Aromas and Flavors of the Past and Present (Cook's Classic Library) Review

Aromas and Flavors of the Past and Present (Cook's Classic Library)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This collection of recipes is less anecdotal than 'The Alice B. Toklas Cookbook' however the notes that accompany each recipe are very useful. It is a relief to consult recipes that are elegantly simple compared to the glossy and overcomplicated creations so often described in fashionable cookbooks.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Aromas and Flavors of the Past and Present (Cook's Classic Library)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Aromas and Flavors of the Past and Present (Cook's Classic Library)

Read More...

The Cooking Contest Cookbook: More Than 120 Prize Winning Recipes Review

The Cooking Contest Cookbook: More Than 120 Prize Winning Recipes
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Over 10 years ago Joyce Campagna started the popular Cooking Contest Newsletter. Now, at the urging of her readers, she and her husband Don have written a cookbook. The Cooking Contest Cookbook is a collection of prize-winning recipes, original recipes using readily available ingredients. It is a handy source of new things to try, plus different approaches to old favorites. The part I like best is the desserts. GREAT CHOCOLATE RECIPES! YUM! If you have considered entering cooking contests but you don't know where to start, this cookbook will give you a look of what kind of things win. For people who read cookbooks like other people read novels, this is the perfect gift, but it is also a wonderful present for anyone who likes to cook, or wants to learn.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Cooking Contest Cookbook: More Than 120 Prize Winning Recipes



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Cooking Contest Cookbook: More Than 120 Prize Winning Recipes

Read More...

The Old-Time Brand-Name Cookbook: Recipes, Illustrations, and Advice from the Early Kitchens of America's Most Trusted Food Makers (Abradale Books) Review

The Old-Time Brand-Name Cookbook: Recipes, Illustrations, and Advice from the Early Kitchens of America's Most Trusted Food Makers (Abradale Books)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I am surprised at how much I love this book! I would call it a compendium of social, industrial, culinary, agricultural, USAmerican women's history. And yet there's nothing pretentious about it-- it's homey, in fact, and quite usable for a cookbook with such a theme. Crumpacker pulls off quite a feat: updating old-fashioned American recipes without making kitsch of them, which other similar books do. I recommend this book to everyone interested in cooking and the many contexts in which recipes are invented, reproduced, and prepared, and I plan to give a copy to all my foody friends!

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Old-Time Brand-Name Cookbook: Recipes, Illustrations, and Advice from the Early Kitchens of America's Most Trusted Food Makers (Abradale Books)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Old-Time Brand-Name Cookbook: Recipes, Illustrations, and Advice from the Early Kitchens of America's Most Trusted Food Makers (Abradale Books)

Read More...

The Everything Diabetes Cookbook: 300 Creative and Healthy Recipes That Put the Fun Back into Cooking (Everything (Cooking)) Review

The Everything Diabetes Cookbook: 300 Creative and Healthy Recipes That Put the Fun Back into Cooking (Everything (Cooking))
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I was very disappointed in this book. It's great for low fat cooking, but not to manage your blood sugar. Her recipes don't use sugar substitues, soy flour, whole wheat flour, fat free cheese or cream and whole wheat pastas (higher fiber foods that are slower to absorb in the bloodstream). Recipe in book required that I alter to reduce the sugars, increase protien and fiber. I alter regular cookbook recipes, and I was hoping that this book would be different. One recipe doubles the carbs/sugars for oatmeal by adding lots of dried fruits. Perhaps sugar substitute, a splash of vanilla and cinnamon, 1/2 cup fresh fruit and a couple tablespoons half n half. This would have less sugar/carbs, but more fiber/protein and the small amount of fat will slow the conversion and absorbtion of sugars into the blood stream. So many other recipes have all-pupose flour, potato flour or potato starch, sugar, honey, and even instant rice. Her zucchini bread has 2 1/2 cups of sugar as well as regular flour...wow! Like I said, really disappointing. It's Low fat focused, not so low sugar. I don't think it's for a diabetic who's really trying to control sugars via diet. It would get 4 stars from me as a NON-Diabetic/Regular diet cookbook.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Everything Diabetes Cookbook: 300 Creative and Healthy Recipes That Put the Fun Back into Cooking (Everything (Cooking))

Preparing healthy meals for you and your family is easy!Are you or one of your family members among the estimated 15.7 million people suffering from diabetes? Diabetics have special needs, and cooking for them can be a frustrating and daunting task. The Everything Diabetes Cookbook puts the fun back into cooking for diabetics, providing you with more than 300 recipes to choose from to make a wide variety of tasty, nutritious meals.From delectable appetizers such as spicy almond dip to delicious entrees such as smoked mussels cream sauce over pasta, The Everything Diabetes Cookbook makes dining in a treat. In addition, the book offers complete nutritional information on every recipe and includes a wealth of useful tips and suggestions.Whether you want a health-conscious meal for one-or are cooking for someone with special nutritional needs-The Everything Diabetes Cookbook enables everyone to simply enjoy the culinary delights set before them without feeling deprived. Featuring mouthwatering recipes for:-Hearty breakfasts, such as egg white pancakes-Comfort foods, such as chicken noodle soup-The perfect starters, such as zesty feta and olive salad-One-stop dinner dishes, such as layered veggie casserole-Decadent desserts, such as glazed carrot cake

Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Everything Diabetes Cookbook: 300 Creative and Healthy Recipes That Put the Fun Back into Cooking (Everything (Cooking))

Read More...

Delicious The Very Best of Gluten Free & Wheat Free Cooking; a home style recipe collection for celiacs & wheat sensitive folks Review

Delicious The Very Best of Gluten Free and Wheat Free Cooking; a home style recipe collection for celiacs and wheat sensitive folks
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
There are now a lot of cookbooks for celiacs in the marketplace. I own many of them, but at times I feel that you need to have been a home economics major to decipher some of the complexities of the recipes. I found this one to be different... and actually more fun to use.
I thought that this author uses more creativity in her selection of recipes as well as in some of the ingredients that she is using. Some of my personal favorites are: Easy chili rellenos casserole, creamy curried chicken casserole, tomato pie, pigs in a poncho, bacon-honey mustard chicken, mulligatawny soup, Mexican albondigas soup, quick and easy griddle muffin bread, parmesan-thyme focaccia, Lou Ann's fruit pie squares, apple cream pie, and Diane's strawberry shortcake cheesecake.
A newly diagnosed gluten intolerant or wheat allergic person is already feeling overwhelmed, especially when they are required to find many ingredients that are somewhat unusual and often hard to come by. This just makes the learning to cook GF more stressful than it needs to be. While, of course, some GF flour blend recipes are mentioned in this cookbook, there are plenty of recipes that will not require the flours, so I could "hit the ground running" and I found some dishes that I could cook up right away without having a chemist's degree....or without many of the flours on hand. The directions were very easy to understand, based on ingredients available in the "real world". The recipes that I have tried taste normal, my family enjoys them and my friends actually look forward to seeing what I am making next from this interesting cookbook.
This is probably a good cookbook for newbies and also for those with wheat allergies, too. Seems like a cookbook to bridge the gap between both of those needs. I have given this cookbook as a gift to friends who were wheat sensitive and they were also very happy to finally have an easy yet interesting wheat free cookbook.
Oh, by the way, I also really liked the "homespun" look of this cookbook and LOVED the fact that it has a comb binding and opens flat and is very easy to use. It's really a great little cookbook overall, and I do highly recommend it!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Delicious The Very Best of Gluten Free & Wheat Free Cooking; a home style recipe collection for celiacs & wheat sensitive folks



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Delicious The Very Best of Gluten Free & Wheat Free Cooking; a home style recipe collection for celiacs & wheat sensitive folks

Read More...

Best Recipes: From The Backs Of Boxes, Bottles, Cans And Jars Review

Best Recipes: From The Backs Of Boxes, Bottles, Cans And Jars
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is an excellent cookbook full of easy, relatively quick recipes. You won't have to go searching for strange-sounding, obscure ingredients, either. These are not gourmet dishes; they are delicious, every-day recipes which will become favorites around your house.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Best Recipes: From The Backs Of Boxes, Bottles, Cans And Jars



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Best Recipes: From The Backs Of Boxes, Bottles, Cans And Jars

Read More...

Quick & Easy Vietnamese: 75 Everyday Recipes Review

Quick and Easy Vietnamese: 75 Everyday Recipes
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I love Vietnamese cuisine, and this book allows me to easily incorporate it into my everyday diet. The ingredients are easy to find in chain grocery stores and I can use ingredients I buy in multiple recipes, making the book economical. I recommend preparing your own chicken stock (have it on hand in freezer). It improves the taste of the recipes. I grow my own Vietnamese herbs in the summer, and the book will give me lots of opportunity to use them on the fly. I have also lost a little weight cooking from this book because the dishes are flavorful (be sure to use the Everyday Dipping Sauce) and healthy, and replaced microwaved and canned meals. Many books may be more in-depth, and not every dish is absolutely fantastic, but if you need something for the busy weekdays, this is a good choice.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Quick & Easy Vietnamese: 75 Everyday Recipes



Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about Quick & Easy Vietnamese: 75 Everyday Recipes

Read More...

Simply Ming One-Pot Meals: Quick, Healthy & Affordable Recipes Review

Simply Ming One-Pot Meals: Quick, Healthy and Affordable Recipes
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
As a Food Network follower from the early days, I remember Ming Tsai and his soothing, elegant cooking show "East Meets West" from the late '90s. When I saw his familiar smile on the cover of his new book, "Simply Ming, One-Pot Meals", I was intrigued. Upon opening the book I found myself making a dash for the register, salivating over which creation I was going to try first. This book is beautiful and very well thought out. EVERY recipe has a gorgeous photograph to accompany it and the range of recipes is astounding. Delightful beverage pairings accompany each dish. Next up on my list are his "Orange-Ginger Lamb Shanks with Barley" (with a Bordeaux blend, like Chateau Centemerle, Haut Medoc, France) and "Chile Pork Fillets with Garlic Brussels Sprouts" (with a big, buttery California Central Cost Chardonnay like Peter Michael). These one-pot wonders and their pairings are my new entertaining secret!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Simply Ming One-Pot Meals: Quick, Healthy & Affordable Recipes



Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about Simply Ming One-Pot Meals: Quick, Healthy & Affordable Recipes

Read More...

Sunfood Traveler: Guide to Raw Food Culture, Restaurants, Recipes, Nutrition, Sustainable Living, and the Restoration of Nature Review

Sunfood Traveler: Guide to Raw Food Culture, Restaurants, Recipes, Nutrition, Sustainable Living, and the Restoration of Nature
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I just got this book last week and so far I am absolutely loving it. I don't think I'll ever visit another city without it. Whenever I travel, I love to visit places like raw food restaurants, co-ops, farmers markets, organic farms, things of that nature. Those things, to me, can sometimes be more fun than visiting historic monuments!
John has found practically every single extraordinarily healthy/natural/sustainable nook and cranny in every US city as well as in countries all over the world. If you're anything like me, you wouldn't want to go somewhere and miss these. I've even discovered places in Chicago (my own city) that I didn't know about. This will be absolutely invaluable to any like-minded traveler.
I also love how friendly this book is to people who want to skip chapters and get right down to what interests them at the moment. There are over 60 short chapters on topics very relevant to the naturalist's culture. For me right now that's yoga, hemp, and a handful of other topics. Next week or next month, a new healthy and sustainable-living subject matter could pop up in my view and I'm sure I'd find a chapter on it in this book too. You can use it as a reference book in that case.
What I wasn't expecting to find in here was the dozens of raw vegan recipes in the back. (I'm a raw food person myself - [...]) This has been a real healthy bonus so far for me this week!
I have a feeling I'll have quite a few new goals on how to live more sustainably after reading more this book. A lot of us can definitely make small changes here and there for the benefit of the planet. There's a lot in here I'm not very familiar with. I love the author's philosophy too. He writes: "I, like everyone, know that the biggest room is the room for improvement."

Click Here to see more reviews about: Sunfood Traveler: Guide to Raw Food Culture, Restaurants, Recipes, Nutrition, Sustainable Living, and the Restoration of Nature



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Sunfood Traveler: Guide to Raw Food Culture, Restaurants, Recipes, Nutrition, Sustainable Living, and the Restoration of Nature

Read More...

The Grit Cookbook: World-Wise, Down-Home Recipes Review

The Grit Cookbook: World-Wise, Down-Home Recipes
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I received this cookbook as a Christmas present from friends who are residents of Athens. I have only eaten at The Grit once, and so I am far from being an expert on their menu, and I didn't have any "favorites" that I was compelled to try first. So I opened it up and attempted the first recipe that caught my eye, the Cinnamon Raisin-Craisin Bread. Oh baby.... this is the good stuff. The recipe was well written and easy to follow, and the resulting bread was out of this world.
This was just the first of many. All of the recipes I have tried have been great, especially the brunch dishes and cakes, and I haven't missed the meat one bit. Bravo, and thanks to my friend for sending it since I never would have known about this gem without her!

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Grit Cookbook: World-Wise, Down-Home Recipes

The Grit, located in the quintessential boho town of Athens, Georgia, is known far and wide as the touring musicians' restaurant of choice. This classic cookbook features 150 of The Grit's most requested recipes, including 20 new recipes to celebrate the 20th anniversary of this famous establishment. True to its Southern roots, this hip vegetarian eatery combines soul-food sensibility with meatless cuisine, and while there are plenty of Italian, Indian, Mexican, and Middle Eastern favorites to satisfy the well-traveled vegetarian, the heart of this cuisine maintains the down-home, soul-food feeling of simple foods and classic combinations that are guaranteed to please.

Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about The Grit Cookbook: World-Wise, Down-Home Recipes

Read More...

A Prairie Kitchen: Recipes, Poems and Colorful Stories from the Prairie Farmer Magazine, 1841-1900 Review

A Prairie Kitchen: Recipes, Poems and Colorful Stories from the Prairie Farmer Magazine, 1841-1900
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Good book with a lot of interesting old recipes. Great for anyone interested in recipes of the past.

Click Here to see more reviews about: A Prairie Kitchen: Recipes, Poems and Colorful Stories from the Prairie Farmer Magazine, 1841-1900

Developing recipes and sharing the results has been a lifelong vocation for Rae Katherine Eighmey. Today her kitchen library has thousands of recipes from 19th and 20th century cookbooks andpioneers' journals and magazines. It is her goal to make them easy for today's cooks to make in their own kitchens, and she has adapted hundreds of them for modern cooking methods. She says translating these recipes is part detective story, part chemistry and part old-fashioned cooking skill.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about A Prairie Kitchen: Recipes, Poems and Colorful Stories from the Prairie Farmer Magazine, 1841-1900

Read More...

The Kingston Hotel Cafe Cookbook: Free-Spirited Recipes to Warm the Soul Review

The Kingston Hotel Cafe Cookbook: Free-Spirited Recipes to Warm the Soul
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This cookbook is a delight, mixing fresh, seasonal ingredients in surprising but always appetizing ways -- and best of all, using recipes that are not arcane or terribly time-consuming (but do expect to spend a fair amount of time chopping). My personal favorites are two unusual summer dishes, one a fruit gazpacho and the other a hot blueberry soup with coconut milk and lime. Yum! I *will* seek out the restaurant when next I'm in the Pacific Northwest.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Kingston Hotel Cafe Cookbook: Free-Spirited Recipes to Warm the Soul



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Kingston Hotel Cafe Cookbook: Free-Spirited Recipes to Warm the Soul

Read More...

On The Chile Trail: 100 Great Recipes from Across America Review

On The Chile Trail: 100 Great Recipes from Across America
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Well presented work on America's uniqucipes from thee contribution to world of food; the chili pepper.
Cooking with chilis means a little more work for the cook, but Coyote Joe brings it all together. I liked the whole loin of pork roast (bone in) the best so far. Looking forward to cooking more receipes from this fine book.
Wish the publisher could have sprung for more color pictures to go with the recipes.

Click Here to see more reviews about: On The Chile Trail: 100 Great Recipes from Across America

Follow America's "chile trail"-from Louisiana to Texas to Baja, California-and sample a taste of some of the country's most famous and delicious chile concoctions. America's tastes are changing: salsa and hot sauce outsell barbecue sauce, ketchup and mustard combined! Now, join author and chile expert Coyote Joe on a lip-burning, forehead-sweating, back-road trip through the "Chile Belt." Follow the history and evolution of the chile throughout the South, West, and Southwest, and learn how each cuisine has developed and which chile peppers help define each region. Chapters in this spicy tome include: "Cajuns," which covers Creole dishes; "Cattlemen," covering the origins of and best recipes for Texas Red Chili and Lone Star Pork Picadillo; "Catholics," detailing New Mexico with dishes such as New Mexico Green Chile with Pork and Navajo Tacos; "Cowboys," covering the "Sonoran" cuisine of Arizona with a recipe for Herbed Spit Roasted Pork Loin; and "California,"where Baja, Mexican, and Nouvelle cuisine combine to create unique dishes.Coyote Joe is the TV host of the popular southwestern show The Sonoran Grill. He is the author of three previous cookbooks: A Gringo's Guide to Authentic Mexican Cooking, The Sonoran Grill, and Snack Attack: Quick Recipes to Conquer Your Cravings. He lives in Arizona.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about On The Chile Trail: 100 Great Recipes from Across America

Read More...

Green and Black's Chocolate Recipes Review

Green and Black's Chocolate Recipes
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I have made a couple of recipes from this book. The pictures are stunning, and I like to support a company that has a social conscience. I really like the Dark Chocolate Mousse Cake (which can be cut into pieces and frozen and keeps really well) and the chocolate mousses. However, I made the brownies and there were way too sweet. Then I started looking at the quantity of sugar that most recipes call for, and discovered that they are really overly sweet. I think you can probably make most of these treats with only half the sugar. In any case, a worthwhile buy.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Green and Black's Chocolate Recipes



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Green and Black's Chocolate Recipes

Read More...

Molto Italiano: 327 Simple Italian Recipes to Cook at Home Review

Molto Italiano: 327 Simple Italian Recipes to Cook at Home
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
`Molto Italiano' is Food Network icon Mario Batali's fourth and, to my lights, best cookbook to date. Like Mario, it has a very nice heft to it, advertising 327 recipes in an utterly simple organization in 450 easy to read pages with a built-in ribbon bookmark, something I think should be a required feature on all cookbooks. For all of those clamoring to buy Giada De Laurentiis' cookbook, I would recommend you pass that up for this book, which is far better.
Mario states that his cooking, and these recipes, are all based on Italian home cooking and repeats his often stated belief that in Italy, no one thinks the best cooking is done in restaurantes. Everyone believes the best cooking is done at their aunt's house or Nonna's house or at the house of the matriarch living down the street above the market. No one goes to a restaurant to get superior meals; they simply go to celebrate so Mama and Nonna don't have to cook. I have been hearing this claim for years on `Molto Mario', and it finally dawned on me the implication this has for all the Italian restaurant cookbooks out there, including Mario's own `Babbo Cookbook'. In strong contrast to cooking in `the F country' where an important difference is made between `haute cuisine' (Paul Bocuse, Joel Robuchon, et al), `cuisine bourgeoisie' ' (Julia Child, Richard Olney) and `cuisine provincial' (Elizabeth David, Patricia Wells), Italy has its regional home cooking and approximations to it done in restaurante, trattoria, osteria, and enotecas.
I am really happy to see this book devoted almost exclusively to RECIPES. There is a five page essay by David Lynch on Italian wines after the introduction and there is a one page list of recommended kitchen equipment at the end of the book (Please add food mill to list, as it is used in the potato gnocchi recipe. This is actually more useful than a potato ricer, as it can do more different things.). There is also two-page list of suppliers at the end of the book, but that's about it. The contents and relative size of the chapters accurately reflects Mario's mantra about the relative importance of various types of food in the Italian cuisine. Meat appears in almost every chapter as the base of a sauce or as a condiment, but it is less important as a main dish. The chapters are:
Antipasto, by far the largest chapter at 106 pages, divided into sections on vegetable, seafood, and meat dishes. This section is so large that this book can easily replace most books specializing in antipasti.
Soup, Rice, and Polenta takes 38 pages with 29 recipes, including all the most familiar dishes such as Roman egg drop soup, Tuscan cabbage and bean soup, saffron risotto, and polenta with clams.
Dried Pasta gets 24 pages with 20 recipes. For me, the most important recipe here is Mario's version of spaghetti alla carbonara, wherein he does not break the egg yolks, but leaves that to the diner to enhance the sauce by breaking the yolks. I learned this dish on `Molto Mario', and have been frustrated at everyone else's recipe which whips the yolks together with the white before mixing with the pasta.
Fresh Pasta chapter is over twice as long with 34 recipes, including a basic pasta dough and several gnocchi recipes. As Mario did his apprenticeship in Emilia-Romagna, where fresh pasta is much more common than the southern dry pasta, this is understandable.
Fish is understandably a major chapter at 48 pages and 31 recipes, including calamari, shrimp, crabs, snails, sardines, bass, sole, snapper, mullet, salt cod, monkfish, eel, tuna, swordfish, and mackerel.
Fowl is slightly smaller at 38 pages and 27 recipes with 10 chicken, 6 turkey, 5 duck, and 6 game bird recipes. This includes some classics such as hunter's style chicken and turkey meatballs.
Meat occupies a sizable chapter, at 54 pages and 40 recipes, including several of my favorites such as veal Marsala, sausage and broccoli rabe, stuffed meat loaf, and two recipes for calves liver. Yum.
Vegetables also get an appropriately sizable chapter with 34 pages and 34 recipes, including some with Mario's favorite ingredient, Guanciale (Note: Dean and Delucca in Greenwich Village carries Guanciale).
Sweets are in the last chapter of 42 pages and 32 recipes with items from the Austrian influenced Alps to Sicily. Mario goes so far as to recant his claim that Italians do not eat many sweets, revising his story to say that they don't eat many sweets at the end of big meals. Instead, they pack away the sugar with nibbles throughout the day.
Lots of familiar Italian dishes such as frittatas are here, but Mario doesn't waste precious room on bread that has been covered so well in other books.
While Mario gives the Italian name for each and every recipe, the recipe names in the various section tables of contents are all in English. Even those names which have become well known such as `cacciatore' are given as `hunter's style'. Italian is reserved for the recipes' subtitles. This makes the book especially good for first timers to Italian cuisine.
The recent book to which Mario's work is most closely comparable is Michele Scicolone's `1000 Italian Recipes'. I compared several recipes in the two books and, for various reasons almost always preferred Mario's version. In the veal Marsala, for example, Mario sautés in olive oil and uses butter as a final flavoring rather than sauteeing in hot butter. Both more practical and more authentic. In the potato gnocchi recipe, Mario gives much more delicate instructions for combining the riced potato, flour, and egg. Mario also starts off with less flour per potato, leaving the finishing amount of flour to the discretion of the cook.
This is my new first choice among Italian cookbooks for non-foodies. The recipes are all relatively simple, but with no compromises. For Mario fans, put this under your pillow at night. Very Highly Recommended.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Molto Italiano: 327 Simple Italian Recipes to Cook at Home

"The trick to cooking is that there is no trick." ––Mario Batali The only mandatory Italian cookbook for the home cook, Mario Batali's MOLTO ITALIANO is rich in local lore, with Batali's humorous and enthusiastic voice, familiar to those who have come to know him on his popular Food Network programs, larded through about 220 recipes of simple, healthy, seasonal Italian cooking for the American audience. Easy to use and simple to read, some of these recipes will be those "as seen" on TV in the eight years of "Molto Mario" programs on the Food Network, including those from "Mediterranean Mario," "Mario Eats Italy," and the all–new "Ciao America with Mario Batali." Batali's distinctive voice will provide a historical and cultural perspective with a humorous bent to demystify even the more elaborate dishes as well as showing ways to shorten or simplify everything from the purchasing of good ingredients to pre–production and countdown schedules of holiday meals. Informative head notes will include bits about the provenance of the recipes and the odd historical fact. Mario Batali's MOLTO ITALIANO will feature ten soups, thirty antipasti (many vegetarian or vegetable based), forty pasta dishes representing many of the twenty–one regions of Italy, twenty fish and shellfish dishes, twenty chicken dishes, twenty pork or lamb dishes and twenty side dishes, each of which can be served as a light meal. Add twenty desserts and a foundation of basic formation recipes and this book will be the only Italian cooking book needed in the home cook's library.

Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about Molto Italiano: 327 Simple Italian Recipes to Cook at Home

Read More...

The Food of Israel: Authentic Recipes from the Land of Milk and Honey (Food of the World Cookbooks) Review

The Food of Israel: Authentic Recipes from the Land of Milk and Honey (Food of the World Cookbooks)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The land of Israel is not only a land of Milk and Honey, but a land of seven main ingredients: olives, figs, dates, pomegranates, grapes, barley and bulgur wheat. The author, Ansky, is Jerusalem-born and is the food writer for Israel's prestigious MA'ARIV newspaper. The book opens with thirty pages of essays on the nature of Israel cuisine, and is followed by three pages of descriptions of ingredients. Each recipe is faced by an alluring, sensuous picture of the dish. Recipes include five eggplant salads, hummus, falafel, fatoush, shakshouka, Jerusalem kugel, patira, pastelicos, Etrog jam, Jerusalem Hamin, kibbeh, and Mussakhan (chicken with sumach and onions). Soups include a version of matzo ball, a kibbeh soup with beets and turnips, and lentil soup. Recipes for the Yemenite breads of malauach and Jachnun are included, in addition to recipes for lachma, and chickpeas with squid (well, maybe it isn't a kosher cookbook). Three exceptional recipes are Hraymi (a garlic halibut) which is the gefilte fish of the Sephardim; Leek Patties and Meat Cutlets in a lemon sauces; and Lamb Kebabs. Some recipes are from Israel's most famous restaurants and chefs.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Food of Israel: Authentic Recipes from the Land of Milk and Honey (Food of the World Cookbooks)

The Food of Israel is the only cookbook that successfully combines the best of Israeli cuisine with the allure of a great destination guide.Find recipes fro some of the best restaurants throughout Israel, including the many influences of the land: from the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and Asia.From piping hot pita bread with spicy zaÆatar seasoning, Israeli salads made with the finest olive oils to Arabic Malawach, stuffed sardines, and lamb with roasted eggplant, as well as the sweet Mutabeck, a pastry filled with salty sheep cheese and syrup.The modern Israeli palate is as vibrant and varied as its people.There is a recipe sure to please a wide variety of tastes.

Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about The Food of Israel: Authentic Recipes from the Land of Milk and Honey (Food of the World Cookbooks)

Read More...

Trail Food: Drying and Cooking Food for Backpacking and Paddling Review

Trail Food: Drying and Cooking Food for Backpacking and Paddling
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I have several books on dehydrating your own trail meals and this is easily the best. It is concise and full of good ideas and recipes. The guidance is flexible enough for the lightweight backpacker or for the canoe or pack mule traveler. For example, some of the recipes call for a dutch oven (too bulky and heavy for the lightweight backpacker) and others are suitable for a one pot meal (ideal for the lightweight backpacker).
A nice feature is the chart of drying temperatures and times for different foods. Also, the chart of calorie and protein content of different foods is important to making sure you get enough calories to keep going in the field and enough protein to keep your body from consuming your muscle tissue for fuel. There are also plans for building your own dehydrator for the do-it-yourselfer. The suggested one week meal plan is a good guide to get you started on packing for a trip.
The emphasis of this book is on drying individual ingredients and then rehydrating and combining them at meal time. This allows you to be more flexible in your meals, but takes a little longer at meal time. However, it also tells you how to use your own recipes to prepare a conmplete meal and then dehydrate it. Precooked spaghetti, rice or beans rehydrate and cook faster in the field. The book recommends having both types of meals with you for variety and flexibility. You can also dehydrate canned foods like vegetables or canned chicken, tuna or salmon and use them in your recipes.
This book is concise and a fast read, but packs a lot of information. This means that you need to pay attention to pick up all the important points. Fully half of the book gives infomration on dehydrating and meal planning as well as other important instructions and the other half gives some excellent recipes.
One important point (based on experience) is to be sure to try the recipes at home on the same stove and cooking utensels that you will have in the field. You want to make sure that you have everything you need and know how to use it BEFORE you are in the field and cold and wet and tired and hungry. That's not a good time to find out that you need another pot or that your pot isn't large enough to properly prepare your recipes!
"Trail Food" is all you need to dehydrate your own meals, but a few other general books on dehydrating wouldn't hurt to help you gain a full understanding of all the nuances of dehydrating.
Excellent book!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Trail Food: Drying and Cooking Food for Backpacking and Paddling


" . . . a book that will appeal to everyone who has ever choked down the pre-packaged, bargain-basement camp food (or gone bankrupt buying the good stuff)."--Canoe & Kayak
. . . if you're on the lookout for a way to bring real meals to the field, [this book] might have the answer."--Field & Stream
Life in the outdoors revolves around food--cooking it, eating it, packing it, carrying it. We even fantasize about it, especially after a week of eating store-bought provisions. This book is all about fulfulling those food fantasies and avoiding those expensive disappointments. Trail Food tells you how to remove water from food, to make it lighter and longer-lasting, without removing its taste. Learn to plan menus and prepare meals just like the ones you left behind, using fresh foods from your garden or market, prepared and seasoned the way you like them.
Why fantasize when you can have the real thing?

Buy NowGet 23% OFF

Click here for more information about Trail Food: Drying and Cooking Food for Backpacking and Paddling

Read More...