfgang Puck, Anne Rosenzweig). Illustrations not seen by PW. BOMC alternate, HomeStyle Book Club alternate. (Mar.)

Library Journal

Nathan's new book is an important addition to this excellent series. Author of The Jewish Holiday Kitchen (Schocken, 1988. rev. ed.), Nathan has researched her subject extensively, and the result is as much cultural history as cookbook. Along with more than 300 kosher recipes, from classics like Herring Salad to regional reinterpretations such as Southwestern Gefilte Fish, there are period documents, including letters and diaries, interviews, nostalgic reminiscences and anecdotes, and lots of photographs, giving a real sense of time and place to the culinary traditions celebrated. Highly recommended. Homestyle Bks. alternate.

BookList

Much more than a cookbook--though it does contain over 300 recipes--this entertaining volume is also a history of the Jewish people through their food. Nathan introduces both people and food in a preface that discusses dietary laws, Jewish holidays, Jewish immigration to the U.S., and the impact of Jews--and their food--on American culture. With every recipe comes an original story or a reprint of an article or a personal vignette that intrigues and/or edifies. For instance, the recipe for falafel appears complete with a profile of Moshe, owner of the best falafel pushcart in New York City. There are also lots of photos, both modern and historic. A number-one choice for cookery collections, but make sure history buffs can find it, too.

What People Are Saying

Joan Nathan
A Review of Jewish Cooking in America

This is a newly released revision of award-winning author Joan Nathan's classic cookbook on Jewish cooking in America, a companion volume to her current PBS series of the same name. It is one of those must-haves for any complete cookbook library, and it most certainly is an essential piece of a Jewish cook's reference shelf. Well written with a wonderful sense of history and tradition along with straightforward recipes and instruction.


From a Barnes & Noble.com E-nnouncement

Joan Nathan's new, expanded edition of Jewish Cooking in America is a rich voyage into Jewish culture. Using not only recipes but photographs, stories, and old advertisements as well, Nathan traces the importance of food in Jewish life. Food not only draws the family together; it has a symbolic role. For example, during Rosh Hashanah, families dip apple slices in honey, representing their wishes for a sweet New Year. This new edition, expanded from the IACP/Julia Child Cookbook Award-winning 1994 edition, includes a preface that highlights Nathan's experiences while working on her PBS television series based on the book.


Joyous Rosh Hashanah Table Marks a Feast of Optimism
By Author Joan Nathan

Sunday evening, September 20th, marks the beginning of Rosh Hashanah—the New Year festival celebrated by Jews throughout the world. This holiday, a time for self-examination and the commencement of the period of repentance, precedes the day of divine judgment, which follows ten days later on Yom Kippur, September 30th.

Unlike Passover, where bitter foods are prepared in commemoration of hard times, the Rosh Hashanah table is laden with delicacies representing optimism for a sweet future. Dishes abound with honey, raisins, sweet carrots, and apples—all seasonal reminders of hope for the coming year.

My father's family, of German-Jewish heritage, had its own symbolic foods for this festival, many of which had been with our ancestral family in Bavaria for centuries. Unlike the tables of eastern European Jews, our table did not include such favorites as gefilte fish, tzimmes (sweet carrot casserole) or honey cake. Instead, we ate sweet-and-sour salmon, apple streusel, zwetschgenkuchen (plum pie), and other dishes.

Today we have a mixture of both traditions and new ones learned through the years. After the traditional Hebrew blessings over candles and wine, our meal commences with the prayer over a round challah, the sweet bread representing the double portion of manna that the Israelites ate in the wilderness during their flight from Egypt. For Rosh Hashanah it is circular, representing a complete year. Then, an apple is dipped in honey, and a blessing is made, asking for a sweet and good year.

In Germany, the main course would have been roast goose with cabbage salad, potatoes, and carrots. In this country my family has substituted a honey orange chicken served with seasonal vegetables, including carrots. The Yiddish word mern, literally meaning "carrots," is translated as "to increase or to multiply."

Traditionally, honey cake is served at the end of the meal, symbolic of wishes for a sweet new year. The following recipe, which appears on p. 338 of my newly updated book, Jewish Cooking in America, is quick, easy, and a family favorite. I hope your family enjoys it too.


Oregon's Kosher Maven's Honey Cake

3 large eggs
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
Grated rind of 1 lemon
1/3 cup vegetable oil
1 cup honey
1 cup warm black coffee
3 1/2 cups sifted all purpose flour
2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 cup slivered almonds

1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees, and grease and flour a 10-inch tube pan.

2. Place the eggs, lemon juice, lemon rind, oil, honey, and coffee in the bowl of an electric mixer equipped with the paddle attachment. Mix on low speed until well blended. Gradually add the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cream of tartar, sugar, and cinnamon, mixing for about 5 minutes, or until well blended. Add the slivered almonds.

3. Pour the batter into the tube pan. Bake in the oven for 50 minutes, or until an inserted toothpick comes out clean.

Yield: 1 cake (P)


Joan Nathan




Interesting book: Abs Diet for Women or You on a Diet

My China: A Feast for All the Senses

Author: Kylie Kwong

An extraordinary, intimate tour through the rich food and culture of China and Tibet, told through lavish photography, stories, and recipes.
My China is a sweeping culinary travelogue through modern-day China and Tibet. Here, Kylie Kwong, renowned chef and author of Simple Chinese Cooking, journeys to ten cities and provinces, beginning in the Toishan district, the home of her own ancestors. Along the way, she meets and cooks with an array of spirited locals and samples a range of wonderful regional meals and tastes-from the haute cuisine of glamorous Shanghai restaurants to the simple bowls of noodles and pickles at the wooden stalls of Lhasa, and the altogether different and intense spicy heat of traditional Sichuan dishes. With a chef's passion for new flavors, Kwong discovers authentic recipes and traditional techniques and adapts them to eighty new recipes that readers can make simply at home.
A rich collection of stories, recipes, and beautiful photographs, My China will transport readers to the sights, smells, and flavors of a world that inspires. It is an intimate, captivating look at modern China and all its treasures, and the perfect gift for the holidays for any armchair traveler.



Tassajara Recipe Book or Moosewood Restaurant Kitchen Garden

Tassajara Recipe Book

Author: Edward Espe Brown

In a friendly and informal style, Ed Brown presents the recipes that have made the kitchen at the Tassajara Zen Center famous for more than thirty years. "Ordinary food for ordinary people" is the way Brown once described his approach, but there's nothing ordinary about these culinary offerings. From appetizers to desserts, the over two hundred recipes use the freshest ingredients in ways that will tantalize the palates of everyone from down-home vegetarians to the most discriminating gourmet cooks. The recipes are interspersed throughout with line drawings, photographs of the center and its environs, and Brown's own poetry. This revised edition includes twenty-nine new and four revised recipes, new photographs, and a new introduction.



Look this:

Moosewood Restaurant Kitchen Garden: Creative Gardening for the Adventurous Cook

Author: David Hirsch

DAVID HIRSCH has been a member of the Moosewood Collective since 1976. Trained as an architect, he eventually turned his passion for gardening and cooking into a vocation. Hirsch is one of the coauthors of all nine Moosewood Collective cookbooks, including Moosewood Restaurant Celebrates and NEW RECIPES FROM MOOSEWOOD RESTAURANT. He lives in near Ithaca, New York.

Library Journal

In what is called ``a gardening book for cooks and a cookbook for gardeners,'' Hirsch offers brief seed-starting instructions, cultural requirements, harvesting instructions, garden design plans, and culinary tips for a variety of vegetables and herbs. He also includes general gardening techniques, insect control, and recipes from the Moosewood kitchens. Of special interest are the culinary tips, especially for less-common vegetables and for herbs. This book has the visual attractiveness of the other Moosewood titles, with charming initials and line drawings on the text pages, decorative title pages for each section, and garden plans and drawings throughout. Not a necessary purchase, this may be desirable in libraries serving sizable vegetarian populations. (Index not seen.)-- Carol Cubberly, Univ. of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg



Cooking for Kids Bible or Vegetarian Turkish Cooking

Cooking for Kids Bible

Author: Publications International

Kids can be hard to please, especially at mealtime. But you don't have to resort to fast-food meals to satisfy them. With Cooking for Kids Bible you'll discover fun foods like Surfin' Salmon and Little Piggy Pies that kids are sure to love. You'll also find a great selection of recipes that will help get kids on the path to healthy eating.

In addition, there are lots of ideas for tasty snacks, clever classroom treats, unique birthday cakes and other party food. All of this in one book! But that's not all. This indispensible book is filled with helpful information about introducing new flavors, eating out, party planning, teaching kids to cook and much more. Cooking for Kids Bible helps you: Encourage kids to try new and different foods and flavors, Teach kids to prepare simple recipes and work safely in the kitchen, Discover how easy it is to prepare fun birthday cakes and throw a birthday or Halloween party, Learn how to improve eating habits by introducing healthy snacks and meals, Find fabulous ideas for classroom treats and healthy snacks.



See also: The Poverty of Philosophy or Monte Carlo Risk Analysis and Due Diligence of New Business Ventures

Vegetarian Turkish Cooking: Over 100 of Turkey's Classic Recipes for the Vegetarian Cook

Author: Carol Robertson

Robertson relates a series of captivating and delightful travel adventures in the first half of the book, unveiling the wonders of Turkey—from the ancient cities of Ankara to the spas at Bursa to the small village bazaars, where fresh vegetables line stone pathways and aged stucco homes. The second portion is dedicated to vegetarian foods and recipes. Over one hundred Turkish dishes, including Spinach with Yogurt Sauce, Eggplant Puree, assorted Sis Kebabs, Minted Pea Pilav, and the ever-popular Baklava, await the cook wanting to explore Turkish cuisine.



Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Candymaking or Good Carbs Bad Carbs

Candymaking

Author: Ruth A Kendrick

Now you can make professional-quality candies using normal kitchen equipment and utensils! Candymaking shows how to create a variety of sweets that look and taste just like they came from the finest candy store. Everything necessary to assure success-rain or shine-is clearly explained. Over 75 full-color photographs show techniques-and the irresistible results. All of your favorites are here-luscious caramels, tender brittles, marshmallows, divinity, lollipops, caramel corn, toffees, cherry cordials, truffles and fudges. This is a must-have for anyone who wants to be a sweets success!



Table of Contents:
An Introduction to Candymaking10
Fondants21
Truffles & Fudges45
Caramels61
Divinity, Nougat & Marshmallow75
Jellies & Fruits85
Brittles & Hard Candies95
Microwave & Easy Candies113
Molded Candies & Compound Coatings133
Chocolate145
Mail Order Sources155
Index156

New interesting book: Economics Ethics and Public Policy or Media Planning Workbook

Good Carbs, Bad Carbs

Author: Johanna Burani

When it was first published early in 2002, Good Carbs, Bad Carbs was the first book to use the phrase "good carbs" and to clarify how to adjust one's eating habits to strike the perfect balance of carbohydrates for optimum health, weight, and vitality. Now, in this new, completely revised edition, best-selling author Johanna Burani brings Good Carbs, Bad Carbs totally up-to-date—with references to the most recent research—and more useful than ever for everyone trying to figure out exactly what carbs they should be eating. The focus remains on using the glycemic index to identify the carbs that most help to lose weight, stay healthy, control blood glucose levels, and maintain energy throughout the day. This edition of the best-selling guide also includes a wonderfully helpful laminated 4-color pullout shopping guide, as well as twenty all new good-carb recipes.



Neiman Marcus Cookbook or The French Dont Diet Plan

Neiman Marcus Cookbook

Author: Kevin Garvin

For nearly a century, Neiman Marcus has epitomized luxury—urbane merchandise in an elegant ambience. Neiman Marcus is also famous for the extraordinary food it serves at its restaurants and cafés across the country. Now, at long last, the renowned institution shares more than fifty years' worth of legendary dishes in this lavishly illustrated cookbook.

From the flagship store in Dallas, featuring the Zodiac Restaurant, to its landmark Rotunda restaurant overlooking Union Square in San Francisco and its newest restaurant, Mariposa, in Coral Gables, Florida, there are forty-two Neiman Marcus restaurants in stores across the country. The first one opened in 1953, and in the last half century Neiman Marcus has become almost as well known for its fresh and delicious cuisine as it is for its fashion.

Neiman Marcus Cookbook will delight the store's loyal fans and food connoisseurs alike, with more than 160 delectable recipes. The exquisite dishes range from simple soups and salads such as Summer Tomato Soup with Basil and Ricotta and Mediterranean Fattoush Salad to more ambitious entrées like Burnt Honey-Orange Chicken and Soy-Glazed Farm-Raised Trout. Longtime fans will be delighted to find recipes for Neiman Marcus's famous Strawberry Butter, Mandarin Orange Soufflé Salad, Popovers, and Chicken Salad—not to mention their legendary Chocolate Chip Cookie.

Neiman Marcus Cookbook is a celebration of a store that has been a trusted institution for nearly a century, and of a cuisine that's been the favorite of discerning Americans for generations.



New interesting book: Corn Free Cookbook and Survival Guide or Bakers Field Guide to Christmas Cookies

The French Don't Diet Plan: 10 Simple Steps to Stay Thin for Life

Author: Will Clower

Wouldn’t you rather savor a buttery croissant instead of inhaling an artificially flavored diet shake? Isn’t taking a relaxing stroll preferable to pounding out early morning miles on the treadmill? The French live this way, yet stay thin and healthy. Now, with The French Don’t Diet Plan, you can, too!
In his groundbreaking book, The Fat Fallacy, Dr. Will Clower was the first to present a theory of how the French maintain low obesity and heart disease rates despite their seemingly “unhealthy” lifestyle. Dr. Clower learned that the French don’t worry about dieting but rather are more concerned with how they eat. That means paying attention to the taste, pacing, and enjoyment of meals, instead of counting calories, cutting fat and carbs, or taking guilt trips to the gym.
With The PATH, his revolutionary weight-loss plan, Dr. Clower has helped thousands of people lose weight, lower cholesterol, and increase energy. Now, in The French Don’t Diet Plan, Dr. Clower shows how easy it is to incorporate his remarkably effective techniques and the French lifestyle into a busy American day.
Dr. Clower has found that natural foods have overwhelmingly been pushed out of the American diet by what he calls “faux foods”: processed, additive-filled convenience products, often marketed as healthy with buzzwords like low fat and low carb. In addition, mealtimes should be a slow, sensual break for the body and mind—not a face-stuffing frenzy while standing up in the kitchen or sitting behind the wheel. As a result of such habits, Dr. Clower says, we are not eating what our bodies need, and we’re eatingin a way that is not conducive to proper digestion. Science shows this precise combination of factors causes weight gain.
The French approach is about taking the time to enjoy real food without guilt or deprivation. Not only a successful path to becoming thin for life, The French Don’t Diet Plan will help you put joie de vivre back into your relationship with food.
The Most Delicious and Decadent Way to Lose Weight

• Formerly forbidden foods, welcome back! Learn why butter, cheese, bread, and chocolate are health foods that keep hunger at bay. . . . See Step 2.
• Spend more time eating! Discover why you should plan on having seconds and make meals last longer. . . . See Step 5.
• Hate to work out? Find out why you don’t have to exercise to lose pounds—and how relaxation can help keep weight off for good. . . . See Step 10.
• Now you’re cooking. Enjoy dozens of easy recipes for satisfying comfort foods, from Hot Artichoke-Cheese Dip to Creamy Alfredo Sauce, and Double-Almond Biscotti to Practically Flourless Chocolate Cake. . . . See Easy Recipes for Fabulous Foods.

Publishers Weekly

While it may have once been true that the French have no weight problems, that's no longer the case: at the current rate, the French could be as fat as Americans by 2020. Neurophysiologist Clower (The Fat Fallacy) acknowledges only research supporting his premise, however, in this more pragmatic version of the bestselling French Women Don't Get Fat. Clower picks apart our bad habits and replaces them with healthier (and, incidentally, "French" ones), pushing, for instance, the French habit of obtaining calcium from food rather than supplements, quoting data indicating supplements are linked to kidney stones. In another example, he pits the French practice of eating butter against the American penchant toward margarine, citing butter as healthier. He later admits this is only true if you eat a little butter (eat a little margarine and the results will be similar). And so it goes throughout this sentimental homage to the French. The advice is, at heart, sound: eat fresh foods and smaller portions, and exercise more. Readers who would like to accomplish this nibbling Camembert while walking along the Seine will be pleased, although a stroll through the American food pyramid will net similar, though admittedly less romantic, results. (On sale Apr. 11) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.



Monday, December 22, 2008

IBS or Lessons in Wine Service from Charlie Trotter

IBS: Food, Facts & Recipes: The Power of Food

Author: Tracy Parker

Irritable Bowel Syndrome affects 1 in 5 people around the world and is second only to the common cold as a cause of workplace absenteeism. Tracy Parker, a dietician who has spent six years in scientific research on IBS, has found that diet and lifestyle changes are the most effective ways of getting it under control. Along with extensive practical advice on what to eat and what to avoid, she offers in-depth scientific information on the causes and symptoms of the disease, how it’s diagnosed, and the dangers of leaving it untreated. To make her advice practically effortless to follow, there are 50 delicious, nutritious recipes, along with simple suggestions for relieving stress and getting support from family and friends.



Table of Contents:
Introduction     4
What is Irritable Bowel Syndrome?     6
Possible causes of IBS     8
Diet and IBS     10
A balanced diet     11
Dietary fiber     14
High and low fiber     15
Food intolerance or allergy?     18
Milk and dairy products     20
Lactose intolerance     21
A milk-free diet     22
Wheat     24
Exclusion diets     26
Food reintroduction     28
Other diet-related triggers     30
The symptom-linked approach     31
Symptom-linked groups     33
Probiotics and prebiotics     36
Some questions answered     38
Recipes
Breakfasts     40
Light bites     52
Main meals     68
Vegetarian     88
Desserts     102
Cakes and bakes     116
Index     126
Useful contacts and acknowledgments     128

Read also Cooking without a Grain of Salt or French Provincial Cooking

Lessons in Wine Service from Charlie Trotter

Author: Edmund O Lawler

Go behind the scenes and explore Charlie Trotter's award-winning wine service program. Remove the pretense from wine service, learn about the relationship between the cellar & the kitchen! Third book in the "Lessons from Charlie Trotter" series.



Betty Crocker Cookbook for Women or Cowgirls Cookbook

Betty Crocker Cookbook for Women: The Complete Guide to Women's Health and Wellness at Every Stage of Life

Author: Betty Crocker Editors

EAT WELL, LIVE WELL!


You do a lot for your family. But what do you do for yourself? Betty Crocker Cookbook for Women is full of recipes and advice to help you stay well-fed, fit, positive and healthy, decade after decade. And by being good to yourself, you're also being good to your family. Open the book and discover all the ingredients you need to cook up a healthy, well-balanced life:



• 130 delicious, easy-to-prepare recipes to help you stay healthy at every decade of your life

• Delicious dishes you'll love, ranging from Whole Grain Strawberry Pancakes and Cucumber-Mango Salad to Chicken Linguine Alfredo and Chocolate Soufflé Cakes

• A complete rundown of the healthy nutrients found in each dish, from fiber and protein to iron, calcium and vitamins

• Authoritative information on health issues that you'll likely encounter at some point in your life, including weight management, stress, hormones, bone density , and heart health

• "Girlfriend-to-girlfriend" wisdom from other women, who share their real-life experiences with weight loss, food, exercise and everyday coping

• "Notes from Dr. R" that offer medical information on women's health topics, ways to exercise and stay fit, and tips on maintaining a healthy weight




Interesting textbook: Logistics Principles and Applications or Silent Theft

Cowgirl's Cookbook: Recipes for Your Home on the Range

Author: Jill Charlotte Stanford

Take a dash of western myth, a healthy sprinkle of vintage photographs, and a dollop of tall tales and instructional sidebars, simmer with a delicious selection of western recipes, and, voila—The Cowgirl’s Cookbook. From June’s Ranch Beans to Joan’s Chile Rellenos, Connie’s Cackleberries on Toast to Rita’s Tomato Mac ‘n Cheese, these hearty fixin’s will feed a city girl’s fantasy as well as a country boy’s belly. A sure favorite with locals and tourists alike, these recipes ain’t just for trail drives no more!



Table of Contents:

Introduction
Beverages
Prairie Roses’ Desert Rose
Sangria
Cow Punchers Punch
Margaritas Not Here
Watermelon Ice
Breads
Cowgirl’s Cornbread
Buttermilk Honey Biscuits
Annie Oatley Bread
Chuckwagon Doughnuts
Cinnamon Sugar Muffins
Saddle Bag Crackers
Fish and Chicken
Metolius River Salmon Loaf
Steam-side Brook Trout
The Bunk House Favorite Tuna-Egg Casserole
Autumn Ride Chicken
Hens Arms
Beer Baked Chicken
Meats
Rocky Mountain Oysters
Steak and Beans
Emergency Steak
Cajun Meatloaf
Mock Fillet Mignon—Venison Back
Whiskey Lamb
Red-Eye Gravy N’ Ham
Ranch House Style Port Chops
Scrapple
Main Dishes
Tad’s Special
June’s Ranch Beans
Black Bean Chili
Joan’s Chilies Rellenos
Rimrock Tomato Mac and Cheese
Cackleberries on Toast
After Easter Casserole
Salads and Vegetables
Lemon Lariat Apple Ring
Rio Brazos Salad
Cowgirl’s Coleslaw
Sharie’s Sauerkraut Salad
Tamarack Baked Carrots
Kentucky Corn Pudding
Santa Fe Vegetables
Soups and Stews
High Desert Potato and Bacon Soup
Kate’s Chicken and White Bean Soup
Fit for a Queen Green Chili Soup
Beef Stew. Period.
Branding Stew
Monday Night Stew Pie
Relishes, Salsas, Sauces, and Ketchups
Green Tomato Relish
Cowgirl Crude Salsa
Fruity Salsa
Out of Your Garden Tomato Ketchup
Keepin’ It Simple Bar-B-Que Sauce
Desserts and Sweets
Tamarack TeaCakes
Leather Cookies
Liz’s Crummy Coffee Cake
Mustang Chocolate Cake
Raw Apple Cake
Texas Two-Step Blackberry Dumplings
Kickin’ apple Pie Enchiladas
Boiled Puddin’
Maple Flavored Gingerbread
Cowgirl Fudge
Fancy Mints
Goober Candies
Jams and Jellies
Bertha Blancetts Quince Jelly
Oregon Grape Jelly
Rose Petal Jelly
Camping Out
Real Cowgirl’s Granola
Campfire Coffee
Campfire Dutch Chicken
Making a Cardboard Oven
Kathy’s Orange-Cranberry Muffins
Index
Author Notes and Resources

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Taste of Challah or Southwest Slow Cooking

Taste of Challah: A Comprehensive Guide to Challah and Bread Baking

Author: Tamar Ansh

Many find the task of making their own bread, and more specifically, of making their own challah, to be intimidating and difficult. A Taste of Challah brings the lost art of home challah and bread baking back to where it is meant to be - in the home. Far more than just another cookbook, A Taste of Challah is a guide, containing within it everything you need to know about the topic of challah and bread baking. Clear instructions and step-by-step, full-color photos will help you successfully master each recipe. This book goes far beyond tasty challah; you can sample breads from around the world. There are recipes included for Kubana, Rye and Flax Seed Bread, Oatmeal Raisin Bread, Saluf, Bagels, Hot Pretzels ... and much, much more. Try them, and enrich your home with the aromas and tastes of both past and present. Replete with numerous tips and sound advice, A Taste of Challah ensures that all your bread baking will come out perfect and tasty ... every single time.



See also: Managing Workplace Negativity or Heavens Door

Southwest Slow Cooking

Author: Tammy Biber

In the quarter-century since cookers appeared in kitchens from coast to coast, there has never been such a flavorful collection of recipes. Included is an invaluable guide to the Southwest kitchen with hints for stocking your own pantry, as well as tips and suggestions on using your slow cooker, allowing you to make dinner and get on with your life. Authors Tammy Biber and Theresa Howell compiled their favorite recipes including traditional specialties such as Tortilla Soup, Mole, Carnitas, and Machaca and blended them with new flavors like Pork Chops with Raspberry-Chipotle Sauce and Corned Beef Enchiladas. Healthy, flavorful food is brought back to life in this old-school kitchen appliance, so fill your slow cooker with these delicious meals that are ready when you are.



Toast to Omaha or Wheat Free Gluten Free

Toast to Omaha: A Cookbook

Author: Junior League of Omaha

Omaha's rich culinary heritage is celebrated in this fresh collection of traditional, yet contemporary, recipes. Inspired by local flavors, gleaned from the city's best chefs, tested by the discriminating palates of The Junior League of Omaha members, these delectable dishes will be the toast of your cookbook collection.



New interesting textbook: Intellectual Property and Unfair Competition in a Nutshell or Careers in Criminal Justice and Related Fields

Wheat-Free, Gluten-Free: 200 Delicious Dishes to Make Eating a Pleasure

Author: Michelle Berriedale Johnson

Celiac disease is a chronic digestive disorder caused by a sensitive reaction to gluten. Using gluten-free flours, breads, and pastas, the recipes here cover everything from the everyday (Chicken Kiev and Spaghetti Bolognese) to the elegant (Rack of Lamb with Mustard Crust and Chicken Risotto with Fennel and Pine Nuts). The book also provides information on diagnosis, lifestyle changes, foods to avoid, and pantry stocking. Black-and-while illustrations are featured throughout.



Stop and Smell the Rosemary or Wacky Cakes Kooky Cookies

Stop and Smell the Rosemary: Recipes and Traditions to Remember

Author: Junior League of Houston

The 1997 national award-winning cookbook offers over 500 mouthwatering recipes that feature fresh ingredients and ease of preparation. Over 100 color photographs and a fabulous entertaining section are profiled. Unique sidebars highlight common traditions associated with food (for example, the history of the birthday cake). The book is a winner of the Benjamin Franklin, Small Press, and Tabasco awards for best cookbook.



Interesting book: Methods of Mathematical Finance or Brinks Modern Internal Auditing

Wacky Cakes & Kooky Cookies

Author: Gerhard Jenn

You don't need much in the way of experience or talent to transform a simple cake into a creative masterpiece. According to virtuoso pastry chef Gerhard Jenne, "you just need a sense of humor and a steady hand."

In Wacky Cakes & Kooky Cookies, Jenne virtually transforms cake decorating from a fusty old chore that many bakers have abandoned, into a pursuit that is both fun and a real outlet for creative expression, The results are gorgeous.



Saturday, December 20, 2008

Doggy Desserts or French Food at Home

Doggy Desserts: Homemade Treats for Happy, Healthy Dogs

Author: Cheryl Gianfrancesco

Healthful and nutritious aren't the words you usually hear with desserts, but doggy desserts don't have to be unhealthy and sweet to be delicious to your dog. Many store-bought products-with their load of preservatives, salt, and sugar-can irritate sensitive canine tummies and cause allergies and other health problems. But you can keep your dog healthy and happy by making your own tasty, wholesome snacks and desserts. The easy-to-prepare recipes inside this cookbook use only ingredients that are good for your dog.

Your dog will eagerly chow down on the delicious and nutritious cookies, bars, cakes, breads, muffins, and frozen treats in this scrumptious canine cookbook. Inside, you're sure to find some new favorites to indulge your pup's palate, such as peanut butter banana cookies, beef biscuits, and doggy birthday cake. You'll feel good knowing that you're providing the best in natural, nourishing, homemade treats-and giving your pup some mouth-watering slices of heaven.



Table of Contents:
Introduction     7
Baking Notes     8
Cookies     11
Bars     55
Drop Cookies     67
Cakes     75
Muffins     85
Frozen Treats     99
Index     110

New interesting textbook: Good Housekeeping Illustrated Book of Desserts or RAWvolution

French Food at Home

Author: Laura Calder

When most people think of French food, they anticipate "complicated to make," "hard-to-find ingredients" or "too fancy." In French Food at Home, Laura Calder shows that great French food doesn't have to be any of that. The French cooking of everyday life is lighthearted, accessible, and suited to modern tastes. It's about creating a meal using easy-to-find local ingredients. And, above all, it's about slowing down and savoring the pleasures of good food, wherever you live.

Whether it's getting weeknight dinners on the table fairly fast (Basil Beef, Pickle Chops, or Carrot Juice Chicken) or leisurely cooking for dining at a slightly slower pace (Lamb Tagine, Holiday Hen, or Fennel Bass), Laura Calder shares recipes that she's created at home in her own French kitchen. Balance these with just the right side dishes (Olive Potatoes, Buttery Two Tomatoes, or Endives with Honey and Golden Raisins). And, for a special meal, bookend main dishes with a first course (Orange Asparagus, Toast Soup, or Beet Stacks) and a dessert (Nutty Figs, Fireplace Camembert, or Coffee Pots).

You'll enjoy reading French Food at Home as much as cooking from it. About her Camembert Salmon, Laura writes, "You're thinking, 'Ugh, she's got to be kidding.' But this is no mental lapse; just because it's strange to the ear doesn't mean it will be to the tongue." Or, for the Lemon Tart of My Dreams: "There are more recipes for lemon tart out there than you can shake a stick at. Some have candied lemon slices afloat on top like so many shipwrecked unicycles; others, for reasons I cannot divine, are hell-bent on involving ground almonds ... But all I want in a lemon tart is the plainestpossible thing: flat, smooth, and puckering with intense lemon flavor."

From apéritifs to desserts, Laura offers recipes ranging from easy to those that need just a little extra effort. From dishes that are ready in minutes to those slow and savory, from traditional to contemporary, French Food at Home lets you bring French food to your home.

The New York Times

The Paris correspondent for Vogue Entertaining and Travel, Calder has delivered a warm, no-nonsense volume of classic recipes (tarragon chicken, potato torte, steak au poivre), nearly all of which are simple to make, even if you don't have the luxury of shopping in big-city food markets. — Dwight Garner

Publishers Weekly

Proving that French cooking can be liberating and accessible, the Paris-based correspondent for Vogue Entertaining and Travel presents more than 100 recipes she developed. Some are inspired by the work of French restaurateurs, and most are easy to prepare. To accompany aperitifs, Calder suggests Frenchified Popcorn flavored with garlic, herbes de Provence and celery salt, or Hot Mussels, which start out like Moules Mariniere and end up being quickly broiled on the half-shell with a dollop of butter, garlic and parsley. Pea Green Soup is nothing more than cooked frozen peas, cream, salt and pepper. An easy dinner is Bacon Cod, fillets topped with lemon slices, bay leaves and thyme sprigs and wrapped with pieces of bacon before being slipped into the oven. Tarragon Chicken is a simplified version of a dish often gussied up by others. On the other hand, Filo Fish in Red Wine Sauce requires a bit of dexterity, and Holiday Hen glorifies a boned guinea hen (Calder supplies deboning instructions). A few of the recipes are off-the-wall, such as Hay Ham, a smoked ham actually simmered in pot with two large wads of fresh hay. Desserts are relatively easy, such as Flamb ed Bananas or Parmesan and Pink Pepper Strawberries, fresh berries wedded to those unusual tastes. Highly engaging headnotes explain each recipe and offer alternative techniques or ingredients. (Feb.) Forecast: This is not a book for those looking to perfect their Gallic expertise, but it will appeal to cooks with a yen to master uncomplicated dishes with a certain French flair. Many of the savory meals are served up with a quite effortless sauce of reduced juices fortified with a dab of butter. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Calder, the Paris correspondent for Vogue Entertaining and Travel magazine, presents an amusing narrative spliced with more than 100 of her personal recipes to illustrate her premise that French cooking is "a state of mind." Indeed eclectic, her recipe collection includes many simple classics like Endive Salad and Potato Omelets, yet there are also more unusual dishes like Duck on a String, which requires a salted duck breast to be hung in the open air for seven days; and Hay Ham (yes, hay, which Calder says imparts a unique, smoky flavor to the meat). The recipes are written in a casual style, often with less than precise instructions, and they often seem secondary to the author's preceding chatty comments and anecdotes. A better selection is Patricia Wells's The Paris Cookbook, also written from the perspective of an American in Paris, which provides simple, well-written recipes that can be successfully prepared by both experienced and novice home cooks in North American kitchens.-Mary Schlueter, Missouri River Regional Lib., Jefferson City Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.