Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Crave or Complete Gluten Free Cookbook

Crave

Author: Maureen McKeon

Chocolate can be as fancy or as simple as you like. Even a simple brownie or chocolate pound cake, when accompanied with ice cream or a fruit sauce and topped with chocolate curls, is transformed into a dessert as elegant as it is delicious. The flavors of fruits, nuts, and liqueurs marry perfectly with the superb richness of chocolate, creating endless possibilities for rich and delectable sweet treats.

A celebration of chocolate, Crave presents 150 recipes for delicious desserts, cakes, cookies, confectionery, and puddings, as well as fillings, frostings, sauces, and chocolate decorations. There are recipes for all occasions and all levels of expertise: from simple family favorites to elaborate recipes for special occasions such as weddings and birthdays. For those who understand chocolate, working with it is a great joy, but for others, it can seem unnecessarily intimidating. This book aims to demystify cooking with chocolate, featuring a techniques section, which gives hints for using and baking with this most evocative of foods.



See also: GL Diet For Dummies or Healing Back Pain Naturally

Complete Gluten-Free Cookbook: 150 Gluten-Free, Lactose-Free Recipes, Many with Egg-Free Variations

Author: Donna Washburn

Enjoy the sensational food that is typically avoided in gluten-free diets.

Gluten-free foods needn't be plain or unappetizing. When there's a food allergy such as celiac disease, wheat intolerance or lactose intolerance, that usually means cooking two separate meals. That's no longer the case, however, thanks to the imaginative recipes in Complete Gluten-Free Cookbook. Everyone can enjoy these tantalizing recipes, which include everything from baked goods, pasta dishes, appetizers and family meals to mouthwatering desserts. Here is a sampling of the inspired gluten-free recipes, most of which have an egg-free variation:


• Asparagus risotto
• Wild rice latkes
• Skillet cornbread
• Bacon and tomato biscuits
• Coconut shrimp
• Curried beef with rice noodles
• Date orange streusel cake
• Cherry almond biscotti
• Pear hazelnut tart
• Shirley's old-fashioned donuts.

In addition to the 150 recipes, there is extensive information about various gluten-free flours, legumes and rices. Also included are tips and techniques for baking lactose-free and egg-free products, making the book helpful for those with other allergies.



Table of Contents:
Acknowledgments
Introduction

Speaking Our Language: Are We All on the Same Page?
Understanding Whole Grains
The Gluten-Free Pantry
Lactose Intolerance
Egg-Free Baking
Dips, Beverages, Soups and Salads
• 16 recipes
• Gluten Cross-Contamination in the Kitchen The Main Event
• 22 recipes Side Dishes
• 13 recipes Yeast-Free Biscuits, Muffins and Loaves
• Extra Baking Tips for Biscuits, Muffins and Loaves
• Working with Biscuit Mix
• Working with Muffin Mix
• 27 recipes Breads and Spreads
• Using Your Bread Machine
• Tips for Bread Machine Baking
• Tips for Mixer-Method Baking
• Make-Your-Own Bread Mixes
• Tips for Successful Starters
• A Page from Deanna's Diary
• 31 recipes Pies and Cakes
• 20 recipes Cookies, Squares and More
• 18 recipes

Equipment Glossary
Ingredient Glossary
Technique Glossary
References
About the Nutrient Analysis
Index

Book of Mediterranean Food or Chai

Book of Mediterranean Food

Author: Elizabeth David

Long acknowledged as the inspiration for such modern masters as Julia Child and Claudia Roden, A Book of Mediterranean Food is Elizabeth David's passionate mixture of recipes, culinary lore, and frank talk. In bleak postwar Great Britain, when basics were rationed and fresh food a fantasy, David set about to cheer herself --and her audience-- up with dishes from the south of France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece, and the Middle East. Some are sumptuous, many are simple, most are sublime.

Library Journal

These debuted in 1950 and 1955, respectively, thrusting the British-born David into the cooking limelight. She is credited with debunking a lot of myths involving foods and their preparation. These editions contain new forewords by Clarissa Dickson Wright, one of TV's famed Fat Ladies, who introduces the Mediterranean volume, and New Yorker columnist Molly O'Neill who offers her take on Summer Cooking. With the remarkable popularity of cooking shows, these might be more popular now. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.



Book review: Windows on the World Complete Wine Course or The Taste of Conquest

Chai: The Spice Tea of India

Author: Diana L Rosen

Discover the sumptuous flavors, rich traditions, and healing powers of chai!

Spirited blends of spices such as anise, cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves transform black tea into the rich, full-bodied elixir that has been enjoyed in India for centuries. As a warm, creamy treat with milk and honey or chilled as a summer cooler, healthful chai is the perfect beverage for any occasion.

In Chai you'll find:

-- 22 recipes for chai spice blends and variations from chai latt, to iced herbal chai

-- Stories of the chai experience from India and throughout the world

-- Recipes for chai scones, cookies, cakes, and more

-- Ayurvedic health benefits of chai spices



Table of Contents:

The Journey Begins

The History of Indian Tea

Classic Masala Chai

Masala Chai Comes to America

A Tea Lover's Tour of India

A Guide to Spices and Their Ayurvedic Benefits

Chai Accompaniments

Recommended Reading

Glossary

Resources

IndeX

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Traditional Foods Are Your Best Medicine or Cocktail

Traditional Foods Are Your Best Medicine: Improving Health and Longevity with Native Nutrition

Author: Ronald F Schmid

This book traces the cause of many chronic health problems to our modern diet and shows how a return to traditional foods can improve one's well-being.

Modern medicine now recognizes that the present-day Western diet is responsible for many of today's chronic illnesses. Nutritionists and anthropologists have noted the decline in health that accompanies indigenous peoples' transition from traditional to modern diets. In Traditional Foods Are Your Best Medicine, Ron Schmid explains how a return to a traditional diet can help you reduce your risk of heart attack by 50 percent; fight allergies, chronic fatigue, arthritis, skin problems, and headaches; recover from colds and flu in a day or two; and increase your life-expectancy. Chapters focusing on the major food groups, common diets, and health goals enable you to tailor a diet to your special needs.

New edition, previously titled Native Nutrition.



Interesting book: Hot Flat and Crowded or The Senator and the Socialite

Cocktail: 200 Fabulous Drinks

Author: Jane Rocca

Two hundred tantalizing drink recipes made more delectable by witty commentary and fanciful illustrations.

To the uninitiated, a drink is just a drink. But connoisseurs know that what you sip is a statement and knowing one's poison is essential to making the right one. With style and sophistication, The Cocktail acquaints readers with the various personalities at the bar: gin bats its eyes behind a bookworm's glasses, whiskey scowls at passersby from the curb, and rum does a tipsy salsa with the bartender.

Featuring 200 concoctions with character, The Cocktail also shows readers the savoir faire of pairing drinks with occasions- mixing up a Rum Runner for an afternoon spent in bare feet and hammocks, or shaking up a 42 Flying Mules for a supercharged late night of raw emotion.

From Manhattans to Mojitos, Tibetan Mules to Southern Shags, The Cocktail covers drinks the world over from classics to trendy eyebrow-raisers. This charming book is divided into nine sections according to liquor-each introduced with a whimsically written profile:

- Champagne: The flirty, giddy staple, tottering around on heels, but not without substance and body- champagne is the leggy blonde who also boasts a degree in neuroscience.

- Gin: If gin had a wardrobe, it would be full of pleated skirts and ruffled shirts, lots of tweed and brooches.

- Tequila: Pin a red rose in your hair and dust on some bronzer-time to be saucy and brazen because, after all, the tequila made you do it. . . .

- Vodka: As racy as a Bond girl, as alluring as a fifties Hollywood starlet, and as compelling as a KGB agent dabbling in a little Russianroulette.

Throughout, Kat Macleod's collages personify cocktails as alluring women with devil-may-care airs-you'll want to cozy up to the bar with all of them. Both mischievous and elegant, this is a book to lift anyone's spirits.

About the Author: Jane Rocca writes for the Sydney Morning Herald, West Australian, HQ, and Harper's Bazaar, among others.

Kat Macleod is a freelance illustrator and graphic designer for fashion and publication projects.



Eat Dessert First or Simple Vegetarian Pleasures

Eat Dessert First!: The Red Hat Society Dessert Cookbook

Author: Red Had Society

The Red Hat Society cooks are back! With a beautiful full-color dessert cookbook filled with enthusiasm, humor, and really good desserts.

"Life is uncertain, eat dessert first!" This beautiful cookbook maintains that you should "Eat Dessert Always!" Even the Red Hatters who no longer bother to cook regular meals will still strut their stuff with chocolate, meringues, pastries, and cakes.

Compiled by Red Hatters from around the country, this luscious collection ranges from simple to sublime, delightful to decadent. Beautiful full-color photos will inspire cooks of all ages and tempt cookbook buyers to add this book to their collection. More than 200 recipes include cakes, pies, candies, breads, puddings, cookies, and much more. For the non-cooks who still want to impress, there will be a special section of non-cook, easy-to-assemble desserts guaranteed to succeed.

The Red Hat Society Cookbook, published in the fall of 2006, was a huge success. Publisher's Weekly said, "The fun spirit of this cheery cookbook makes it a winner." The Red Hat Society Dessert Cookbook contains all new recipes; none are duplicated from the earlier cookbook.

Judith Sutton - Library Journal

"Life is uncertain-eat dessert first" is one of the mottoes of the Red Hat Society, an organization of women, now with more than a million members, determined to have fun growing old. This follow-up to the society's best-selling first cookbook, The Red Hat Society Cookbook, includes more than 200 recipes, contributed by "Red Hatters" from all over the country, for cakes and pies, cookies, frozen treats, beverages, and more. Sure to be popular, this is recommended for most collections.



Table of Contents:
Introduction     V
Cakes for Every Occasion     1
Savory Cheesecakes and Pies     53
Pastry Delights     91
Munchable Cookies     117
Mouthwatering Bars and Luscious Brownies     153
Old-Fashioned Favorites     191
Frozen Delights     211
A Medley of Other Sweet Pleasures     225
Brittles, Truffles, and Assorted Candies     245
Thirst-Satisfying Beverages     271
Index     283

See also: Bobbi Brown Beauty Evolution or Fibromyalgia

Simple Vegetarian Pleasures

Author: Jeanne Lemlin

Jeanne Lemlin is aware that we're all vegetarians some of the time and that what we crave is delicious food that is quick and simple to prepare. In Simple Vegetarian Pleasures, she shares her dedicated, relaxed approach to good food with two hundred tempting recipes for flavorful meals.

The flexibility and range of Jeanne's recipes encourage you to take advantage of seasonal fruits and vegetables, and her menu suggestions for every occasion help frazzled cooks move serenely, almost effortlessly from soup to nuts. With tips for keeping your pantry and refrigerator stocked to simplify meal preparation and vibrantly flavored recipes - for stovetop dishes, make-ahead casseroles and gratins, rich vegetable stocks, salads, and a range of pizzas, quesadillas, sandwiches, and vegetarian burgers -vegetarian cooking becomes easy, fast, and fabulous. Whether you're vegetarian all the time or occasionally enjoy a meatless dish, Jeanne Lemlin has your food right here - simply delicious and deliciously simple.

Winning Dishes:

Chickpea Salad with Fennel, Tomatoes, and Olives
Spinach Soup with Couscous and Lemon
Garlic Mashed Potatoes
Portobello Mushroom and Caramelized Shallot Omelette
Nantucket Cranberry Cake

Trish Hall

Ms. Wolfert does not just writer recipes; she writes about the recipes, and about the food, and about the people who make the food. —New York Times

Cooks Source

Simple Vegetarian Pleasures is, above all, a collection of recipes that will awaken your palate to the pleasures of vegetarian cooking, simply and easily.

Publishers Weekly

Lemlin (Main-Course Vegetarian Pleasures; Quick Vegetarian Pleasures) adds to her meat-free oeuvre with this unpretentious repertoire of quick-to-prepare vegetarian dishes. Without precisely defining "simple," Lemlin uses her introduction to give suggestions for stocking a pantry and a brief rundown on vegetarian nutrition. Recipes are fairly basic, although special touches enliven Mesclun Salad with Dried Apricots and Spiced Nuts; Beer Pizza (the brew's in the crust) and Coconut Lime Rice. Innovative approaches evidenced in such recipes as Tiny Eggplant Turnovers (thin slices of eggplant folded like ravioli around a goat cheese filling) accompany standards along the lines of Kale, Butternut Squash and White Bean Soup; Black Bean and Red Onion Burgers; and Macaroni and Cheese. Chapters like the one on tofu and tempeh dishes (Marinated Fried Tofu and Vegetable Salad with Mesclun, Baked Tofu and Mushrooms Hoisin, Garlicky Tempeh and Potato Ragout) open with useful tips (buy sealed tofu, because the loose variety is a breeding ground for bacteria). The chapter of breakfast recipes and that titled Pizzas, Burgers, Sandwiches, Quesadillas, Etc. brim with good ideas. Lemlin's refreshing, no-nonsense, unproselytizing attitude inspires. (May)

Library Journal

Haedrich (Simple Desserts, LJ 8/95) says that few of the many vegetarian cookbooks around are "grounded in the reality of family life," but his new book should remedy the situation. His four children have grown up on a vegetarian diet, and there are lots of kid-friendly recipes here, as well as advice on feeding a family with different likes and dislikes. Some of the recipes include variations or options for grownups only, and although Haedrich isn't a strict vegetarian, his partner (as he identifies her) is, and she's contributed some vegan recipes and alternatives. Any parents who are committed to a vegetarian diet should be interested in Haedrich's new book. Lemlin, who has written a number of excellent vegetarian cookbooks (including Main-Course Vegetarian Pleasures, LJ 4/15/95), is less concerned with avoiding dairy products, chocolate, and so forth than Haedrich is, but she is no less aware of the time constraints facing busy family cooks. She offers an attractive collection of quick and easy recipes, often with make-ahead suggestions. With its simple but fairly sophisticated recipes, Lemlin's latest should appeal to "sometime" as well as "all the time" vegetarians. Recommended for most collections.



Monday, December 29, 2008

The Measure of Her Powers or Simply Elegant Soup

The Measure of Her Powers: An M. F. K. Fisher Reader

Author: M F K Fisher

Spanning six decades and more than twenty books by our most famous epicure, The Measure of Her Powers reveals the sharp wit and affectionate humor of Mary Frances Kennedy Fisher.

Gathering journals, letters, translations, and selections from her many books, The Measure of Her Powers showcases Fisher's versatility, providing new readers and loyal fans alike with a sampler from her wide-ranging body of work.

M.F.K. Fisher is a perennial literary favorite. Her evolution from an uncertain young woman to a feisty elder with opinions about everything continues to fascinate readers who understand the complexities of life's hungers.



New interesting book: Applied Data Communications or Entrepreneurial Finance

Simply Elegant Soup

Author: George Morron

GEORGE MORRONE was named San Francisco's 2001 Chef of the Year. He has headed some of the nation's most elite kitchens, including San Francisco's four-star Aqua and Fifth Floor. He currently lives in Berkeley, California.

What People Are Saying

Charlie Trotter
George Morrone has always had a gifted touch, but with this delightful book he zeros in on something we all love--basic, delicious, comforting food, all in the form of satiny, unctuous, enticing soups! With Simply Soup, Chef Morrone takes Four Star restaurant ideas and distills them for the home cook.
Congratulations George, you've produced a winner!




San Francisco Flavors or Charlie Palmers Practical Guide to the New American Kitchen

San Francisco Flavors: Favorite Recipes from the Junior League of San Francisco

Author: Junior League of San Francisco

Enjoy a little bit of San Francisco wherever you live. Following on the runaway success of their previous two recipe collections, the Junior League of San Francisco is back with San Francisco Flavors, an all-new cookbook of Junior League favorites. Packed with tips from San Francisco's most celebrated chefs and sommeliers, San Francisco Flavors captures all the excitement of eating around the Bay Area. From appetizers to entrees to brunch and dessert, here are classics updated with a San Francisco twist, as well as sophisticated contemporary creations, and a wide range of recipes influenced by San Francisco's vibrant ethnic communities. With an introduction by Alice Waters of the legendary Chez Panisse restaurant, this beautifully photographed book evokes the vitality of this endlessly diverse and food-loving city.

THE JUNIOR LEAGUE OF SAN FRANCISCO is an organization of women committed to promoting volunteerism, developing the potential of women, supporting families, and improving the community through the effective action and leadership of trained volunteers. All of the proceeds from this book go to support this charitable work.



Go to: Creating Web Pages For Dummies or Microsoft Expression Web for Dummies

Charlie Palmer's Practical Guide to the New American Kitchen

Author: Charlie Palmer

Charlie Palmer's Practical Guide to the New American Kitchen is the first entirely waterproof, durable, and stain-resistant cookbook. Since 1988, when he opened New York City's Aureole, Palmer has set the standard for excellence in New American cuisine. Now he brings his expertise to a cooking manual for casual cooks full of inspiring recipes and essential information, including 135 entrйe, appetizer, and dessert recipes; which cookware, kitchen tools, and knives to buy for your kitchen; essential ingredients; how to plan menus and mix and match courses; and wine recommendations for each menu.



Enjoy Chinese Cuisine or Joseph C Piscatellas Healthy Heart Cookbook

Enjoy Chinese Cuisine (Quick and Easy Series)

Author: Judy Lew

Quick & Easy Enjoy Chinese Cuisine will guide even the most novice cook through the necessary techniques for preparing these delicious, easy-to-follow recipes-all of the recipes have been developed and tested in Chinese cooking classes. Additionally, this accessible volume includes some of the authors personal favorites, which have been handed down in her family for generations.

With recipes that are inexpensive and use readily available ingredients, step-by-step color photographs for each recipe, suggestions for substitutions, and a unique menu chart, Quick & Easy Enjoy Chinese Cuisine makes Chinese cooking both simple and enjoyable.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Judy Lew lives in Seattle and is the Director of the Uwajimaya Cooking School. She is well known for her cooking classes and her appearances on local radio and television programs.

Shirley Reis - KLIATT

This is a great book for beginning cooks who want to learn the basics of Chinese cooking. Every recipe is accompanied by several color illustrations that show exactly how to prepare the dishes in exquisite detail. All recipes feature ingredients readily available in grocery stores. Sample recipes: Fried Won Ton, Hot & Sour Soup, Fried Rice, Seafood Chow Mein, Almond Breaded Chicken, Black Bean Sauce Spareribs, Stuffed Mushrooms, Prawns with Lobster Sauce. A special section includes metric conversion tables along with cutting and cooking methods in addition to menu planning, customs, basic equipment and a glossary. This book really demystifies Chinese cooking. (Quick and Easy). KLIATT Codes: JSA-Recommended for junior and senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 2003, Kodansha, 120p. illus. index., Ages 12 to adult.



Table of Contents:
Foreword3
Acknowledgment4
Basic Tips5
Metric Tables8
Dim Sum and Appetizers
Fried Won Ton10
Sweet and Sour Sauce11
Egg Rolls12
Shrimp Dumpling14
Pot Stickers16
Steamed Barbecued Pork Buns18
Baked Barbecued Pork Buns20
Chicken Rolls22
Curry Turnovers24
Siu Mai26
Soups
Basic Soups28
Basic Chicken Stock (from bones or whole chicken)29
Won Ton Soup30
Sour and Hot Soup32
Corn Soup34
Seaweed Soup36
Rice and Noodles
Fried Rice (long grain)38
Steamed White Rice39
Tomato Beef Chow Mein40
Pan Fried Noodles41
Pork Chow Mein42
Seafood Chow Mein44
Mandarin Pancakes46
Meats and Poultry
Basic Sauce Meats or Vegetables48
Basic Sauce49
Bon Bon Chicken50
Steamed Chicken51
Sweet and Sour Chicken52
Spicy Fried Chicken53
Almond Breaded Chicken54
Miniature Drum Sticks56
Hot Spiced Chicken57
Glazy Sauced Chicken58
Oyster Sauce Chicken59
Hoisin Sauce Chicken60
Barbecued Spareribs61
Sweet and Sour Spareribs62
Black Bean Sauce Spareribs63
Barbecued Pork64
Spicy Ground Pork66
Spicy Beef67
Broiled Ginger Steak68
Ginger Beef69
Oyster Sauce Steak70
Seafoods
Fish with Soy Bean Paste72
Steamed Fish with Ginger73
Sweet and Sour Fish74
Crab with Black Bean Sauce76
Poached Whole Fish78
Stir-Fried Clams79
Stir-Fried Geoduck with Vegetables80
Deep-Fried Prawns82
Spicy Prawns83
Prawns with Lobster Sauce84
Spicy Shrimp Salad86
Vegetables, Eggs and Tofu
Chicken Maifun Salad88
Chicken with Almonds89
Pea Pods with Beef90
Broccoli with Beef91
Chinese Greens with Chicken92
Stuffed Mushrooms94
Prawns with Vegetables96
Pork with Scrambled Eggs98
Egg Fu Yung100
Deep-Fried Stuffed Tofu102
Spicy Tofu104
Information
Cutting Methods106
Cooking Methods108
Menu Planning110
Customs112
Basic Equipment113
Glossary116
Index119

New interesting textbook: Lose It for Life or American Yoga Associations Easy Does It Yoga

Joseph C. Piscatella's Healthy Heart Cookbook: Over 700 Recipes for Every Day and Every Occasion

Author: Joseph C Piscatella

Joseph C. Piscatella's five ground-breaking books on eating and health have sold nearly 2 million copies collectively. At long last, he has combined his hundreds of diverse, easy-to-follow and good-for-you recipes into this one new volume. And as a smart cook is a well informed one, this generous collection includes nutritional information with every recipe, plus an extensive nutritional guide featuring fat grams, calories, and other information about the widest array of foods and ingredients.

This mammoth cookbook has mouthwatering surprises on every page, and is a great step toward a longer, healthier, and happier life.



Sunday, December 28, 2008

Seafood Twice a Week or You Too Can Create Stunning Watermelon Carvings

Seafood - Twice a Week

Author: Evie Hansen

Did your doctor tell you to eat Seafood Twice a Week? Have you wanted to put more seafood into your diet? Then this is the book for you. Inside you'll find easy, quick recipes (most can be prepared in 15 minutes or less); tasty meals that are low in fat, cholesterol and calories; and inexpensive, budget conscious favorites.



Look this: Summer Gatherings or Tucson Cooks

You Too Can Create Stunning Watermelon Carvings

Author: Jay Ball

A popular pumpkin carver demonstrates a unique approach on creating stunning works of art out of watermelons.



50 Best Pizzas in the World or Kaiseki

50 Best Pizzas in the World: The Irresistible Winners of the Passion for Pizza Contest

Author: Honey Zisman

For everyone who loves pizza but is tired of the same old take-out slice. For everyone who sees a round of pizza dough (whether store-bought or homemade) as a blank canvas. For everyone who believes pizza is the most delicious, versatile, fun-to-eat food in the world. . .Here are the winners of the nationwide Passion for Pizza contest--50 recipes for traditional, hearty, veggie, meat, seafood, appetizer and dessert (yes, dessert) varieties of America's favorite food. Among the selections are:Hot Sausage and Pepper PizzaVidalia Onion PizzaPizza PrimaveraProscuitto and Broccoli PizzaEggplant Marinara PizzaFive Cheese Roasted Garlic PizzaCanadian Bacon and Vegetable PizzaSpicy Chicken and Bean PizzaPizza Pot PieChoclate Pizzaand many more.Also included are pizza recipes from top restaurants across America, plus the salads, sauces, crusts, and notes on ingredients to make your pizza kitchen complete.



Book about: Anatomy of Motive or Lion of Jordan

Kaiseki: The Exquisite Cuisine of Kyoto's Kikunoi Restaurant

Author: Yoshio Murata

A STUNNING JOURNEY IN DAZZLING PHOTOS AND INSIGHTFUL TEXT THROUGH THE COURSES OF JAPAN'S MOST ELEGANT AND ARTISTIC CUISINE.

The specialized cuisine served at Kyoto's famed Kikunoi restaurant is a feast for the eyes as well as the palate, and KAISEKI, by owner / chef Yoshihiro Murata, is at once a cookbook and a work of art. This sumptuously illustrated volume features-in seasonal format-the style of cooking that began as tea ceremony accompaniment and developed into the highest form of Japanese cookery.

Kaiseki celebrates the natural ingredients of each season with a spectacular presentation. After a front section explaining the history and components of kaiseki cuisine, Murata introduces his establishment's impressive menu. With candor and insight, he shares his thoughts on ingredients, preparation methods and the philosophy behind his dishes. He explains how the cuisine has changed over the years and continues to do so. His professional and personal accounts are enlightening; ranging, for example, from how some dishes evolve in the search for the proper combination of ingredients to a description of a learning encounter with a zen master.

Approximately twenty dishes from each season, chosen by chef Murata, have been lovingly and carefully photographed to convey the experience of being an honored guest at his restaurant. Also included are the exact recipes direct from the Kikunoi kitchen, and a glossary of kaiseki terms.



Saturday, December 27, 2008

Vintage Humor for Wine Lovers or Masters of American Cookery

Vintage Humor for Wine Lovers

Author: Malcolm Kushner

About the Author

Malcolm Kushner, "America's Favorite Humor Consultant," is an internationally acclaimed expert on humor and communications. His previous books include Public Speaking For Dummies (IDG Books) and The Light Touch: How To Use Humor For Business Success (Simon & Schuster).



Read also Getting Ready for Baby or Your Miracle Brain

Masters of American Cookery: M. F. K. Fisher, James Andrews Beard, Raymond Craig Claiborne, Julia Mcwilliams Child

Author: Betty Fussell

Ever since American soldiers returned home after World War II with a passion for pâté and escargots instead of pork and beans, our preferences have moved from cooked to raw, from canned to fresh, from bland to savory, from water to wine. And guiding us through our culinary revolution have been four of the world's finest food experts: Julia Child, Craig Claiborne, James Beard, and M. F. K. Fisher. In Masters of American Cookery, Betty Fussell demonstrates vividly how each of these chefs has made a unique and invaluable contribution to the American way of cooking and eating. In more than two hundred recipes—in chapters on appetizers, soups, salads, sauces, meats, poultry, fish, breads, cheeses and wines, and desserts—Fussell shares the artistry of these culinary masters. She also traces the evolution of each dish and provides insightful, often witty asides about the origins of the recipes. In the tradition of Waverley Root and M. F. K. Fisher herself, Fussell has combined elements of history, memoir, and the cookbook to create a food lover’s delight. As entertaining as it is instructive, Masters of American Cookery belongs on the bookshelf of anyone who cares about good food. Fussell provides a preface for this Bison Books edition.



Pasteles or Italian Food

Pasteles

Author: Maite Rodriguez Fischer

A new concept in cookbooks, this series is designed for those who want to replicate at home the trendy international cuisine they typically enjoy at restaurants. Simple and nutritious sushi, fish, salad, and wok recipes put elegant appetizers and entrees within reach of the novice cook. Each book in the series contains 50 recipes.



New interesting book: Blender Bible or Kitchen Con

Italian Food

Author: Elizabeth David

Elizabeth David's Italian Food was one of the first books to demonstrate the enormous range of Italy's regional cooking. For the foods of Italy, explained David, expanded far beyond minestrone and ravioli, to the complex traditions of Tuscany, Sicily, Lombardy, Umbria, and many other regions. David imparts her knowledge from her many years in Italy, exploring, researching, tasting and testing dishes. Her passion for real food, luscious, hearty, fresh, and totally authentic, will inspire anyone who wishes to recreate the abundant and highly unique regional dishes of Italy.

Library Journal

France and Italy are especially famous for wine and food. David studies and analyzes cooking the way a scholar analyzes literature, and, as a result, her titles are far more than just cookbooks. Along with the recipes, of which there are many, she explains at length the histories of the dishes and offers splendid advice on serving wine with the meals. Both volumes, published in 1960 and 1958, respectively, contain forewords by Julia Child. Italian Food was the author's personal favorite.



Friday, December 26, 2008

Cupcakes or Hospitality Management Accounting

Cupcakes: From the Cake Mix Doctor

Author: Anne Byrn

Cupcake magic...Cupcakes are celebratory, cupcakes are comforting, cupcakes are peel-back-the-paper and tickle-your-inner-child treats that elicit smiles wherever they appear.

But leave it to bestselling cookbook author Anne Byrn to take cupcakes to the next level. Proving that cupcakes can do everything a big cake can do, only better, here are 135 dazzling recipes —and you'll never believe they started with a mix.

Publishers Weekly

From chocolate ganache to toppings with panache, this latest addition to the Cake Mix Doctor canon offers creative ideas and 135 recipes for tiny, delicious cakes. The detailed table of contents and alluring cupcake likenesses in the opening assemblage of photos will have readers salivating. The Cupcakes with Class chapter offers tasty elegance, from Cappuccino Chip to Harvey Wallbanger (which contains vodka and liqueur). Kids' cupcakes range from Cotton Candy to Caterpillar, and priorities delightfully in place, Byrn provides party-planning suggestions for favors and activities that complement the cupcakes. Helpful hints abound via "The Cupcake Doctor Says" tidbits, which appear throughout the book, and mini-essays that ponder questions such as "What's a Muffin? What's a Cupcake?" The Muffins: Breakfast Cupcakes chapter suggests ways to move beyond the classic blueberry (though Byrn offers a new take on that standby, too); Cupcake Cousins and Cupcake Creations will give do-it-yourselfers the confidence to try making fancy desserts in muffin tins. Fans of the regular QVC guest will already know that homemade frostings are a must, "the strand of pearls setting off the classic little black dress." Recipes for creams, glazes, frostings and sauces will help cupcake chefs "experiment and enjoy." (May) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

The Cake Mix Doctor's many fans will be delighted that she has returned to sweet baking (her last book, The Dinner Doctor, just didn't have the same appeal as her other two Cake Mix Doctor titles). Here, Byrn presents 135 recipes for cupcakes for any occasion-from "cupcake cousins," such as Mini Strawberry Trifles baked in a muffin pan, to Breakfast Cupcakes (a.k.a. muffins) to Jelly Doughnut Cupcakes-along with an assortment of toppings, frostings, and glazes. There are imaginative cupcakes just for kids, fancy ones for adults, and elegant creations like a Cupcake Wedding Cake. The opening essay includes 16 full-color photographs. For all baking collections. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.



Table of Contents:

Cupcakes 101 (p. 4)
Mastering the art of the cupcake, from mixing the batter to frosting and decorating. The pans, the pantry, and all you need to know to tote cupcakes to school functions, potlucks, and family reunions.

Cupcakes with Class (p. 22)
No one outgrows the love of cupcakes. Rich in sophisticated flavors, these are the desserts to serve at your most elegant dinner party: Warm Chocolate Cupcakes with Molten Centers, Cherry Cheesecake Cupcakes, Fresh Pear and Gingerbread Cupcakes with a Creamy Lemon Frosting, and Coconut Snowballs.

Cupcakes for Kids (p. 94)
Loaded with kid appeal, these cupcakes are irresistible no matter what your age is. Try Butterfly Cupcakes with Pastel Frostings, Pineapple Banana Smoothie Cupcakes, Buried Treasure Cakes, Peanut butter Surprises, and A Cupcake Zoo, or one of the many other treats in this chapter.

Celebration Cupcakes (p. 170)
Special occasions deserve the most festive cupcakes. make Strawberry Rose Cakes for Valentine's Day, Fireworks Confetti Cupcakes for the Fourth of July, Pilgrims' Hats for Thanksgiving, and adorable Snowman Cupcakes for the winter holiday season.

Muffins: Breakfast Cupcakes (p. 220)
Freshly baked, warm muffins make a delicious sart to the day, and this chapter has plenty of favorites, both sweet and savory: Blueberry Yogurt Streusel Muffins, Butter Pecan Banana Muffins, Easy Granola Muffins, and Green Chile and Corn Mini Muffins, to name a few.

Cupcake Cousins (p. 272)
Desserts with cupcake aspirations:Mini Strawberry Trifles, Fresh Raspberry Cream Cakes, Little Chocolate Bar Cakes, and Mini Créme Brûlées—all made in a cupcake pan.

Cupcake Creations (p. 296)
When is a cupcake not a cupcake? When it becomes part of a wreath or a wedding cake or an artist's palette or a bouquet. With the right decorations, cupcakes can be used to form a magical centerpiece for any party.

Frostings and Glazes (p. 316)
A cupcake just isn't a cupcake without that final touch—a pretty swirl of homemade frosting or glaze. There are twenty-five to choose from, including Chocolate and malted Milk Buttercreams, Creamy Lemonade, Butterscotch Maple, and Caramel Pan Frostings. And an easy Basic Chocolate Ganache. What could be better?

See also: Reiki the Ultimate Guide Learn Reiki Healing with Chakras Plus New Reiki Healing Attunements for All Levels or The Lemon Juice Diet

Hospitality Management Accounting

Author: Martin G Jagels

The success of every business in the hospitality industry depends on maximizing revenues and minimizing costs. This Ninth Edition continues its time-tested presentation of fundamental concepts and analytical techniques that are essential to taking control of real-world accounting systems, evaluating current and past operations, and effectively managing finances toward increased profits. It offers hands-on coverage of computer applications and practical decision-making skills to successfully prepare readers for the increasingly complex and competitive hospitality industry.



New American Chef or Educating Peter

New American Chef: Cooking with the Best of Flavors and Techniques from Around the World

Author: Andrew Dornenburg

America's leading authorities on ten influential cuisines offer a master class on authentic flavors and techniques from around the world
Today's professional chefs have the world to use as their pantry and draw freely on a global palette of flavors. Now Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page bring together some of the foremost culinary authorities to reveal how to use different flavors and techniques to create a new level of culinary artistry. Mario Batali, Daniel Boulud, Alain Ducasse, Paula Wolfert, and many others share the foundations of ten influential cuisines:
* Japanese
* Italian
* Spanish
* French
* Chinese
* Indian
* Mexican
* Thai
* Vietnamese
* Moroccan
Packed with information, ideas, and photographs that will inspire every cook, The New American Chef shares a mouthwatering array of nearly 200 authentic recipes, including Honey Spare Ribs from Michael Tong of Shun Lee Palace, Gazpacho Andaluz from José Andrés of Jaleo, and Steamed Sea Bass with Lily Buds from Charles Phan of The Slanted Door.

Publishers Weekly

Dornenburg and Page (Chef's Night Out; Becoming a Chef) collaborate successfully once more, bringing together the international inspirations that today's chefs draw from. As unusual, often imported ingredients become more readily available, the authors believe that "there is an exciting opportunity for experimentation and exercising creativity. On the other hand, experimentation-particularly in the hands of an inexperienced chef-can be disastrous." Dornenburg and Page address this problem by bringing together 10 fundamental international cuisines in one handy volume. Drawing on the knowledge of the leading exponents of each fare, and liberally sprinkling in quotations, they distill these styles, ingredients and techniques into a philosophy that can guide the chef or the inspired home cook to produce authentic results. Whether focusing on Japanese or Moroccan cuisines, the authors call for advice upon the likes of such notables as Paula Wolfert, Rick Bayless and Daniel Boulud, who provide not only their expertise but also their recipes. Each section is divided into the fundamentals, including a culinary map, flavor palette, ingredients and techniques as well as a suggested reading list from cookbook shop notable Nach Waxman, before finishing with several timeless recipes that provide a basic repertoire. Most recipes require a certain level of knowledge and competence, but some, such as the clean-tasting Gazpacho Andaluz and vibrant Chicken Tangine with Prunes, are within reach of any cook. The finished work is deceptively thorough, but it works better as a guide to the values, tastes and methods that form each cuisine than as a recipe book. (Oct.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.



New interesting book: The Arthritis Cure or Gut Solutions

Educating Peter: How I Taught a Famous Movie Critic the Difference Between Cabernet and Merlot or How Anybody Can Become an (Almost) Instant Wine Expert

Author: Lettie Teagu

Lettie Teague knows wine. She has been the wine editor at Food & Wine magazine for almost a decade. The only question she is asked more than "Can you recommend a great wine for under $10?" -- great cheap white: Argiolas Costamolino Vermentino from Sardinia; great cheap red: Alamos Malbec from Argentina -- is "What is the best way to learn about wine?"

After many years of fielding these questions, Lettie was determined to debunk the myth that learning about wine is hard. She decided to find just one wine idiot and teach him a few fundamentals -- how to order off a restaurant wine list without fear, approach a wine merchant with confidence, and perhaps even score a few points off a wine snob.

Enter her neighbor, good friend and complete wine neophyte Peter Travers, Rolling Stone magazine's longtime film critic.

Peter Travers proved the perfect Eliza Doolittle to Lettie's Professor Higgins. As a film critic he made bold pronouncements ("This movie stinks," which could be readily translated to "This Cabernet tastes like Merlot") and exhibited a finely tuned visual sense ("The cinematography could be improved" could easily become "This wine is too white"). But, most important, Peter knew almost nothing about wine.

As Lettie begins their lessons, Peter puts down his ever-present glass of "fatty" Chardonnay and learns that there is a huge world out there full of all kinds of wine. He is taught to swirl his glass to release the wine's aromatic compounds -- or esters -- above the rim and vows, "I'm going to do that for Martin Scorsese next time I see him. I'll volatize my esters for him."

Thus Lettie enlightens her wine-challenged but film-savvy friend aboutthe Facts of Wine: how to hold a glass; the vocabulary of wine; how wine is made; how to read labels; how to tell the difference between grape varieties; how to make sense of vintages; how to glean information about a wine simply by looking at the shape and color of the bottle; and an overview of the great wine regions of the Old World and the New.

Finally, after many fact-filled, hilarious lessons, Lettie takes Peter to the most famous American wine region of all, Napa Valley, where he hobnobs with wine and Hollywood royalty and finally puts his new skills to the test in the real world.

Part buddy movie, part serious wine tutorial, Educating Peter is as much a treat for oenophiles in on the joke as it is for beginners who think Chablis is a brand name of wine.

Publishers Weekly

When Teague, the wine editor for Food & Wine, first takes Rolling Stonefilm critic Peter Travers in hand, he's the sort of uninformed drinker who rarely spends more than $10 on a bottle and inevitably ends up selecting bad vintages. So Teague (Fear of Wine) starts pouring him selections from around the world. Each region gets its own chapter, transitioning between the tastings and Teague's general recommendations. Later, after a visit to Napa Valley, she takes Travers out to dinner to see if he'll be able to interact with sommeliers and match wine to various courses, then visits an assortment of shops to show him what to look for when building his own collection. She corrects his vocabulary when he says a wine has "a fatness to the swirl" instead of "good viscosity." He stubbornly resists New Zealand vintages because director Peter Jackson criticized them, and complains that green wine bottles keep him from seeing how red the wine is. Novice tasters can add this pleasure to more traditional guides, while enjoying the entertainment value. (Mar. 13)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information



Table of Contents:

Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction How to Taste Age and Temperature The Basic Six Grapes and Beyond Peter's Tasting Vocabulary What Makes a Wine Great?

Bottle Colors, Shapes, and Sizes How Wine Is Made Winemaking

Old World Wine

France

Bordeaux Burgundy Alsace The Loire Valley The Rhône Valley Champagne

Italy Spain Portugal Germany Austria Hungary

New World Wine

Argentina Australia New Zealand South Africa Chile New York State Oregon and Washington State California

Sonoma More That Is Not Napa

Peter Faces His Fears, or Four Days in the Napa Valley The Night the Eagle Landed

Peter at Large in the Wine World, or Peter Goes Public

Peter at the Zachys Wine Auction Peter in a Restaurant, or a Guide to Pairing Wine with Food Peter Dines with the Collector Peter Goes Shopping, or What to Do in a Wineshop

Five Favorite Retail Wine Sources

The Final Exam The Final Word: Peter

The Dictionary of Modern Herbalism or Non Commercial Food Service Managers Handbook

The Dictionary of Modern Herbalism: The Complete Guide to Herbs & Herbal Therapy

Author: Simon Y Mills

•An indispensible guide to the herbal remedies most used in the Anglo-American and European traditions.
• Defines each remedy in terms of its main pharmacological actions and usual therapeutic applications.
•A useful reference to the application of traditional medicines for modern health problems, for both professional and lay use.
• SIMON MILLS is President and Director of Research of The National Institute of Medical Herbalists, and he runs a private medical herbal practice in Devonshire, England.



New interesting book:

Non-Commercial Food Service Manager's Handbook: A Complete Guide for Hospitals, Nursing Homes, Military, Prisons, Schools, and Churches

Author: Douglas Robert Brown

Finally, the non-commercial food service director has a comprehensive manual to aid them in their day-to-day operations. This massive 600-page new book will show you step by step how to set up, operate, and manage a financially successful food service operation. The author has left no stone unturned. The book's 19 chapters cover the entire process from startup to ongoing management in an easy-to-understand way, pointing out methods to increase your chances of success, and showing how to avoid many common mistakes. The new companion CD-ROM contains all the forms in the book in PDF format. While providing detailed instruction and examples, the author leads you through basic cost-control systems, menu planning, sample floor plans and diagrams, successful kitchen management, equipment layout and planning, food safety and HACCP, dietary considerations, special patient/client needs, learn how to set up computer systems to save time and money, learn how to hire and keep a qualified professional staff, manage and train employees, accounting and bookkeeping procedures, auditing, successful budgeting and profit planning development, as well as thousands of great tips and useful guidelines. The extensive resource guide details over 7,000 suppliers to the industry; this directory could be a separate book on its own. This covers everything for which many companies pay consultants thousands of dollars.



Thursday, December 25, 2008

Pillsbury Appetizers or Sweet Serendipity

Pillsbury Appetizers: Small Bites Packed with Big Flavors from America's Most Trusted Kitchens

Author: Pillsbury Editors

Pillsbury makes it easy to entertain with more than 300 recipes for cold and hot appetizers, along with creative theme menus to jump-start the party. So go ahead and make some fun!



• Dips, Spreads and Salsas

• Meatballs, Wings and Ribs

• Kabobs, Canapés and Crostini

• Roll-Ups, Mini Pizzas and Snack Mixes

• Antipasti, Spring Rolls and Empanadas

• Plus—Cocktails, Punches

• and Fun Nonalcholic Beverages




New interesting textbook:

Sweet Serendipity: Delightful Desserts and Devilish Dish

Author: Stephen Bruc

Marilyn Monroe's favorite was Miss Milton's Lovely Fudge Pie, and she'd eat it wearing nothing but Chanel No. 5 and a raincoat. Andy Warhol always savored the Lemon Icebox Pie, stealing bites while he watched and sketched other diners through cutout holes in a newspaper he held upsidedown in front of his face. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis came for the frozen hot chocolate and brought JohnJohn and Caroline, who now brings her children.
Where did all these luminaries and many more devour these sinful treats? At Serendipity 3, New York's legendary dessert restaurant and boutique. The restaurant's history is as rich as its desserts, and this book, commemorating its fiftieth anniversary, lets you indulge in both.
Founded in 1953, before the concept of theme restaurants even existed, Serendipity was one of the first restaurants in the country to turn dining into a theatrical experience, to create an ambiance as fun as the food that was served. Located near Bloomingdale's in one of New York's toniest East Side neighborhoods, Serendipity fills two floors of a historic townhouse. Decked out with original Tiffany lamps, black-and-white floors, fabulous Victorian oversized posters, and idiosyncratic adornments such as a huge clock and metal horse, the restaurant takes you down the rabbit hole into a fairytale world.
The desserts, represented by seventy-five recipes in this book, make everyone feel like a kid again. Many evoke the comfort of grandmother's kitchen, but many also have a creative, irreverent kick to them. Since many are based on heirloom recipes from one of the founders' families, all the recipes are easily achieved at home and can make fun projects for the wholefamily.
Among the recipes included:

Cheesecake Vesuvius
Strawberry Fields Sundae
Chocolate Chip Pizza
Chocolate Blackout Cake
Lemon Rain Drops
Frozen Tutti Frutti

Library Journal

Serendipity is a one-of-a-kind ice cream shop/caf /boutique on New York City's Upper East Side, as popular today as when it opened 50 years ago. It has always attracted a mix of celebrities, as well as families with kids, and Bruce, one of the three original owners, reminisces about the early days (when Andy Warhol would pay his check with a piece of rejected artwork) and memorable moments (Greta Garbo stopped in to browse one day but left as soon as she was recognized). The caf serves a mix of savory items, including foot-long hot dogs and omelets with caviar, but its most famous creation by far is Frozen Hot Chocolate. The recipes here are all for its indulgent desserts. For area libraries and larger baking collections. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.



Table of Contents:
Introduction7
Tremendous, Stupendous Cakes16
Melt-in-Your-Mouth Cookies44
World-Famous Pies56
More Delectable Delights That Defy Categorization76
Thick, Rich, and Dreamy Puddings92
Smooth, Icy, and Irresistible Frozen Drinks104
New York's Most Outrageous Sundaes116
Index126

Le Repertoire de la Cuisine or Slow Cooker Magic in Minutes

Le Repertoire de la Cuisine: A Guide to Fine Foods

Author: Louis Saulnier

This book is treasured by thousands in the culinary profession. If you are interested in good food and cooking, it will prove of great value and be constantly in use. This volume presents the fundamental elements of cookery: explanations of French culinary terms; recipes for the great sauces; and ingredients and preparations for appetizers, soups, egg and fish courses, entrees, salads, vegetables, and desserts.



Books about: Overcoming Binge Eating or The Pritikin Edge

Slow Cooker Magic in Minutes (Favorite Brand Name Series)

Author: Staff of Publications International

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

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Russian Heritage Cookbook or Convection Oven Cookery Revised

Russian Heritage Cookbook

Author: Lynn Visson

Alongside the splendors of tsarist Russia-its art, architecture, and literature-sits its cuisine, a marvelous, little-known part of Russian heritage. Based on favorite family recipes, collected by the author from the private collections of the old Russian йmigrй community of New York City, The Complete Russian Cookbook represents the restoration of an entire culinary heritage, which previously existed only in memory.

Most Americans have experienced little of Russian cuisine: Beef Stroganoff, Pirozhki, Borscht, and a few others. The Complete Russian Cookbook brings together the best of these classic dishes, along with hundreds of recipes for the sumptuous meals that have delighted generations, each tested by both Russian and American cooks and adapted for the modern kitchen. More than 360 recipes are included, covering everything from hors d'oeuvres to main dishes to desserts and beverages. Potato Pirozhki with Mushroom Filling, Carp а la Russe, and Almond Cake with Apricot Wine Filling are just a few of the delicious dishes to be found here, accompanied by useful introductions that provide a history of Russian cuisine.

Library Journal

In this revised and expanded edition of The Complete Russian Cookbook (originally published in 1988), Visson, a writer and interpreter whose parents emigrated from Russia, was able to incorporate new recipes from young and old cooks in Russia, all eager to preserve the traditional recipes of their homeland. (The first edition contained recipes primarily from members of New York City's emigre community.) Included here are dozens of recipes, many hearty, homey dishes along with those reserved for special occasions. Although Visson provides a general introduction to Russian food, and individual chapters open with more specific detail, few recipes include headnotes. Visson's ambitious book also lacks the charm of Catherine Cheremeteff Jones's recent memoir with recipes, A Year of Russian Feasts, but most collections will still want it for the sheer number of recipes it contains. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.



Interesting textbook: Atkins Journal Package or Juicing for Life

Convection Oven Cookery, Revised

Author: Christie Katona

A delicious collection of recipes for your new convection oven

  • more than 100 easy-to-follow recipes
  • recipes for every course
  • descriptions of various models of convection ovens; how they operate; how to take care of them
  • tips and techniques for using your convection oven
  • instructions for converting your favorite recipes to convection oven cookery



Wine Food and Friends or Slow Cookers

Wine, Food and Friends

Author: Karen MacNeil

Wine and cooking enthusiasts will know immediately that they have uncorked something truly magical with Karen MacNeil's Wine, Food & Friends. This book combines the culinary expertise of Cooking Light with the wine connoisseurship of Karen MacNeil, today's preeminent wine authority. Award-winning author, lecturer, and television personality, Karen is a champion when it comes to the enjoyment of food and wine, which she summarizes in "The Only Ten Principles of Matching Wine and Food You'll Ever Need." Pair Karen's zeal for the art of wine with more than 150 Cooking Light kitchen-tested recipes and you have all the ingredients you need to reach new levels of gastronomical glory.

Features:

  • Build your culinary knowledge base by combining 30 top-rated menus and recipes with wine recommendations for every season and any occasion
  • More than 100 full color photographs give visual cues for presenting casually elegant dishes
  • Demystifies wine terms with Karen MacNeil's tried-and-true food and wine matchmaking concepts
  • Offers Karen's own Sip Tips-easy-to-remember wine descriptors and non-intimidating advice on buying, ordering, and serving wine



Read also Jungle Effect or Younger Next Year

Slow Cookers (Quamut)

Author: Quamut

Quamut is the fastest, most convenient way to learn how to do almost anything. From tasting wine to managing your retirement accounts, Quamut gives you reliable information in a concise chart format that you can take anywhere. Quamut charts are:

  • Authoritative: Written by experts in their field so you have the most reliable information available.
  • Clear: Our explanations take you step-by-step through everything from performing CPR to threading a needle.
  • Concise: You’ll learn just what you need to know—no more, no less.
  • Precise: Quamut charts include detailed text, photos, and illustrations to show you exactly how to do just about anything.
  • Portable: Your know-how goes with you wherever your projects lead.
  • Durable: A laminated finish helps Quamut charts withstand repeated use (Car Care & Roadside Emergencies) and abuse (Cooking Basics).


Let dinner make itself.

Tired of slaving away in the kitchen? Make the switch to a slow cooker. This energy-efficient countertop appliance can be left unattended for hours as it prepares hearty meals of all kinds. Get a taste of how to:

  • Use and care for your slow cooker safely and with minimal cleanup

  • Adapt traditional stovetop and oven recipes to your slow cooker

  • Slow cook meat, veggies, fish, and pasta with more than 30 delicious recipes



Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Essence of Chocolate or Williams Sonoma Mastering

Essence of Chocolate: Recipes from Scharffen Berger Chocolate Makers and Cooking with Fine Chocolate

Author: John Scharffenberger

The first cookbook from America's premier chocolate makers, filled with recipes, kitchen tips, and dazzling photographs

As Americans have become fascinated by chocolate, and especially high-quality chocolate, one name has risen above the rest: Scharffen Berger. Founded in 1996 by Robert Steinberg, a physician and amateur chef, and John Scharffenberger, an award-winning vintner, the company's confections have won a following among food professionals and home cooks alike. Now, in their first cookbook, the duo shares their passion with the world.

The Essence of Chocolate features more than one hundred spectacular -- and often simple -- recipes drawn from the Scharffen Berger files and from two dozen top pastry chefs. It is divided into three sections: "Intensely Chocolate," which includes such decadent treats as That Chocolate Cake, in which the sumptuous flavor of chocolate is the star; "Essentially Chocolate," with lighter chocolate desserts like White Velvet Cake with Milk Chocolate Ganache or Brown Butter Blondies; and "A Hint of Chocolate," with recipes that use chocolate's spicier qualities to their best effect, like Vegetarian Chili and John's Cocoa Rub. And all will work magnificently with any high-quality chocolate. Filled with helpful tips, sumptuous photographs, and the story of how chocolate is really made, here is a book that is every bit as seductive as its subject.

Robert Steinberg had been practicing medicine for twenty years when he went to France in 1994 to explore chocolate making, then returned to his own kitchen to create the first versions of what would be Scharffen Berger chocolate. He lives in San Francisco and until recently practicedat the San Francisco Free Clinic. John Scharffenberger founded Scharffenberger Cellars, one of the premier sparkling wine manufacturers in the United States. He sold his interest in the winery, and in 1996 he and Steinberg founded Scharffen Berger Chocolate Maker. Scharffenberger lives in Berkeley and Mendocino County.

USA Today

Chocoholics will find this book as tasty as a dish of chocolate mousse . . . The authors are the California chocolatiers noted for Scharffen Berger, one of the world's premium dark chocolates.

Publishers Weekly

In their first cookbook, the founders of Scharffen Berger Chocolate Maker are clear from the start: chocolate is their passion. Every section of their book reflects that, from the recipes drawn from the Scharffen Berger Company and various pastry chefs to the detailed sections on how chocolate is made and where its future lies. The first of three sections, "Intensely Chocolate," features divine classics like That Chocolate Cake, Chocolate Chocolate Cupcakes, and Chocolate Mousse. The "Essentially Chocolate" part takes a lighter approach with Souffl , Chocolate Ginger Pots de Cr me, and Chocolate Biscotti. In "A Hint of Chocolate," the most interesting section, chocolate is added to basics such as breads, muffins and waffles, as well as savory dishes like Chile Marinated Flank Steak (made with cocoa powder) and Tortilla Soup (with bittersweet chocolate). Throughout the book are "Legends & Lore," delightful one-page chocolate trivia facts (such as how Devil's Food got its name), and "Quick Fix" pages, with instructions on fast and easy chocolate treats like chocolate-dipped potato chips and pretzels. Beautifully simple photographs complement the elegant recipes. (Nov.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.



Interesting book: Corporate and Foundation Fund Raising or Lowell

Williams-Sonoma Mastering: Grilling & Barbecuing

Author: Williams Sonoma

Texas Beef Brisket, Grilled Tuna with Red Pepper Relish, Classic Grilled Chicken with Barbecue Sauce -- these and many other crowd-pleasers are among the dozens of popular grilling and barbecuing recipes you will learn to prepare, without trepidation, with this book.

Williams-Sonoma Mastering Grilling offers a complete cooking course in a single volume. In the opening pages, you will find out about grill types and grilling methods; which meats, fish, poultry, and vegetables cook best on the grill; and what your flavoring options are, from fiery spice rubs and moisture-boosting marinades to herb-flecked compound butters and cool salsas. The basic recipes and key techniques follow, delivering dozens of indispensable culinary building blocks, such as how to build a hot charcoal fire and how to test foods for doneness. Trouble-shooting tips show you what can go wrong and how to fix it without having to start all over again.

The recipes lead you step-by-step through the intricacies of grilling over direct and indirect heat and reveal the secrets of slow smoking. The many variations in each chapter encourage you to continue practicing your newfound skills, building your grilling repertory and your confidence at the same time. Last, an illustrated guide to equipment and a glossary of ingredients will help you stock your outdoor kitchen with all the essentials.

In these pages, you will find more than fifty classic recipes that show you, in both pictures and words, how every dish you grill should look and taste from beginning to end. Whether you are an aspiring novice or a skilled backyard cook, this book will help you turn every grilled meal into a specialoccasion.



Northern Italian Cooking or Fresh Food Fast

Northern Italian Cooking

Author: Biba Caggiano

Even if your mama wasn't born in Italy, you know how authentic Italian food is supposed to taste -- fresh, flavorful, rich and bursting with that special ingredient: love. Italian-born Biba Caggiano takes you under her wing with over 200 recipes from Northern Italy -- the center of great cooking. Simple-to-master recipes will have you making tortellini from scratch, authentic pasta sauces, savory meat dishes and luscious desserts in no time. Soon you'll be cooking as if you had grown up in a Northern Italian home. Your kitchen will be filled with the aromas of homemade Minestrone, Tagliatelle Bolognese Style, Shellfish Risotto, Bruschetta with Fresh Tomatoes and Basil and Roasted Leg of Lamb with Garlic and Rosemary, just as if you had learned to make them all at the side of a real Italian mama. Everything from simple dishes for a family meal to more elaborate recipes for special occasions are here in this new edition of a classic that has sold more than 400,000 copies.

Follow the many who have learned from Biba and do as they do; if someone asks you where you learned how to cook real Northern Italian food, tell them Biba taught you everything you know.

Publishers Weekly

Biba Caggiano, Bologna-born and raised in the Emiglia-Romagna region, gives her audience the chance to cook like a native in Biba's Northern Italian Cooking. The author of six cookbooks and owner and chef of Biba restaurant in Sacramento, Calif., prepares simple to sumptuous meals, from antipasto to dessert, with dishes for all occasions. First she discusses essential Italian ingredients and equivalents and begins each course section with a brief account of what it entails. Her Green Lasagne Bologna Style, Shellfish Risotto, Pheasant with Gin and Juniper Berries and Pears Poached in Red Wine will lure eager diners to a bounteous table. ( Jan.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.



Table of Contents:
Fabulous Foods of Northern Italy1
Some Basic Ingredients3
Appetizers6
Soups20
Pasta36
Gnocchi, Polenta and Risotto75
Fish and Shellfish101
Game and Poultry113
Lamb, Pork and Variety Meats128
Veal and Beef146
Vegetables169
Salads188
Eggs and Sauces197
Desserts209
Seasonal Menus239
Metric Conversion Charts243
English Index244
Italian Index250
About the Author252

Interesting textbook: Audience Economics or International Organizational Behavior

Fresh Food Fast: Create Delicious, Seasonal Vegetarian Meals in Under an Hour

Author: Peter Berley

From award-winning chef Peter Berley: mouthwatering seasonal vegetarian menus that can be created in under an hour

Sophisticated, home-cooked vegetarian meals without the fuss. Is that too much to ask? Absolutely not.

True to his roots as a restaurant chef, cooking teacher, and family man, award-winning vegetarian chef Peter Berley has a passion for meals that taste incredible, salute the seasons, and are easy to prepare in under an hour. In Fresh Food Fast, he provides forty-eight meals -- twelve for each season -- including recipes, a shopping list, an equipment list, and a game plan that takes you step-by-step through the menu.

Included are substantial, satisfying meals that will bring pleasure to vegetarians and omnivores alike:

Spring
bibb lettuce and radish salad with crème fraîche citronette braised spring vegetables with grits, poached eggs, and chives

summer
spicy corn frittata with tomatoes and scallions cucumber salad

fall
pasta with spicy cauliflower, chickpeas, and cherry tomatoes pan-grilled radicchio salad with honey- balsamic glaze over frisée

winter
balsamic-roasted seitan with cipollini onions garlic mashed potatoes and parsnips

Berley also provides delectable dessert recipes for each season, including spring's Warm Honey Lemon Curd over Strawberries, summer's Blueberry-Nectarine Crisp, fall's Roasted Grapes with Red Wine, and winter's Caramelized Bananas with Blood Orange and Pistachio.

In a world where fast food is generally prepackaged and second-rate, Peter Berley teaches us how we can live without compromise andenjoy fresh, wholesome meals any night of the week as we connect with family and friends.

Publishers Weekly

At the outset of this superb guide to cooking uncomplicated vegetarian fare, Berley asks a rhetorical question: "Stylish, sophisticated, home-cooked meals without a fuss-is that too much to ask for?" If this cookbook is any indication, it isn't too much to ask for; in fact, it's a very simple request that Berley happily fills. The former executive chef of New York's Angelica Kitchen and chef and co-owner of the city's Miette Culinary Studio lays out healthy, quick meals requiring minimum effort. He divides the book by season and gives 12 menus for each. In a minimalist style reminiscent of Mark Bittman's, Berley describes key ingredients to keep in the pantry (herbs, grains, beans, oils, etc.) and important tools (he's particularly fond of the pressure cooker). As the title suggests, the recipes draw on seasonal produce; Berley reminds readers that buying vegetables in season will save money and ensure the best quality. Each menu consists of at least two dishes-a main course and a side-and some include a third accompaniment or appetizer. Although simplicity reigns, the dishes do encompass a variety of ethnic cuisines, including Asian, Caribbean, Italian and Mexican flavors. Berley gives a brief intro to each dish (e.g., before giving the recipe for Wild Mushroom Fricassee over Farro, he explains what farro is and how to cook it; he also makes a case for saving some Rhubarb Crisp for the next day, since "leftovers are great for breakfast; just substitute yogurt for the whipped cream"). (Mar.) Forecast: Berley's book is perfect for cooks who are too busy to spend two hours cooking dinner but want delicious, healthy meals-that is to say, almost anyone. A national broadcast and print media campaign, 25-city radio campaign and author appearances in New York; Portland, Ore.; San Francisco; and Seattle will target buyers. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.



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

Cook and the Gardener: A Year of Recipes and Writings from the French Countryside

Author: Amanda Hesser

Winner of the Best Book on France by a Non-French Writer Award at the Versailles Cookbook Fair; finalist for the Julia Child Award, the Gourmet Magazine Award, and "Best Cookbook of the Year" sponsored by IACP; and nominated in the international category of the KitchenAid Book Awards of the James Beard Foundation Awards. The unique, award-winning cookbook—a collection of seasonal recipes from a traditional French garden. A unique blend of stylish cookbook and earthy garden story, here is a collection of 250 recipes derived from a centuries-old French kitchen garden. The stunning debut of a lively new culinary voice, The Cook and the Gardener chronicles a year in the life of the walled kitchen garden at Chateau du Fey and its taciturn, resourceful, charmingly sly peasant caretaker. Using the fruits and vegetables harvested from Monsieur Milbert's garden, Amanda Hesser creates four seasons of recipes tied ineluctably to the land and the all-but-forgotten practices upheld by Milbert. Hesser's sublimely simple recipes—each with accessible ingredients and clear notes and instructions—also tell a story. They are a month-by-month record of the ingredients available to her, so that this cookbook also serves as an almanac for cooks. Special "Basics" sections at the opening of each season lay the culinary groundwork for the recipes that follow. Tips on how to buy, store, and prepare particular vegetables, fruits, and herbs are presented in margin notes to recipes. By bringing the kitchen closer to the garden, The Cook and the Gardener gives home cooks a new understanding of the produce they have on hand, whether from the supermarket, the farmer's market, or theirown gardens. Atthe same time, it captures the quirky customs and wily wisdom of a vanishing way of life in provincial France.

Cooks who pick from Hesser's 200 month-by-month recipes will easily imagine themselves at least momentarily transported to the French countryside. (Publishers Weekly starred and boxed review, 1 February 1999)

Hesser's knowledgeable, graceful, and opinionated prose calls to mind the great food writers M.F.K. Fisher and Elizabeth David. (Cooking Light)

A seasonal tribute to the symbiotic relationship between a chef and her provider of ingredients. (Austin Chronicle)

Both Hesser's taste and voice are gentle and sure. (The New York Times Book Review)

Hesser gained the kind of old-fashioned seasonable sensibility that many of us have lost today—her delightful recipes reflect this. (Fine Cooking)

Cooks who pick from Hesser's 200 month-by-month recipes will easily imagine themselves at least momentarily transported to the French countryside. (Publishers Weekly starred and boxed review, 1 February 1999)

Book Magazine

What could be more tempting than the bounty of the garden prepared with skill and style....Amanda Hesser's been there, done that. This is her story.

Publishers Weekly

Readers who have been pining for a new literary cookbook need look no further. The cook of the title is the author, a staff reporter for the "Dining In/Dining Out" section of the New York Times. The gardener is a crusty, irascible French country gardener of considerable age and vast experience. Hesser met M. Milbert when she began cooking for Anne Willan, founder of the cooking school La Varenne, at Willan's estate in Burgundy, France, where Milbert and his wife were caretakers, a job they took on after selling their small farm. With respect and grace, Hesser describes her encounters with Milbert in his domain, the estate's one-acre garden, tracing four seasons' worth of interwoven gardening and cooking. Beginning in spring, Hesser makes use of what's freshest in such recipes as Early Carrots with Tarragon Beurre Blanc, Warm Roasted Shallots with Balsamic Vinegar and Braised Lamb with Garlic, Asparagus and Peas. Summer recipes range from Sauteed Duck with Artichokes to Zucchini-Lemon Soup, Striped Bass and Fennel and Seared Tomatoes with Olive Oil and Sage. In similar fashion, recipes for the fall and winter months make use of the seasons' offerings: Red Beets with Shallots and Sage, Pear-and-Almond Tart and White Sausages with Turnips and Butternut Squash. Like Milbert's approach to growing herbs, fruits and vegetables, Hesser's recipes follow the traditional French country techniques and are neither fussy nor marked by shortcuts. Seamlessly including basics--e.g., pastry doughs, stocks (one for each season), preserves and mayonnaises--in the introductions to the seasons, Hesser delivers a solid grounding for beginning cooks as well; or at least for those whose interest is in preparing food with fresh ingredients (and who don't need to learn how to cook broccoli, which apparently Milbert didn't grow). Hesser's voice, as she carefully earns Milbert's trust, becoming finally in his words, la petite jardiniere, is as sure and convincing as is her hand in the kitchen. Cooks who pick from Hesser's 200 month-by-month recipes will easily imagine themselves at least momentarily transported to the French countryside. (Mar.)

Library Journal

Hesser, now a reporter for the New York Times food section, was for two years the chef at a chateau in Burgundy, and she has written a month-by-month account with recipes of her experience there. She spent a fair amount of time trying to befriend the crusty gardener, with eventual success, and learned a great deal from him. Her book follows the seasons, each section opening with basic recipes (e.g., canning tomatoes, peaches, and plums for summer); recipes for each month are introduced by an essay touching on the progress of the kitchen garden, Monsieur Milbert's plans and travails during those weeks, and other aspects of life in Burgundy. Hesser relied on the garden for her inspiration as she cooked, only rarely visiting the market in the adjoining town to find fruits and vegetables for her recipes: Early Carrots with Tarragon Beurre Blanc, Baby Potatoes in Hazelnut Oil, Lamb Roasted with a Family of Onions. Both gardeners and cooks will enjoy this; recommended for most cookery collections.

NY Times Book Review

Hesser...understands and values the bred-in-the-bone wisdom of people who have grown up on the land...

What People Are Saying

Patricia Wells
With her warm, engaging style, Amanda Hesser guides us through the seasons of a French garden, cultivating our own enthusiasm and respect for the farmer's labors, the cook's complicity.
&151; (Patricia Wells, author of The Food Lover's Guide to Paris)


Susan Herrmann Loomis
The Cook and the Gardener offers a bright, charming approach which uplifts the French tradition of the potager above its usual realm. Ms. Hesser definitely sees the best in situations as she explores the crops, the seasons, the recipes and the gardener who ties them all together.
&151; (Susan Herrmann Loomis, author of The French Farmhouse Cookbook)


Nancy Harmon Jenkins

It's an all too facile observation to say that Amanda Hesser writes beautifully and from the heart. I think I love her writing more for what she doesn't say than for what she does. She has a rare gift, a sense of tact and restraint, that simultaneously pulls us into the story and sets boundaries beyond which we dare not tread. Thus, Monsieur Milbert, her crotchety old gardener, is a real person, a three-dimensional, flesh-and-blood portrait, not a colorful postcard-size caricature.

I am fully persuaded that...if there's anyone writing about food in America today who might someday inherit M.F.K. Fisher's status, it's Amanda Hesser.
&151; (Nancy Harmon Jenkins, author of The Mediterranean Diet Cookbook and The Flavors of Puglia)




Book about: Javatrekker or Dysphagia Cookbook

Hemingway & Bailey's Bartending Guide to Great American Writers

Author: Edward Hemingway

In this entertaining homage to the golden age of the cocktail, illustrator Edward Hemingway and writer Mark Bailey present the best (and thirstiest) American writers, their favorite cocktails, true stories of their saucy escapades, and intoxicating excerpts from their literary works. It’s the perfect blend of classic cocktail recipes, literary history, and tales of the good old days of extravagant Martini lunches and delicious excess.

When Algonquin Round Table legend Robert Benchley was asked if he knew that drinkingwas a slow death, Benchley took a sip of his cocktail and replied, “So who’s in a hurry?” Hunter S. Thompson took Muhammad Ali’s health tip to eat grapefruit every day; he just added liquor to the mix. Invited to a “come as you are” party, F. Scott Fitzgerald and his wife, Zelda, arrived in their pajamas ready for their cocktail of choice: a Gin Rickey.

Forty-three classic American writers, forty-three authentic cocktail recipes, forty-three telling anecdotes about the high life, and forty-three samples of the best writing in literature –Hemingway & Bailey’s Bartending Guide to Great American Writers delivers straight-up fun.

USAToday -

Who better to illustrate a belly-up-to-the-bar guide to American writers than Papa Hemingway's grandson? Edward Hemingway's charming caricatures of cocktail-loving writers—from his own grandpapa to Dorothy Parker to Hunter S. Thompson—add the fizz to Hemingway & Bailey's Bartending Guide to Great American Writers. Writer Mark Bailey spices things up with literary drinking anecdotes that recall the glass-clinking glory days of Parisian cafes and Algonquin Round Tables.

What People Are Saying


"I like everything about this book, except that I'm not in it."—Norman Mailer



"Hemingway and Bailey's Bartending Guide to Great American Writers is a bracing cocktail of wit, anecdote, and practical knowledge. All your favorite literary drinkers are here along with their favorite drinks. I'm keeping one copy by the bed and one by the bar. Read responsibly—no more than three or at most four pages a night."
—Jay McInerney

"I like everything about this book, except that I'm not in it."
—Norman Mailer




Monday, December 22, 2008

Cooking without a Grain of Salt or French Provincial Cooking

Cooking Without a Grain of Salt: Helpful Hints and Tasty Recipes for Creating Delicious Low Salt Meals for Your Whole Family

Author: Elma W Bagg

Putting down the saltshaker is just the first step....

Experts agree that a low-sodium diet can decrease the risk of heart disease, migraines, diabetes, and osteoporosis.  

But to significantly reduce the salt in your diet, you must learn how to spot the hidden sodium in frozen foods, canned goods, and popular recipes.

Fully revised and updated using the latest medical research, Cooking Without a Grain of Salt is a nutrition guide and cookbook all in one.  It's filled with useful tips on how to limit sodium without sacrificing flavor--as well as savory recipes that will help you put your healthy, low-salt lifestyle into action.

From Stuffed Mushrooms and Double Corn Biscuits to Pork Medallions in Pesto, Grilled Tuna with Salsa, and Pasta Primavera, Cooking Without a Grain of Salt lets you enjoy all the dishes you love while forming healthy eating habits for years to come..



New interesting textbook: Gaias Kitchen or Food and Wine Wine Guide 2008

French Provincial Cooking

Author: Elizabeth David

First published in 1962, Elizabeth David's culinary odyssey through provincial France forever changed the way we think about food. With elegant simplicity, David explores the authentic flavors and textures of time-honored cuisines from such provinces as Alsace, Provence, Brittany, and the Savoie. Full of cooking ideas and recipes, French Provincial Cooking is a scholarly yet straightforward celebration of the traditions of French regional cooking.

Library Journal

France and Italy are especially famous for wine and food. David studies and analyzes cooking the way a scholar analyzes literature, and, as a result, her titles are far more than just cookbooks. Along with the recipes, of which there are many, she explains at length the histories of the dishes and offers splendid advice on serving wine with the meals. Both volumes, published in 1960 and 1958, respectively, contain forewords by Julia Child. Italian Food was the author's personal favorite.



I Should Have Stayed Home Food or Waldorf Astoria Cookbook

I Should Have Stayed Home - Food: Tantalizing Tales of Extreme Cuisine

Author: Roger Rapoport

This uproarious book takes you where conventional dining guides dare not venture, from a Chinese eatery on New York's Lower East Side that erupts into food fights to a Tokyo restaurant that serves legendary-and potentially deadly-fugu fish.



Table of Contents:
Introduction 1 Down the Hatch Clifford Pierce 3 Korea's Silk Route Frank Lev 7 Looking For Foie Gras In All The Wrong Places Julia Niebuhr Eulenberg 12 Feeling Crabby Loretta Graziano Breuning 18 Afterwhile Crocodile Darla Kay Fitzpatrick 22 Banquet Blues Alev Le Sueur 25 Congo Breakfast At Tiffany's Scott Loveridge 48 In Search of Mongolian Pie Larry Jer 51 Food Fight Marius Bosc 56 Pass the Anteater, Please Claudia R. Capos 58 Hold the Salad Julia Niebuhr Eulenberg 65 How I Became a Purveyor of Caviar and Champagne on the Trans-Siberian Alev Lytle Croutier 71 The Last Supper Mark Cerulli 75 The Thousand-Year-Old Fish Patti Deveney 79 The Cockroach Floor Show Beth Esfandieri 81 I Think It Was Something I Ate Karin Palmquist 83 The Best Restaurant in Town? Marcia Muller Bill Pronzini 88 Sam Wo's Insult Machine, Edsel Ford Wong Joe Kempkes 93 No Meat, Nor Fish-No Eat Chris Mears 96 You Say Potato, I Say Ptomaine Roger Rapoport 99 The First and Last Meal Carole L. Peccorini 102 Something in the Air Zona Sage 107 Soup Kitchen Edward Reed 112 In the Forest Without a Dog Andrew Grieser Johns 115 Pining Away Janet Roberts 130 Bulgogi To Die For Hemlata Vasavada 132 Stranger In Paradise Linda Wasylenko 136 Eating at the Ritz Dawn Starin 139 My Family, Food and Fieldwork A. Magdalena Hurtado 142 At The Gates of Heaven Chris Mears 155 Beefsteak With Onions Jim Krois 158 Caught Knapping Roger Rapoport 161 About the Authors 165

Book review: La Cucina Di Lidia or At Home With The French Classics

Waldorf-Astoria Cookbook

Author: John Doherty

The WALDORF-ASTORIA COOKBOOK opens the doors to the hotel's kitchens, where a team of seven chefs de cuisine, 10 sous-chefs, and 110 cooks, all led by Executive Chef John Doherty, serve the finest meals to a demanding public 24 hours a day, seven days a week at three restaurants, four bars and a grand ballroom, and, of course around-the-clock room service for 1,250 rooms (an innovation in the hotel industry that began at the Waldorf over a hundred years ago).

The book features more than 120 recipes by chef Doherty and his staff, from breakfast (Irish Oatmeal BrulЋe with Strawberry Coulis) to lunch (Oscar's Spicy Asian Chicken Salad) to dinner (Filet Mignon with Blue Cheese Crust, Port Wine Sauce, and Béarnaise). With beautiful food photography, atmospheric and archival images of the hotel, as well as new takes on historical recipes such as the Waldorf Salad and fascinating sidebars that tell the rich history of the hotel, this gorgeous volume is a must-have for cookbook collectors.

About the Authors: John Harrisson cowrote The Neiman Marcus Cookbook as well as cookbooks by Mark Miller and Roy Yamaguchi.

John Doherty has been the executive chef at the Waldorf for 20 years.



Sunday, December 21, 2008

Fall Family and Friends or Twelve

Fall, Family and Friends: Come Celebrate the Simple Country Pleasures of Good Food and Good Friends!

Author: Gooseberry Patch

Crisp days with bright blue skies, wood smoke in the air and crunchy leaves under foot...everything we love about fall is tucked into our Fall, Family & Friends Cookbook! With recipes perfect for sharing at the tailgating party or in front of a crackling fire, we've got favorites for every mouthwatering meal of the season. Warm up chilly mornings with sweater weather tea and pumpkin pancakes. Come home to a slowly simmered northern sausage soup and finish off the season's biggest feast with pumpkin trifle and buttery maple walnut drops. We've even included clever entertaining tips for all your happy harvest fun.



Book about: Science of Wine or Cooking of Southwest France

Twelve: A Tuscan Cookbook

Author: Tessa Kiros


A 12-month journey through the tastes of Tuscany.

In this exquisitely photographed book, Tessa Kiros uses each month of the year as a device to explore and record recipes in seasonal cooking with fine ingredients. Her personal observations throughout reveal the nuances of the Italian meal.

"The Store Cupboard" has tips on filling the pantry with the right ingredients. The "Basics" section provides preparation instructions and recipes that Tuscan home cooks learned from their parents and grandparents. Substitutions for harder-to-find ingredients are offered along with encouraging tips on improvising to suit any taste. Wine notes and a glossary round out the book.

Here are examples of the fabulous recipes:


  • Risotto alla Toscana (Tuscan risotto)

  • Spezzatino di cinghiale (wild boar stew)

  • Zuccotto (chocolate and vanilla sponge pudding)

  • Melanzane alla parmigiana (baked eggplant with tomato, mozzarella and Parmesan cheese)

  • Stracotto di manzo (beef braised in red wine)



Twelve is a sensitive, personal exploration of one of the world's most popular culinary traditions by an author who lovingly shares her discoveries with the home cook.