Books - Cooking, Food & Wine - Regional & International

1-20 of 100       1   2   3   4   5   Next 20

  • Regional & International
  • Asian
  • Canadian
  • Caribbean & West Indian
  • European
  • International
  • Latin American
  • Mexican
  • Middle Eastern
  • Native American
  • U.S. Regional
  • Cooking, Food & Wine
  • click price to see details     click image to enlarge     click link to go to the store

    1. Cooking from China's Fujian Province:
    2. Old Havana Cookbook: Cuban Recipes
    3. Fine Filipino Food
    $24.00
    4. Around My French Table: More Than
    $14.52
    5. Rachael Ray's Look + Cook
    6. Nile Style: Egyptian Cuisine and
     
    7.
    $15.49
    8. As Always, Julia: The Letters
    $21.99
    9. Mastering the Art of French Cooking,
    $22.50
    10. Good Eats 2: The Middle Years
    $21.00
    11. Joy of Cooking: 75th Anniversary
    $50.51
    12. Mastering the Art of French Cooking
    $31.50
    13. Ad Hoc at Home
    $22.83
    14. The Flavor Bible: The Essential
    $22.50
    15. Good Eats: The Early Years
    $27.00
    16. One Big Table: 600 recipes from
    $20.47
    17. Giada at Home: Family Recipes
    $11.49
    18. Diners, Drive-ins and Dives: An
    $26.37
    19. The Complete America's Test Kitchen
    $14.98
    20. Semi-Homemade The Complete Cookbook

    1. Cooking from China's Fujian Province: One of China's Eight Great Cuisines
    by Jacqueline M. Newman
    Kindle Edition
    list price: $29.95
    Asin: B0028K36P6
    Publisher: Hippocrene Books
    Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    Fujian, a province in southeastern China, boasts a distinct culinary tradition that enjoys a thousand-year-old recorded history but is barely known in the Western world. This collection of 200 easy-to-follow, authentic recipes provides the perfect introduction to this unique cuisine.

    Fujianese cuisine makes marvelous use of the foods and herbs found in the region's mountains, flatlands, and on the coast. The staples rice, wheat, and sweet potatoes are featured in these sweet-and-pungent-flavored dishes. Buddha Jumping the Wall, a famous specialty, is made with shark's fin, scallops, chicken, mushrooms, yams, scallions, and much more. Popular Fujianese dishes such as Crossing Bridge Noodles, New Year Money Bags, and Steamed Sea Cucumber Pockets are highlighted.

    Also included are fascinating cultural and historical notes, handy glossaries of equipment and ingredients, and suggested menus for everyday meals and holidays. Eight pages of color photographs bring the foods of Fujian to life! ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars A great free cookbook
    This was listed in Kindle's Top 100 free, so I got it. What a delight.
    1. The recipes look delicious, and seem easy to follow, even to a non-shef as myself.
    2. The formatting is gorgeous. For a Kindle book with lots of tables for recipes, this is one of the best layouts I've seen.

    There do not seem to be any pictures in this free version, but it's well worth a look.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Two hundred authentic recipes from the Fujian province
    Fujian is a province in southeastern China and home to a distinctive culinary tradition that goes back a thousand years in the recorded history of the country. In "Cooking From China's Fujian Province", Jacqueline M. Newman (editor-in-chief of 'Flavor and Fortune', the only food magazine in the U.S. dedicated specifically to Chinese cuisine) has compiled two hundred authentic recipes from the Fujian province. Along with the recipes themselves, "Cooking From China's Fujian Province" also features cultural and historical notes, glossaries of equipment and ingredients, suggested menus, and eight pages of color photographs showcasing the culinary beauty of selected dishes. From Pork and Spinach Dumplings; Firecracker Shrimp with Litchi; Duck and Taro in Oyster Sauce; and Meatballs with Crab Meat; to Bean Curd Rice Rolls; Stuffed Sweet Potato Pancakes; Chicken Soup with Pear; and Razor Clams with Black Bean Sauce, "Cooking From China's Fujian Province" is an impressive culinary collection and enthusiastically recommended for personal, professional, family, and community library cookbook shelves.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Cooking From China's Fujian Province
    I got the book because it was written by a cousin,and I wanted my sons to have it. I have since bought one for myself and have read it twice. It is well written and extremely informative.If you are serious about chinese cooking and I mean authentic Chinese , then this book is a must in your collection. ... Read more


    2. Old Havana Cookbook: Cuban Recipes in Spanish and English (Bilingual Cookbooks)
    Kindle Edition (1999-12-01)
    list price: $14.95
    Asin: B00275EE62
    Publisher: Hippocrene Books
    Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    Havana is one of the oldest and most picturesque cities of the western hemisphere. It was a popular winter destination for North American tourists in the 1950s, and this cookbook recaptures the spirit of Old Havana-- Habana la vieja-- and its celebrated culinary traditions. Cuban cuisine, though derived from its mother country, Spain, has been modified and refined by locally available foods like pork, rice, corn, beans and sugar, and the requirements of a tropical climate. Fine Gulf Stream fish, crabs and lobsters, and an almost infinite variety of vegetables and luscious tropical fruits also have their places on the traditional Cuban table. This cookbook includes over 50 recipes, each in Spanish with side-by-side English translation-- all of them classic Cuban fare and old Havana specialties adapted for the North American kitchen. Among the recipes included are: Ajiaco (famous Cuban Stew), Boiled Pargo with Avocado Sauce, Lobster Havanaise, Tamal en Cazuela (Soft Tamal), Quimbombo (okra), Picadillo, Roast Suckling Pig, and Boniatillo (Sweet Potato Dulce), along with a whole chapter on famous Cuban cocktails and beverages. ... Read more

    Reviews

    4-0 out of 5 stars Havana cookbook, June 19, 2008
    I purchased this book because my family is from Havana, Cuba, and I felt I could get some good authentic recipes. I was very dissapointed. My grandmother who has shown me how to cook cuban food was even surprised at some of the ingredients in the recipes. The recipes are from foods we eat but the ingredients were way off. Sorry just my opinion

    4-0 out of 5 stars AUTHENTICALLY CUBAN, January 21, 2010
    a friend who lived in cuba until her family left several years ago, recently stumbled on my edition of this charming little volume, pronounced it the most authentic of all my cuban cookbooks and asked to borrow it. although i hate lending books, she lives across the street and i felt there was very little risk. what did i know. after she'd had it for more than a month, i decided to get one for her as a christmas gift and retrieve mine. in the interim mine had been blessed with a few more grease spots. she had really used it!

    as an additional piece of this book's charm, recipes are in spanish on one page and in english on the facing page (which helps me with my efforts to learn spanish). probably more people know about picadillo (a kind of ground-beef hash with raisins and olives) than about ajiaco, the national soup. but make this hearty dish once and you will have experienced a delicious piece of culinary cuba.

    i have cooked my way though this book's 120+ pages and so far my guests and i have enjoyed everything. i don't much make desserts, but if someone made the apple pudding with bicardi rum for me, Old Havana Cookbook: Cuban Recipes in Spanish and English (Bilingual Cookbooks)i'd for sure eat it!

    Oh, and if you're interested in a bit of bartending at home, there are also recipes for drinks, including the daiquiri, which originated in cuba.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Buena Comida!, February 16, 2009
    I got this book for my wife for Christmas. It's great, and has Spanish on one page and English on the opposite, so you can learn some words and phrases if you feel so inclined. There is a wide variety of recipes, and they're great. My wife loves to cook, and this has become one of her favorite cookbooks.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Old Havanna Cookbook review, September 17, 2009
    The cookbook is great, it just took FOREVER to get to me. I think I waited almost a month for a 12 dollar purchase. That part was really annoying. Other than that I love the recipes and I am glad I bought the book.

    1-0 out of 5 stars Lacking, December 15, 2004
    This was an interesting, early attempt at compiling a cookbook of Cuban recipes. Having the book in two languages may help your local library, but most chefs speak one language or the other -- the result is a lot of wasted space. The simple graphics and lack of photos are uninspiring and there is nothing here that will entice or motivate you. A better choice for contemporary Cuban cuisine: Three Guys from Miami Cook Cuban <ASIN: 158685433X>.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Delightful!, January 13, 2001
    There's a wonderful Cuban restaurant on our neighboring island of St. Croix. So, I was thrilled to find this charming book. Easy to understand and filled with mouth-watering recipes to remove the drudgery of cooking. If you like this book, you'll love Angela Spenceley's two new cookbooks "Just Add Rum!" and "A Taste of the Caribbean". Both books are valuable additions to any good cookbook library. ... Read more


    3. Fine Filipino Food
    by Karen Hulene Bartell
    Kindle Edition (2003-06-30)
    list price: $14.95
    Asin: B002JVXWNA
    Publisher: Hippocrene Books
    Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    Created from recipes collected during the author’stravels to this country at the crossroads of the Pacific Ocean and theSouth China and Sulu seas, FINE FILIPINO FOOD is a testament to a richmix of cultures. Chinese traders introduced stir-frying anddeep-frying cooking techniques, as well as noodles and soy products;Malaysian spice traders brought seasonings from the Spice Islands andintroduced that delectable appetizer, satay; Spanish colonizationbrought Spanish cuisine: Adobo (a pickling sauce made from olive oil,vinegar, garlic, oregano, paprika, thyme, bay leaf, and salt),arguably the best-known Filipino dish, is a by-product of both Spanishand Chinese influence. Finally, the American influence left thelegacies of speed and convenience.

    Enjoy this blend of cuisines with its 19 cooking methods, such asstir-frying, deep-frying, grilling on skewers, sautéing in coconutmilk, marinating in vinegar and spices, broiling over live charcoal,wrapping in banana leaves, and steaming. Fine Filipino Food features205 recipes, a glossary of ingredients, a guide to ingredientsubstitutions, and an extensive resource guide, which allow all homecooks to perfectly recreate these tantalizing dishes. ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars Each classic dish is accompanied by a small history
    There are surprisingly few cookbooks covering Filipino food on the market and new titles are few and far between, which would make the appearance of this guide an unusual event in and of itself - but its attention to recipes gathered during the author's travels to the Philippines makes Fine Filipino Food exceptional even in its genre. Each classic dish is accompanied by a small history of its origins, plus a variety of variations on the theme. Thus you have classics such as Adobo which go beyond the usual Chicken Adobo to include such dishes as Cinnamon-Garlic Beef Adobo and Lumpias which include Pork and Shrimp with Lemongrass and Garlic Shrimp and Bamboo Egg Rolls. Dishes are easy to make too - no color photos, but this doesn't need them. ... Read more


    4. Around My French Table: More Than 300 Recipes from My Home to Yours
    by Dorie Greenspan
    Hardcover
    list price: $40.00 -- our price: $24.00
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0618875530
    Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
    Sales Rank: 50
    Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    When Julia Child told Dorie Greenspan, “You write recipes just the way I do,” she paid her the ultimate compliment. Julia’s praise was echoed by the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times, which referred to Dorie’s “wonderfully encouraging voice” and “the sense of a real person who is there to help should you stumble.”
     
    Now in a big, personal, and personable book, Dorie captures all the excitement of French home cooking, sharing disarmingly simple dishes she has gathered over years of living in France.
    Around My French Table includes many superb renditions of the great classics: a glorious cheese-domed onion soup, a spoon-tender beef daube, and the “top-secret” chocolate mousse recipe that every good Parisian cook knows—but won’t reveal.
     
    Hundreds of other recipes are remarkably easy: a cheese and olive quick bread, a three-star chef’s Basque potato tortilla made with a surprise ingredient (potato chips), and an utterly satisfying roast chicken for “lazy people.”
     
    Packed with lively stories, memories, and insider tips on French culinary customs, Around My French Table will make cooks fall in love with France all over again, or for the first time.
    ... Read more

    Reviews

    4-0 out of 5 stars A VERY Personal Book from Greenspan, September 14, 2010
    First, what this book is NOT: an introduction to classical French cuisine. Or even modern French cuisine. As Greenspan herself points out in a post at the eGullet forums,

    "Here's what the book isn't: It's not Escoffier. It's not Mastering the Art of French Cooking. It's not a by-the-rules book. It's not a textbook. It's too personal to be any of those things."

    This is a collection of recipes that feels like it comes straight out of Greenspan's kitchen: which means that if your cooking style and tastes run with hers, you will like this book. If they don't, you won't. So despite my four-star rating, that is purely a reflection of how well my cooking style agrees with Ms. Greenspan's. I strongly encourage you to check out the table of contents before clicking "Buy" on this one. There are a lot of braises, including three different recipes for what amount to roast chicken. There are two veal stews, and two beef daubes. If that's the food you like to eat, you would be hard-pressed to find clearer, better-written recipes. Naturally Greenspan is not breaking any new culinary ground here: if you have even a medium-sized cookbook collection, you probably already have most of the recipes she presents. What you probably don't have is the exquisite photography (by Alan Richardson), or the extremely well-written recipe instructions. The production values of this book are very high indeed: I am astonished at how low the price is all things considered.

    A few favorite recipes of the dozen or so I've made so far: Chicken Breasts Diable, Veal Marengo, Lamb and Dried Apricot Tagine, and the Chard-Stuffed Pork Roast are all very good. In particular I think that the Lamb and Dried Apricot Tagine would be a wonderful dish for an evening with guests: just exotic enough on the US palate to be different, without being totally out of left field. But all of those dishes would go over very well on a typical US dinner table, and some, like the Chicken Diable, are quick-and-easy weeknight meals.

    Pros:
    * Exceptionally well-written recipes
    * High percentage of excellent dishes
    * Fantastic production qualities

    Cons:
    * Not a "learn to cook French Cuisine" book (it doesn't try to be, though)
    * Three roast chickens? Really?

    5-0 out of 5 stars Makes my heart and tummy sing!, September 4, 2010
    I made the Quiche Maraichere (pg.158), a French Vegetable Tart, the first day I received the book. My husband said it rated a "5 out of 4 stars"! It was delicious both hot and room temperature, and not difficult to make.

    Tonight is the second night, and I am making Hachis Parmentier (pg.258)...basically a French Shepard's Pie. The fragrance of the meat cooking and making it's own beef broth is out of this world! Not hard to do, just takes some time.

    Clear directions,beautiful photos, and easy to come by ingredients for the American cook; this is my new FAVORITE cookbook. Definitely worth every penny!

    The fragrance of the food cooking brings an indescribable sense of home, comfort, and joy in living and being a cook.

    5-0 out of 5 stars It really IS around her french table!, October 18, 2010
    I first discovered Dorie Greenspan after reading David Lebovitz's book "The Sweet Life in Paris." I loved the book and started reading everything I could on him. Since Lebovitz and Greenspan are friends, naturally on Google, I soon discovered Dorie's blog, doriegreenspan.com. The first time I went there, I was in search of a Financiers recipe. I used to get them in a wonderful bakery in New Orleans' French Quarter and fell in love with them, and found a good recipe on the blog.

    A dear friend sent me Greenspan's latest book "around my french table." When I first opened it, I figured this would be so far out of my league, and probably mostly upscale Parisian food. Not having been to France (yet!) I wondered if I could find anything in the book that would be at my skill set, which is being a very good cook and baker but still, an amateur. I decided to take the book and lay across my bed perusing the recipes. In no time flat, I was off to the desk to get my post-it notes. By the end of the hour session, I had about a dozen recipes marked to make. Far from being anything like the average American envisions French cooking, this seemed to me to be French home cooking. (Actually, she had me on the front cover)...the photo of the recipe "chicken in a pot: the garlic and lemon version" which is depicted on the cover is a very good example of why it wasn't upscale cooking alone. A large, heavy porcelain cast iron dutch oven with a whole chicken, celery, garlic, sweet potato, onions and carrots surrounded by a golden ring of dough (a dough seal) between the pot and the lid. In my mind, this looked straight from Provence, like I know anything about Proven�al cooking!

    I ventured into some of the recipes. The first I made was the brown sugar squash and Brussels sprouts en papillote. Two years ago, I despised Brussels Sprouts. Now, I love them. The brown sugar and the squash make a sweet compliment and tone down the sulfuric taste of the sprouts. The dish was a big hit. Yesterday I tackled the cauliflower-bacon gratin. Oh wow.WOW. just delicious. I bet some kids would not even know those are cauliflower and not potatoes. The taste is so good, and this is my new favorite vegetable side dish. I also made the spiced butter-glazed carrots and this is going on the Thanksgiving table! On page 342, one of the simplest, yet most delicious and handy to have on hand recipes is the slow-roasted tomatoes. Seasoned and slow roasted, the flavor is intensified, and I keep them in a jar in the refrigerator. They are great with salads and I am sure would be great on pizza.

    There are so many things I want to make, but usually I have to make them on the weekend. I have to make the garlic crumb-coated broccoli, the potato gratin (the photo is just wicked!) I found a French version of a brittle cookie my Mom used to make, but simpler and with an egg wash to make it golden, called salted butter break-ups. I can't wait to make that next weekend. I saw something good for the fall, pumpkin & Gorgonzola flans.

    Ok, I am about to make myself sick with hunger, so let me just say: GET THIS BOOK! Your family and friends will want to steal it. Be sure and check out her blog at doriegreenspan.com Some of the recipes featured are in the book.

    Did I mention the Marie-H�l�ne's Apple Cake?

    5-0 out of 5 stars delicious cook book, September 22, 2010
    I read cookbooks and rarely cook from them. I took one look at Dorie Greenspan's new recipes and knew I would be cooking from the book. They are terrific, trustworthy and great to eat. I made her cheese crackers for a party. They were very easy and really good. My friends were shocked that I used a recipe from a cookbook and that it was wonderful.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Delightful!, October 11, 2010
    I love french food. I love to talk about it, I love to eat it. Cook it? Hmmmm, that's an entirely different matter. Where do you begin? Enter Dorie Greenspan's new book "Around My French Table " and I am hooked after the first easy to toss together Tartine. I thought French food would be more complicated and fiddly to prepare? Guess not. The book breaks it down so accessibly, that I'm almost embarrassed by how easy it all is. And delicious. I particularly enjoy the narrative within the sidebars short stories scattered throughout the book.

    One of my new food book favorites this autumn!

    3-0 out of 5 stars Wish I had waited to check it out in store..., September 16, 2010
    I like DG and have her "Baking From My Home to Yours" book, which is excellent. I also follow her blog and have perused some of her other works and find her to be a great writer. I ordered this book from Amazon based on this, but now wish I had waited to check it out in store. I know the title says "300 Recipes," but, after reviewing the book, I really would have preferred 150 more selective choices. I feel like there is a lot of "filler" in this book to get to 300. There certainly seems to be some terrific ideas (and the previews from her blog over the year pretty much guarantee it) but there are a number of uninspired, plain, or not-very-French dishes that are easy for me to pass up ("Olive-olive Cornish hens, Coconut-lemongrass Braised Pork, Monkfish and Double Carrots"). I know there are tons of books on classical French, and I have no problem with DG wanting to go outside the box, but I really feel the collection of recipes is unfocused and somewhat random - two words I never would have associated with DG.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Better than I ever imagined, October 20, 2010
    My family thinks I'm crazy, taking this cookbook to bed with me at night and reading for hours. But I can't help it, Dorie Greenspan's writing is so captivating. Each recipe has a little back story and includes hints and tips. Best of all, she gives the cook flexibility with the recipes - so you can make any recipe work just about any way you like it. Truly, this cookbook is a keeper.

    5-0 out of 5 stars My favorite new cookbook this year -- by far, October 9, 2010
    I've been cooking from this wonderful book for several months, as I was lucky enough to snag a copy of the galleys
    Every single dish has been a complete success. I've been playing in the kitchen for a long time and have a large collection of dependable recipes, so when I try a new one it has to earn its way into my Make-It-Again-and-Again repertoire. Well, cooking with Dorie has swelled that repertoire considerably.
    But owning this book isn't just about great food --it's equally about great writing and spending time with an incredibly warm, caring cook with a gift for friendship And what friends: chefs such as Daniel Boulud, Jean-Georges Vongerichten and Pierre Herme and talented home cooks from Paris and throughout the French countryside.-- all of whom have shared recipes and "trucs" (little tricks that make recipes shine).
    If you love cooking, eating or just dreaming about French food, you have to treat yourself to this book




    5-0 out of 5 stars These recipes will become every day favorites!, November 3, 2010
    I was lucky enough to go to a booksigning and meet Dorie in person last month. She is utterly delightful (she brought us Valrhona chocolate!) and these recipes are clearly near and dear to her. So far, I've made Marie-Helene's Apple Cake, Hachis Parmentier, Pumpkin-Gorgonzola Flans, and the Cafe Seyel Burgers and they were all home runs.
    So far, I'd say the book is equal parts recipes you can make any night of the week and recipes that take a bit more time that would be excellent for entertaining. I am loving this cookbook and HIGHLY recommend it! It's a HUGE book full of fabulous stories, gorgeous photos and seriously good recipes.

    Bon Appetit!

    5-0 out of 5 stars I want to try every recipe!, October 12, 2010
    As with all of Dorie's books, this does not disappoint. Beautiful photographs, little bits of Dorie's hints and wisdom and the most delicious and easy recipes. I always thought of French food as being more intimidating. Nothing very complicated and has definitely made meals more fun. ... Read more


    5. Rachael Ray's Look + Cook
    by Rachael Ray
    Paperback (2010-11-02)
    list price: $24.99 -- our price: $14.52
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 030759050X
    Publisher: Clarkson Potter
    Sales Rank: 88
    Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    “Inexperienced cooks need more that just a few lines of laconic test to help them along.  Rachael Ray has coached a generation of rookies on her Food Network shows, talking and plopping and emoting her way through dish after dish.  Her latest books, Rachael Ray’s Look + Cook, shows what each stage should look like in big photos.  Betty Crocker, or more specifically, the 1976 edition of Betty Crocker’s Cookbook, used to be my bulletproof go-to recipe source. But now Ray fills that role.”  — Time magazine
     

    From her cookbooks to her magazine to her daily talk show, Rachael Ray’s message remains the same today as the day she wrote her very first 30-minute meal—making delicious, knock-your-socks-off dishes should be fun, fast, fulfilling, and foolproof.

    Rachael now presents her best idea yet: Rachael Ray’s Look + Cook—100 brand-new recipes, each featuring beautiful and helpful step-by-step full-color photographs that illustrate how to create each meal, along with photographs of the gorgeous finished dishes. You literally look along while you cook!

    But that’s not all . . . at the back of Rachael Ray’s Look + Cook, you’ll find 125 bonus, never-before-published recipes, including 30-Minute Meals; Yes! the Kids Will Eat It; Sides & Starters; Simple Sauces & Bottom-of-the-Jar Tips; and Desserts. As if that weren’t cool enough, Rachael Ray’s Look + Cook also features accompanying real-time video available online for select recipes at www.rachaelray.com.

    Rachael makes it easier than ever to prepare delicious home-cooked meals as you follow along with the step-by-step photographs or even the video! Having a last-minute dinner? No worries . . . you’ll wow the crowd with Gazpacho Pasta, Fancy Pants Salmon, or Almost Tandoori Chicken. Looking for some fun twists on classic dishes that will have your kids clamoring for more? The Open-Face Turkey Burgers with Potpie Gravy and the Coconut Fish Fry are sure to be family faves! Wondering what to do with those last spoonfuls in the jars lining your refrigerator door? Check out Rachael’s Bottom-of-the-Jar Sauces and add pizzazz to any meal with Salsa Dressing, Orange Bourbon Glaze, or Spicy Thai Peanut Sauce. Packed with the value that her fans love and have come to expect, Rachael Ray’s Look + Cook has a simple-to-follow recipe to fit every occasion.
    ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars Looking and Cooking with Rachael Ray!
    I love cookbooks, I must have hundreds and my mother (from whom I inherited my passion for cooking) has thousands. A few of my early purchases were of the "Look and Cook" variety, such as French Country Cookery (Anne Willan's Look & Cook) but I have since moved on to cookbooks that rely on the reader to have mastered the different techniques that are required for each specific dish. Then I saw Rachael Ray on television cook some of the dishes from this new cookbook of hers. I must say that I was impressed with both the style of the dishes and their ease of preparation. The recipes are new, trendy and very approachable. The photos that demonstrate the preparation of the dishes do so in a step-by-step fashion are well shot and very easy to learn from. Some of the recipes in this book were posted on Rachael's website before the book was released so I had the opportunity to try out a few earlier as well as some new ones that are only in the book.

    The look and cook portion of the book includes 100 recipes and is divided into 3 chapters:

    1. Cozy Food - Includes recipes for some great comfort food, such as: Shepherd's Pie Stuffed Potatoes; Pimiento Mac n' Cheese; and fresh Onion and Wild Mushroom Soup


    2. Make Your Own Takeout - Restaurant-style dishes that can be prepared faster than you can pick up something to-go, recipes include: Chinese Orange-Barbeque Cashew Chicken and Crunchy Tuna Tacos


    3. Fancy Fake-Outs - These are simplified versions of dishes that are usually reserved for the advanced home chef, including: Almost Tandoori Chicken; Individual Beef Wellingtons; and Veal and Olive Ragu with Pappardelle

    The back section of the book includes 5 more chapters (125 additional recipes), but they are in her 30 Minute Meals format and do not include photographs. There is also a link to her interactive website where you can see select dishes being made in real-time.

    So far my favorite recipe is for the Chicken Cutlets Brasciole. The chicken breast filets are butterflied and pounded; the breasts are then stuffed with a mixture of raisins, toasted pine nuts, parsley, lemon zest, cheese, garlic and bread crumbs and is served atop a tomato, wine and tarragon sauce. Delicious!

    This book is full of great recipes, some of which will become regular fare at my house. Although the Look and Cook feature is not really necessary if you are an advanced cook, this book is still worth having for its creativity and ease of preparation alone. It should be a big hit with the beginning and intermediate home chef as nothing is assumed and each technique and process is both shown and explained in detail. Advanced cooks will still be inspired by Rachael's ability to simplify classic recipes and to substitute easy to find ingredients for those that have been used historically in the well-known versions.

    Ms. Ray has both her fans and her detractors. Some find her a little too "cutesy" with her made-up words and expressions (like EVOO for extra-virgin olive oil), but I find her somewhat unorthodox style to be refreshing (and she's not too hard on the eyes!). All in all I find this to be a very fine cookbook and one that I will be recommending to quite a few of my friends who would appreciate both the recipes and the step-by-step style of the photography and instructions. This will not become a go-to cookbook for me, but I am very glad that I own it and I will be cooking recipes from it from time to time.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Great Recipes so far!
    I pre-ordered this book cause I saw an episode on her Rachael Ray morning talk show where she was preparing a pasta and shrimp dish that looked so delicious. So I just had to try it which I did last night and it was a hit in my home. I look forward to trying some more recipes from this book.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Fun cooking
    I have made many recipes so far and have loved the book. It is so helpful to have the pictures, and the the dishes have came out great. Both in taste and in looks! There is a great variety of dishes to made, and I look forward to more fun cooking with Rachel Ray!

    5-0 out of 5 stars Delicious Recipes, Fast and Easy!!!
    I have made several recipes from Rachael Ray's Look + Cook. Some of my favorites have been the Summer Corn Fettuccine and the Steakhouse Chili. I enjoy this new style of cookbook with the pictures of the steps and the finished dish. A bonus is the other 125 plus recipes in the back of the book that don't have pictures but you can go online and cook with Rachael Ray. Who wouldn't want to cook along such a funny woman and excellent cook? I liked this book so much that i told my mother and sister-in-laws about it and the great recipes i have found in it. Not in the mood for something really heavy yummy recipes for light recipes are inside here as well as ones that are a tad on the heavier side when you decide you want to go all out. Plus it has a great new feature it tells you what the dish would be great paired with to make a complete meal. This is by far her best cookbook.

    5-0 out of 5 stars WOW! Perfect Christmas present for beginner chefs! And me too!
    What a great cookbook! Bought this cookbook as a Christmas present for my son, who loves to cook and just moved into his first apartment with buddies. Now I'm going to buy another one for myself! What I like about this cookbook is that it is so incredibly visual, perfect for a beginner cook. But not dummied down, the recipes are savory, complex and delicious! What a great Christmas present! ... Read more


    6. Nile Style: Egyptian Cuisine and Culture: Ancient Festivals, Significant Ceremonies, and Modern Celebrations (Hippocrene Cookbook Library)
    by Amy Riolo
    Kindle Edition (2009-03-28)
    list price: $29.95
    Asin: B003JTHY5S
    Publisher: Hippocrene Books
    Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    From classics like Fava Bean Puree, Yogurt with Honey, and Egyptian Whole-Wheat Pita Bread, to tempting Lamb-Filled Phyllo Triangles and Peanut, Coconut, and Raisin Baklava, "Nile Style" spans the range of the Egyptian kitchen with recipes that will appeal to every palate! It includes 23 full menus showcasing, 150 easy-to-follow recipes and much more. ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars Very Good Egyptian Food
    I've been married to an Egyptian guy for 8 years--and ever since, I've been searching out Egyptian and Middle Eastern cookbooks. I have all of the main Egyptian ones, including Claudia Roden's "New Book of Middle Eastern Food", Samia Abdennour's "Egyptian Cooking", Sally Elias Hanna's "Dining on the Nile", Collette Rossant's "Memories of a Lost Egypt," and Magda Medhwany's "My Egyptian Grandmother's Kitchen."

    The recipes in "Nile Style" are easy and accessible to the average American--yet they are pretty much authentic. I wondered from the description if I'd be receiving ancient, but unpalatable, recipes--but that's not the case. All of the recipes here are used by Modern Egyptians--and are still very much a part of every day Egyptian cuisine. What I liked about Amy's book in particular was that she offers some things I haven't seen in others--such as the drink recipes (basically layering different fruit nectars) as well as the restaurant recommendations for not only Cairo, but also Alexandria and Luxor. She also includes recipes from Southern Egypt which is typically ignored in most other cookbooks which focus on mainly Cairo, with some fish recipes from Alexandria. I also learned about the dessert truffles, which I had never heard about.

    Her recipe for aish baladi is the best I've found. I couldn't find the unprocessed bran in my local stores, so I substituted toasted wheat germ (cereal aisle) and it worked very well. She includes the Egyptian-home style favorite "macarona bechamel"--which is similar to Greek pastito. The Egyptians I know use a typical French bechamel when making it, but I liked learning Amy's approach which mixes chicken/beef stock with the milk. It makes a very rich meal, slightly lighter. Her hawashi dough is excellent--very close to the stuff one finds on the street, but her filing was not traditional for me. I think "My Egyptian Grandmother.." does a better job with her mixture of ground meat, allspice, chopped carrot, green pepper, and garlic. Her fuul is a bit boring--I think I would have preferred to see some more variations--such as cooking/mashing the fuul with garlic, onion, tomatoes, and tahini, etc. Heating up a can of fuul isn't really a recipe to me. :) See Claudia Roden for how to actually cook the dried beans. The chicken shwarma was very good and one of the best I've found for doing it at home. Nothing is going to compare to something roasted on a vertical roaster--but this is good. I recommend squeezing some fresh lemon juice on it as you take it out of the oven. The masa'a was good--and I tried the unorthodox suggestion of adding cheese on top which my family loved. I also loved her serving suggestion for fattah in using the ramekins.

    The book contains lots of dessert recipes--and the few I've tried have been good. I like how she including the baklava with cream recipe--as it's a wonderful variation that many Americans have never had. I'm also eager to try the double chocolate baklava.

    Although not mentioned (or perhaps I missed it), you can always use ground beef for any recipe calling for ground lamb. It won't be exactly the same--but it works well and nearly every recipe that calls for ground lamb is made with both in Egypt.

    The book has some nice pictures and is a good, if small, size. If you are at all interested in Egyptian cooking, I highly recommend adding it to your library. I'd also recommend Claudia Roden's and Sally Elias Hanna's books as well. Those are the ones I keep coming back to.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Excellent recipes and culinary history
    This book provides a wealth of culinary history along with tantalizing recipes, allowing the reader to understand the context of each dish. The author, Amy Riolo, has traveled extensively in Egypt, and she includes excerpts of her experiences in the book. As a result, Nile Style is fun to read as travel literature as well as a cookbook. With the home cook in mind, Amy has a adapted the recipes for easy after-work cooking. I especially enjoyed learning about and cooking with exotic ingredients like orange blossom water, molokhiya, and baby okra.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Perfect for any collection strong in ethnic cookery
    Egypt is an ancient land of monuments and artifacts. It's also a country rich in distinctive culinary traditions that encompass food and dining as a fundamental element of both ancient and modern festivals, ceremonies, and celebrations. An internationally recognized culinary authority, food historian, and cooking instructor, Amy Riolo brings her many years of experience and expertise to bear when she compiled the recipes comprising "Nile Style: Egyptian Cuisine And Culture", a illustrated, 220-page compendium of superbly presented recipes that range from such exotic fare as Nubian Bread ad Hibiscus Punch; to traditional dishes like Lentils, Rice, and Pasta with Spicy Tomato Sauce; to classics like Egyptian Rice, Apricot, and Pistachio Pudding. The Egyptian names for each of the presented recipes is given along with the English translations of their names. Enhanced with the inclusion of a glossary of ingredients commonly used in Egyptian cooking, a 'Where to Buy' guide (including specific contact information for vendors of specialty ingredients not otherwise readily available), a tour-guide listing of superb Egyptian restaurants, an extensive bibliography, and a handy index, "Nile Style" is an enthusiastically recommended addition for personal and community library ethnic cookbook collections.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Absolutely worth it for a freebie! Good recipes.
    "Nile Style" is much more than a cookbook. Packed with deep research and excellent reporting of Middle Eastern cultures, celebrations and rituals, "Nile Style" is also a history book. Amy Riolo writes from her soul, pulling the reader into understanding lifestyles from all countries in the Mid-East and Northern Africa. As a marketing professional in the global coffee and tea industries, this book provides an historic education from ancient customs to modern day cuisine. Recipes are easy to prepare and open a new world of flavors to enjoy. ... Read more


    7.
     

    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    8. As Always, Julia: The Letters of Julia Child and Avis DeVoto
    Hardcover (2010-12-01)
    list price: $26.00 -- our price: $15.49
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0547417713
    Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
    Sales Rank: 78
    Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    With her outsize personality, Julia Child is known around the world by her first name alone. But despite that familiarity, how much do we really know of the inner Julia?
     
    Now more than 200 letters exchanged between Julia and Avis DeVoto, her friend and unofficial literary agent memorably introduced in the hit movie Julie & Julia, open the window on Julia’s deepest thoughts and feelings. This riveting correspondence, in print for the first time, chronicles the blossoming of a unique and lifelong friendship between the two women and the turbulent process of Julia’s creation of Mastering the Art of French Cooking, one of the most influential cookbooks ever written.
    Frank, bawdy, funny, exuberant, and occasionally agonized, these letters show Julia, first as a new bride in Paris, then becoming increasingly worldly and adventuresome as she follows her diplomat husband in his postings to Nice, Germany, and Norway.
     
    With commentary by the noted food historian Joan Reardon, and covering topics as diverse as the lack of good wine in the United States, McCarthyism, and sexual mores, these astonishing letters show America on the verge of political, social, and gastronomic transformation.

    ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars A foodie friendship, one letter at a time, November 15, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    It's easy to recommend this book to dedicated foodies, and certainly to fans of Julia Child. "As Always, Julia" is the collection of the correspondence between Julia Child and her friend, mentor, and editor Avis DeVoto, from the time in 1952 when Julia wrote a fan letter to Avis' husband (regarding an article he'd written about kitchen knives) and mentioned in-passing that she was working on a cookbook, until the time several years later that the cookbook finally was published.

    If you're interested in Julia Child the person (and My Life in France wasn't enough for you, whether or not accompanied by the Julie & Julia movie), then "As Always, Julia" is a no-brainer, because these were the letters shared by two intelligent and opinionated women who were confiding in one another, not talking to a microphone. And confide they did: about Avis' child-raising and Paul Child's job as well as the difficulty of finding fresh shallots. It is, more than anything else, the story of a real life friendship, and better than any epistolary novel you can imagine. You will know these women well, at their most personal, such as Avis writing, "I like every part about growing older except what happens to your feet." (It's hard to imagine anyone compiling such a collection now, with all of us writing e-mail -- if that -- and only packrats like myself keeping copies of everything for decades.)

    But the book is interesting for several other reasons.

    Watching the creation of a masterpiece: Mastering the Art of French Cooking was an instant classic, and it was the result of years of hard work. But the words "it was the result of years of hard work" does not begin to capture the number of cooking experiments Julia (and Simca) did, or contract negotiations, or research into the equipment that Julia could expect a typical American housewife to own. She experimented with pressure cookers, for instance, to find out if they were okay for making chicken or duck stock. "First time the [pressure cooker] brew was so horrible I threw it away." Then, after adding the vegetables only at the end, "Again it was loathsome so I threw it out." Many ducks gave their lives for such research, and the Childs often found themselves "bilious" after all these experiments.

    Would-be writers (or any creator waiting for her ship to come in) may be heartened or inspired by the knowledge that even Julia had self-doubts. She wrote in 1953, "There is so much that has been written, by people so much more professional than I, that I wonder what in the hell I am presuming to do, anyway."

    A snapshot of foodie history: My mother was never excited about cooking, and I don't think she owned a copy of MtAoFC. But I do remember shopping for groceries in the 1960s and early 1970s, when cookbooks had to give detailed explanations about what cilantro is, or how to make your own coconut milk. It was worse in the 1950s, and much of the Avis-Julia correspondence is about what was (or usually wasn't) available, from decent jarred chives to fresh clams anywhere but the coastal cities. They also debated the wisdom of getting those newfangled dishwashers, Waring blenders, and other devices that, they started out agreeing, nobody really needed.

    A "daily history" of the McCarthy era: Nowadays, we tend to think of the time when Senator McCarthy held sway as a bizarre interlude in American history, but few of us remember it personally. Julia and Avis were extremely political women; one constant theme in their letters was the current political landscape, which they actively abhorred, and their letters become a chronicle of living through that time. "Oh god I wish this madness would subside, as I know it will, but it is exhausting watching all this go on," wrote Avis in 1953. "I do not enjoy watching the Senate floor turned into a bear-pit." There's so much political discourse, in fact, that it might lower the book's value for some readers. (Or raise it for others, if you're more political than I.) While I care about their views (or at least their passions) it often was more than I needed to know. But I could comfortably skip ahead through those parts.

    A view of intelligent, accomplished women in a pre-Betty Friedan world: Both Julia and Avis were upper-class women who saw themselves as "housewives" but simultaneously were engaged in serious endeavors. Avis was active in Boston-area intelligentsia (Bernard DeVoto had taught at Harvard), in politics (dinner guests included the Schlessingers and Kennedys), and in book publishing (not the least of which was her initial introduction of Julia to book acquisition editors). Julia was part of the government agency's social scene throughout Paul Child's career, not to mention her own cooking accomplishments in the 40s and 50s. This book is a picture of the years before "Women's liberation" were coined, including social mores. The poet May Sarton, a friend to both Avis and Julia, has a "special relationship;" the editor's footnote explains this meant that Sarton was lesbian. It was indeed a different world, and I'm grateful for a peephole into it -- and even more grateful not to live in it.

    As you can tell: I've really enjoyed this book. I think you will, too -- and not just for foodie reasons.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Julia, Unplugged, October 28, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    Who would have guessed that Julia Child was a control freak?

    Judging by her own letters, it seems that she was often in various stages of irritation at her two co-authors of Mastering the Art of French Cooking, the book that launched her career. One co-author didn't do her share of the work, although in her defense, it's unlikely that any of them realized when they began, that they were embarking on what would be a 20-year-long project that was anything but smooth. Her other colleague was a hard worker, but something of a perfectionist, often second-guessing Julia's meticulous research. It's amazing the book was published at all.

    Julia became pen pals with Avis DeVoto, a reviewer of mysteries and wife of Bernard DeVoto, a writer and editor. Julia had written to Bernard about an article he had written and he asked Avis to answer the letter. Julia and Avis hit it off immediately and began a correspondence and friendship that lasted the rest of their lives.

    Julia was an expert at French cooking, but she knew little about book publishing and oddly, little about American cooking. She had never cooked when she lived in America, and had learned everything she knew about cooking in Paris, so she had peculiar gaps in her knowledge, such as that Americans keep their fresh eggs in cartons in the refrigerator, not in a bowl on the counter. Avis was able to keep such clangers from getting into the book, as well as steering Julia to editors who would be open to the idea of such an ambitious cookbook.

    Avis also acted as Julia's stateside researcher, answering questions such as whether cake flour was available, or just all-purpose flour. Avis alerted her to new trends in American cooking, such as the use of mono sodium glutamate (MSG) in the form of sprinkle-on Accent.

    They wrote about politics as well, with Senator Joseph McCarthy and his hunt for communists the topic of the day. Julia and husband Paul moved from Paris to Marseilles to Germany to Oslo during the 1950s, and she wrote Avis how they were adapting to each new home and how their attempts at language learning were going. Julia loved getting to know new places, but her heart always belonged to Paris.

    After two years of letter writing, Avis and Julia finally met in France, and they met a few more times over the years, until the Childs finally returned to the States for good and could see the DeVotos on a more regular basis.

    The letters span the years from 1952 to 1961 and are remarkably interesting despite their share of mundane matters such as the weather and who had what seasonal disease. Julia and Paul went to a play while they were visiting New York in 1957 and were impressed by the "young male lead, Richard Burton...he is English, I believe." In a prescient letter dated 1952, Julia told Avis "I'm enjoying [teaching French cooking to Americans] immensely, as I've finally found a real and satisfying profession which will keep me busy well into the year 2000."

    5-0 out of 5 stars A Fascinating Peek Into the Life of a Great Woman, November 2, 2010
    I love to cook and have been cooking for over 40 years. Surprisingly enough, I was never a fan of Jullia Child until much later in her life. I never saw her show on PBS, but recently I've been more interested in finding out more about her.

    As Always, Julia was a fascinating look into Ms. Chilld's personality and politics, as well as her views on cookery. I found the progression of her friendship with Avis to be a great read. I was afraid that I'd be bored just reading letters between two women, but what women they were!

    I also had no idea that Mastering the Art took so many years to right and edit and that a major publisher made the really dumb mistake of turning it down, wow!

    I found Julia to not only be a pioneer in the modern American kitchen, but a truly lovely and extremely bright woman. She was an avid reader, writer and very involved in the politics of the time.

    I would recommend this book for anyone who would like to know more about the fascinating person who was Jullia Child. I rate the book a solid 4.5 stars. The editing was excellent as well.

    Please note that I received an E-ARC copy of this book from the publisher for the purpose of writing a review. I'm a little disappointed to see it's not available for Kindle yet, but online it says that the book is due out 12/10/10, so that may be the Kindle release date.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Two extraordinary women, one inspiring friendship, November 8, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    Picture a young wife, circa 1963, faced with entertaining her husband's European business associates and friends (one of whom was a Swiss trained chef!), but whose only cookbook was "Betty Crocker's Picture Cookbook." Now, imagine her astonishment as she thumbs through her brand new book entitled, "Mastering the Art of French Cooking." Talk about prayers being answered! Yes, Julia was responsible for awakening my passion for cooking that continues to this day.

    But much as I appreciated Julia as an excellent instructor and enjoyed her television appearances, I had no clue how intelligent, witty and warm hearted she was until I read these letters. In addition, what a pleasure it was to meet her friend, Avis DeVoto, every bit as charming and erudite as Julia. How extraordinary that these two "met" when Julia sent a couple of good French knives to Avis's husband, the writer Bernard DeVoto, after reading his article complaining about the lack of quality in American kitchen knives. That simple gift was the seed of a friendship that is beyond heartwarming to read about.

    For those of us who remember the late `50's, these letters also remind us of the turmoil surrounding the McCarthy witch hunts and the latter hearings, years that can only be described today as "bizarre." But it reminds us of how easy it is for just one person to create an atmosphere of suspicion and hearsay so poisonous, that, for awhile, it can intimidate an entire country.

    When I first began reading this rather large book, I thought I would keep it by my bedside and read a few letters each evening. Ha! "Bet you can't eat (read) just one!" Instead, I promptly gave in and let the rest of the world go by while I devoured every word until the end. I can't remember the last time that happened.

    History, humor, inspiring and unforgettable personalities -- what more can you want in a book?

    5-0 out of 5 stars A PERFECT GIFT FOR THOSE WHO LOVE COOKING, STRONG WOMEN AND WITTY CONVERSATION, November 5, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    A great and lasting friendship was born on March 8, 1952, when a young American housewife living in Paris, Julia Child, wrote a short letter to historian Bernard DeVoto, complimenting him on an occasional piece he had written in Harper's lamenting the absence of good carving knives in the States, where knives seemed all to be made of stainless steel, which would not hold an edge. Mrs. Child included a French knife in her letter -forged carbon steel. Mr. DeVoto was swamped with work at the time so his wife, Avis, wrote back. Avis and Julia are one of the great pairs of friends in modern times. They were both sharp as pins, they were irreverent and opinionated, and, most of all, they both were genuinely interested in the people and things around them. Avis's letters are now released from archive and veteran culinary historian Joan Reardon has done a labor of love, combining Avis's and Julia's letters across the span of almost ten years (1952-61) to tell the story of a lovely friendship and of the growth to maturity of the author of one of the classic cookbooks of modern times.

    On February 12, 1953, Julia Child wrote her new pen pal, Avis DeVoto, to describe a dinner Julia and her two colleagues in their new Ecole des Trois Gourmandes had attended the night before with famed Parisian gourmand Maurice Curnonsky ("the Prince of Gastronomy"). "At the party," she wrote, "was a dogmatic meatball who considers himself a gourmet but is just a big bag of wind. They were talking about Beurre Blanc, and how it was a mystery, and only a few people could do it, and how it could only be made with white shallots from Lorraine and over a wood fire. Phoo. But that is so damned typical, making a damned mystery out of perfectly simple things just to puff themselves up." She concluded, tongue in cheek, by writing: "I didn't say anything as, being a foreigner, I don't know anything anyway." Two pares later, she's rhapsodizing over the kind of kitchen she'd like to have if she were rich: "I am going to have a kitchen where everything is my height [over six feet], and none of this pigmy [sic.] stuff, and maybe 4 ovens, and 12 burners all in a line, a 3 broilers, and a charcoal grill, and a spit that turns."

    That's Julia to a T, always unbuttoned in her opinions, wobbly in her spelling, bursting with energy, savoring whatever life offered her. She wasn't yet the world authority on French cooking she would soon become but she already knew where she was heading and she knew how she wanted to get there -every recipe tested, adaptations made to American materials, tastes and equipment, the `secrets' of French cuisine made clear and obvious to even the neophyte cook. (She commented once about another French cookbook that it should spell out what weight hen to buy for coq au vin -a five-pounder, which is what the recipe called for, would be an old hen: it wouldn't cook in forty-five minutes as the recipe stated; it'd still be tough as leather.)

    Julia hadn't finished her immortal Mastering the Art of French Cooking yet, but Avis and she were talking about it. Avis lived in Cambridge, Julia in Paris. Avis hoped to get Julia a decent publishing contract with Houghton Mifflin, a publishing house with which she had contacts. The letters continue through 1961, by which time Mastering had been published, not, alas, by Houghton Mifflin, but by Alfred Knopf. Bernard had died unexpectedly in 1955. Julia and her husband Paul had paid for Avis to visit them in France. The flurry of letters back and forty continued unabated but by that point the continuing themes of their correspondence are in place. As much fun as their letters are to read, at this point there are few new revelations. But who cares? These are first class letters by two first class people, and who would not want to know more about the forging of Mastering the Art of French Cooking, I?

    A warning: There is a lot about cooking in these letters, typically gone into in great detail. Julia asks Avis for American ingredients (dried spices, for example) and cooking equipment and counsels her how to make dishes, Avis corrects errors and un-Americanisms in Julia's prose. Other topics pop up repeatedly, most notably, in the earlier portions of the book, their caustic commentary on the Red Scare, Senator Joe McCarthy, and the spineless elected officials who time and again failed to confront him. These are two tough (but very warm) ladies. It's a treat to be let in on their intimate and prolonged conversation with each other.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Intelligent Correspondence, November 21, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    In 1951, American West historian Bernard DeVoto wrote an article for Harper's magazine in which he deplored the lack of adequate knives for the American housewife. In Paris, Julia Child read the article and sent him a French kitchen knife. Avis DeVoto, Bernard's wife, who answered her husband's mail, wrote back to Julia. From this start, the two women corresponded until Avis' death in 1989.

    "As Always" covers only ten years of their 38-year friendship. During that 10-year period, Julia attended Le Cordon Bleu to learn how to master French cooking and decided to write a French cookbook for American women.

    Over the course of a 38-year friendship, the two women wrote hundreds of letters. Reading these letters was fascinating because interspersed in the two on-going topics of cooking and eating were discussions of politics, living in foreign countries, and many other topics.

    One has to wonder whether these two erudite and intelligent women would produce such a body of correspondence in this day of 140-character tweets, 500-word blog posts, and emails.

    If you love cooking, eating, Julia Child, cookbooks, and intelligent women, this book will fascinate you.

    5-0 out of 5 stars A Story of Friendship and Gastronomy! A must for every Julia Child fan!, November 5, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    Julia Child's legacy still lives on whether through her foundation or her revolutionary television show on public television, "The French Chef." Despite her own WASPY upbringing in Pasadena, California in a well-to-do family, she had planned on becoming a novelist in New York City and went to serve her country in Ceylon where she met Paul Child, her loving husband. He accepted an assignment in France. There Julia decided to expand her knowledge on French cuisine and gastronomy with enthusiasm, fascination, and interest.

    THis book is not just about Julia Child but about a friendship between her and Avis De Voto, the wife of author Bernard DeVoto. Avis replied to her letter and there began a friendship of love, devotion, honesty, and candid between these two women until the end of their lives.

    Their letters also express the time in the 1950s whether set in Cambridge, Massachusetts where Avis lived with her family and all over Europe where Julia and Paul had managed to live in Paris, Marseilles, Germany, and Oslo among his assignments. In the duration, Julia had worked with Louisette and Simca, two French chefs, on a cookbook that was years in the making. In many ways, Avis was the fourth author of this book. She was the force to get it published in the United States through her contacts.

    In reading this book compiled by the author, the letters do go into details about food a little too much for me. Avis was also an accomplished chef. But it's a fascinating look at American life and the world of letter writing between two exceptional, brilliant women who revolutionized the publishing and cuisine industries to this day.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Witty, moving, consuming--a feast of fifties' culture, friendship, food, and love, November 4, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    This is the kind of book where you come to know the writers like friends, grow to love them, and feel their joys and tragedies as your own. In the opening sections I was captivated by the chatty, literate voices of Avis and Julia, their generous wit and intelligence, and the exciting political and cultural circles in which they moved even more than any of the specific--and also wonderful--information about food. Avis is married to the noted Harvard historian, novelist, and Harper's columnist Bernard DeVoto and knows everybody, writing about Adlai Stevenson, Archie MacLeish, and the scions of American publishing as houseguests and `lambs.' Speaking of Dorothy de Santillana, a top editor at Houghton Mifflin, she remarks, "She used to be married to Robert Hillyer [a Pulitzer prize-winning poet and novelist]. She is now married to Giorgio de S., who is an Italian marquis and teaches history of philosophy at MIT and is a darling. . . You'll die when you meet Dorothy because she is very beautiful and enormously fat--I think this is really one of the rare glandular cases--it makes no difference because she is a great natural force and men gravitate towards her like flies. I'm quite sure she'd give her eye teeth to get this particular book."

    I was both amused and intrigued by this breezy kind of talk and the up close and personal views of American literati, their dinners and cocktail parties, and Julia's and Avis's thoughts on such subjects as the `new' stainless steel knives, Dick Nixon, frozen vegetables, roasting chickens, the French, Peyton Place, and McCarthyism. It was like being steeped in pitch-perfect Fifties culture as experienced by tremendously talented, intelligent women immersed in domesticity and serving others and yet somehow managing, quite heroically I might add, to craft lives where their own remarkable gifts shine through.

    It took me a while to realize just how courageous these women were because part of their outward cheeriness and generosity towards others is making it all look not that hard. As the years roll by and their labors on Julia's manuscript and for their families continue, you start to see along with all the recipes and other commentary more of the very real hardships they face and the steadfast determination that gets them through. The book is organized by editor Reardon so that you know when something very tragic or really wonderful is about to happen, and then you live through it with the women in their letters as it occurs. This makes for an incredibly engrossing, affecting read.

    As the Booklist reviewer pointed out, Avis thought Julia's book was as exciting as a novel, and their correspondence about creating a culinary masterpiece and surviving the ups and downs of midlife is certainly the same. In fact, it's richer, more sumptuous, true, and moving than almost anything I've read this year. You don't even have to be that interested in food or cooking to get swept up by the story. Thank goodness Houghton Mifflin had the good sense to publish their book this time!

    4-0 out of 5 stars More Julia, December 14, 2010
    I have loved and admired Julia Child since my Mother and I would sit mesmerized in front of the television in the 60's and watch her cook. What a difference from what we knew then!

    I'm midway through this almost fascinating book - the fascinating part is Julia. I didn't realize how long it took to bring this book to the public or how intelligent she was or how much effort she brought to the book - almost obsessive but what a success.

    What's starting to bother me is the conversations about knives, beurre blanc and McCarthy, none of which I care about. Also I don't like Avis at all. She's racist, spoiled and exaggerates"how busy she is" all the time. How busy can you be when you have live in help and two sons 8 years apart and one not home? The frantic pace she keeps is unbelievable and I can't imagine anyone living like that. With all that ruckus, she still seems to get to the market and even would like to invite her butcher for lunch - this after what seemed like endless dinner parties. It must have taken an hour at least to type all those letters to Julia.

    Two things that makde an impression on me that I had not thought about recently is the enormity of what is offered today in American supermakets and specialty stores compared to the 50's. The second is what a hunk Paul Child was and what an odd couple they made visually. The fact that they were so in love is reassuring.

    I doubt I will finish this as I find myself skipping around but it is an interesting endeavor to plumb the personality of this fascinating woman who lived such an extraordiary life.

    5-0 out of 5 stars A gold mine for Julia-philes, December 3, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    For those of us whose appetite for all things Julia was whetted by My Life In France and the movie Julie and Julia, As Always, Julia is a gift. A bonus is getting to know the inimitable Avis deVoto, a vibrant and memorable character in her own right, whose role in creating the phenomenon that was Julia Child and Mastering The Art Of French Cooking deserves to be better known.

    Things began in 1951 when Harvard historian and foodie Bernard deVoto wrote an article for Harper's on the abysmal quality of American made kitchen knives. Julia Child wrote in response, mentioning her interest in French cooking for American kitchens and sending along a French knife. Bernard's wife/secretary Avis wrote back in thanks, requesting recipes for a couple of French dishes she remembered fondly from a trip abroad. Their ensuing correspondence resulted in a deep friendship and the eventual publication of Mastering The Art Of French Cooking, revolutionizing American kitchens, supermarkets and, it can be argued, quality of life. As Avis would say, "Wow."

    The French Chef and the Cambridge hostess had much in common. They were both curious and avid readers, loved parties, wines, politics, jokes and cooking and eating great food. These letters sparkle, even when the contents are gloomy. Julia's humor, honesty and exuberance leap from the page, her zest for life evident even when relating an anecdote about a truly awful ladies' luncheon in Oslo. It's prefaced with a succinct, "Gawd!" and ends with "Ugh." In addition, there is delightful commentary on people and events and wonderful glimpses inside Julia's marriage to that Renaissance man, Paul Child through their many moves, language lessons, health issues and conflicts between his job and her own ambitions.

    For her part, Avis' letters reveal a sharp and rigorous intellect, a deep commitment to home and family, and wide ranging interests. They provide a fascinating picture of domestic life among the Cambridge intelligentsia in the second half of the last century. Highly entertaining descriptions of what was available in grocery stores, uses of aluminum foil, quality of frozen vegetables, meals she cooked (often with the benefit of Julia's coaching) and parties she attended are interspersed with blunt and perceptive characterizations of public figures; Sen. Joseph McCarthy "...really insane," President Eisenhower "a dope;" and Adlai Stevenson "a nice man."

    It was Avis who knew the ins and outs of publishing and while MTAOFC might have seen the light of day without her help, it was her suggestions, contacts and guidance that made the book what it is. From initial feelers to Dorothy de Santillana (resident of The Pnk Palace), the only woman editor at Houghton Mifflin, through the devastating news that after seven years of consideration and work, HM turned it down, Avis was its indefagitable champion and just as euphoric as the Childs when it found its home at Knopf. Her letter to the Childs delivering the news is one of the most eloquent and charming in the book, espressing love, respect and admiration and joy.

    My only complaint is that the footnotes are somewhat distracting and perplexing. On the one hand Ms. Reardon provides a great deal of information on people we already know about (Richard Nixon, Arthur Schlesinger, Archibald MacLeish), information on people mentioned once in passing at a dinner party or something but ignores juicy details of incidents and anecdotes we'd love to know more about. Avis and Julia run away with two-thirds of the book, leaving Ms. Reardon and her footnotes in the dust, but she really tried. The section introductions are informative and good if perhaps the book could have done with more editing--there's a lot of step by step cooking in it, and some dullish passages about long-over political debates--but better too much than too little, and one can only imagine Ms. Reardon's state of mind when faced with the task of compiling these letters. Overall it's an heroic effort, and minor quibbles are just that. Highly, highly recommended.

    ... Read more

    9. Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Vol. 1
    by Julia Child, Louisette Bertholle, Simone Beck
    Hardcover
    list price: $40.00 -- our price: $21.99
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0375413405
    Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf
    Sales Rank: 97
    Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    Revised edition of the classic cookbook, originally published in 1961. ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars I am a man that cannot cook. but with this book I CAN, October 5, 2005
    First, I cannot cook. other then basic heat and serve.

    So I bought a ton of cookbooks and tried a ton of recipes from the food network. Still could not cook.

    Picked up this book at a flea market ( the 1963 printing ).

    This book is incredible. My kids not only will eat the food, but they love it. ( and they demand the food now ).

    I do not agree with other reviews about complexity and cost of the recipe's. She provides both easy and complex recipes.

    The recipes are well thought out, with step by step insrtructions and illustrations. The illustrations are priceless, cooking is alot of technique, and the illustrations walk you through it. Every question I would have had about the ingredients or prep are covered.

    Oh, and ingredients.. She assumes that the grocery store is the only place you have to shop. So she notes how to adjust for canned or frozen vs fresh, and what you can substitute. Not some cute ethnic market in New york city where everything is always in season from the 4 corners of the world. You can literally take the book to the grocery store to buy your ingredients. and come out with everything you need. ( I have a 40 year old copy of this book, and Julia's assumptions about what I will be able, and will not, to find in my grocery store is 100% correct. )

    Crepes - been trying for a year to make the kids crepes. tried several recipes online. failed. first attempt with Julia, and voila crepes.

    Omlette - so I could always make an omlette. or at least I thought. now I am an omlette gourmet cook.


    I cannot wait to graduate to her other cookbooks.


    5-0 out of 5 stars My cooking textbook and still my favorite "all-purpose" book, September 14, 2002
    My mom was insistent that we kids learn to cook, and when Julia Child came on public television in the 60's, the whole family was glued to the set. We watched with fascination as she did things with food we Americans didn't know you could do. Mom bought this cookbook then, and I still have it, cover hanging by threads and covered in all kinds of saucy stains. It's still going strong, getting more stains every time I give a dinner party.

    We learned how to make omelets, roasts, soups like Vichysoisse (surprisingly simple potato and leek soup), and how to cook the bumper crop of garden green beans in a new and very delectable manner.

    I still think that this may be one of the best cookbooks for vegetables that I have on my shelf. I prize it for the meat section, especially a veal ragout that is possibly one of the most luxurious company dishes for a dinner party. It can be made ahead, and in fact, improves if you do. There are a lot of delicious desserts, some complicated (like Creme Bavaroise) and some cakes such as Reine de Saba (Queen of Sheba), a darkly moist and modest looking little chocolate cake. This is easy to make, but so rich and delicious it should be banned by the AMA. What's not in here is French Bread. That's in Volume II.

    We made French-style green beans and the Reine de Saba cake one memorable Thanksgiving when we were very young, and even the kids (seven cousins, five of which were BOYS) sat politely glued to the table for the ENTIRE meal instead of getting up and running around halfway through the feast. The food was THAT good.

    While I don't make French food every day because I watch my weight, I do use this book for the princples of good food preparation, even if omitting cream or substituting lower fat choices.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Most Important Cookbook of the Last 50 Years. Period., April 6, 2004
    Rarely are we able to say with certainty that a book is at the top of its subject in regard and quality. This book, `Mastering the Art of French Cooking' by Julia Child, Louisette Bertholle, and Simone Beck is certainly in that most unique position among cookbooks written in English and published in the United States.

    With Julia Child's celebrity arising from her long series of TV cooking shows on PBS, it may be easy to forget how Ms. Child rose to a position with the authority that gave her the cachet to do these shows in the first place. This book is the foundation of that cachet and the basis of Ms. Child's influence with an entire generation of amateur and professional chefs.

    It may also be easy to forget that this book has three authors and not just one. The three began as instructors in a school of French cooking, `Les Ecole des Trois Gourmandes' operating in Paris in the 1950's. And, it was from their experience with this school that led them to write this book. To be fair, Julia Child originated a majority of the culinary content and contributed almost all of the grunt work with her editors and publisher to get the book published.

    The influence of this book cannot be underestimated. It has been written that the style of recipe writing even influenced James Beard, the leading American culinary authority at the time, to change his style of writing in a major cookbook on which he was working when `...French Cooking' was published. Many major American celebrity experts in culinary matters have cited Child and this book as a major influence. Not the least of these is Martha Stewart and Ina Garten. It is interesting that these first to come to mind are not professional chefs, but caterers and teachers of the household cook. Child was not necessarily teaching `haute cuisine', she was teaching what has been named `la cuisine Bourgeoise' or the cooking of the housewife and, to some extent, the cooking of the bistro and brasserie, not the one or two or three star restaurant.

    The table of contents follows a very familiar and very comfortable outline, with major chapters covering Soups, Sauces, Eggs, Entrees and Luncheon Dishes, Fish, Poultry, Meat, Vegetables, Cold Buffet, and Deserts and Cakes. The table of contents does not itemize every recipe, but it does break topics down so that one can come very close to a type of preparation you wish from the table of contents. One of the very attractive schemas used to organize recipes in this book is to take a general topic such as Roast Chicken and give not one, but many different variations on this basic method. Under Roast Chicken, for example, you see Spit-roasted Chicken, Roast Chicken Basted with Cream, Roast Chicken Steeped with Port Wine, Roast Squab Chickens with Chicken Liver Canapes, Casserole-roasted Chicken with Tarragon and Casserole-roasted Chicken with Bacon. Thus, the book is not only a tutorial of techniques, it is also a work of taxonomy, giving one a picture of the whole range of variations possible to a basic technique.

    The book goes far beyond being a simple collection of recipes in many other ways without straying from the culinary material. Unlike books combining regional recipes with anecdotal memoirs, this book is all business. Heading the recipes is a wealth of general knowledge on cooking variables such as weights versus cooking time and conditions. Headnotes also include general techniques on, for example, how to truss a chicken (with drawings) and many deep observations on professional technique. The notes on roasting chicken instructing one to attend to all the senses in watching and listening to the cooking meat in order to obtain the very best results. This may have easily come from the pen of Wolfgang Puck or Mario Batali.

    The individual recipe writing is detailed in the extreme, and recipes typically run to two to three times as long as you may see in `The Joy of Cooking' or `James Beard's American Cookery'. The recipes are also very `modular'. A single recipe may actually require the cooking of two or three component preparations. This is not an invention of Julia Child. I believe she has captured here an essential characteristic of French culinary tradition. The most common of these advance preparations is a stock. More complicated examples are to make a potato salad, a dish in itself, as a component to a Salade Nicoise. What Child may have originated, at least to the world of American cookbook writing, is the notion of a Master Recipe, where many different dishes are presented as variations on a basic preparation. This notion has been used and misused for decades.

    This book has become so important in its field that it seems almost irreverent to question the quality of the recipes. I can only say that I have prepared several dishes from these pages, and have always produced a tasty dish and learned something new with each experience. While there are other excellent introductions to French Cooking such as Madeline Kamman's `The New Making of a Chef', one simply cannot go wrong by using this book as ones entree into cooking in general and French cooking in particular.

    The more I read other cooking authorities' writing, the more I respect the work of Julia Child and company. Observations on technique that went right over my head two years ago are now revealed as signs of a deep insight into cooking technique.

    As large as the book is, the material presented to Knopf in 1961 was actually much larger and the second volume of the book is largely material created for the original writing. To get a reasonably complete picture of French Cookery, do get both volumes at the same time.

    A true classic with both simple and advanced techniques. A superb introduction for someone who is just beginning an interest in food.

    5-0 out of 5 stars This Revised One is the One to Get, August 14, 2009
    I ordered this after seeing the movie. I was a little concerned about whether I really wanted the revised edition or try to find an original. I ordered this one, and was so pleased. It has the original instructions and then a note, like with aspic..It has the instructions for using the calf foot, like in the movie "Julie and Julia" and then tells you how to use boxed gelatin instead, since it is readily available now.
    I, a down-home Southern cook, at the age of 53, who thought no one could teach this old dog new tricks, have Boeuf Bourguignon simmering in my oven as I write this, and my husband said the house smells better than it ever has with anything cooking (and he loves my cooking!) The only bad part of this recipe is smelling it, wanting to eat it, and having to wait for it to cook slowly in the oven!
    Julia Child is a genius, and I can't wait to try more recipes! Love, Love, Love this cookbook. But now I want new cookware and knives............

    5-0 out of 5 stars A Learning Experience, July 8, 2006
    I have always enjoyed cooking, but had never read this book. I thought that traditional French cooking would be difficult to master, high in fat and unnecessarily time-consuming. Also -- I'm an Italian-American -- I thought that Hazan was the last word in cooking. Boy, was I wrong.

    A few months ago, my teenage son returned from his first trip abroad raving about the meals that he'd had in Paris. I knew from experience how great those meals could be and, to please him and provide my family with a new dinner experience, I bought "Mastering" and tried a few recipes. I am now totally hooked. Julia's recipes are clear, well-organized and easy to follow. The book is exquisitely -- and logically -- organized, with each section beginning with a master recipe and continuing through several variations on that theme. This method of organization teaches the structure as well as the ingredients of each recipe, thus encouraging further experimentation by the reader. In other words, by following the recipes, you learn to cook. (Having recently read "My Life In France," I now know that this was Child's intention: "Mastering" took years to write, with each recipe tested and refined many times.)

    Some recipes contain too much butter or cream for modern diets, but these recipes may be easily modified. The techniques, however, are flawless: my pie crust was flaky and did not shrink; the ratatouille (which is low in fat) was perfect and beautiful; the swordfish provencale was so good that my son, who never eats leftovers, ate the leftovers cold out of the refrigerator. Indeed, the pastry dough recipe works so well that, after turning it out into the pan, I exclaimed aloud, "Julia Child is brilliant!", much to the surprise of my plumber, who was working in the house at the time and had walked into the kitchen to ask about a leak. In sum, if you have been afraid of this book, don't be, and if you think that it has become dated or irrelevant -- a mere collector's item -- you are very wrong. I still love Hazan, but "Mastering" is the master class.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Incomparable--the one book you need to begin cooking!, February 9, 2007
    This was the first cookbook I bought for myself and my wife after we were married 34 years ago and had migrated to Perth, Australia from San Francisco. I knew almost nothing about cooking and Julia, along with Simone and Louisette, taught me how to cook.

    The book is far, far more than a collection of recipes; it is a university course in French cooking but after plumbing the depths of souffle's and quenelles, terrines and crepes, you can attack any recipe from virtually any region of the world. It might be like climbing Everst as your first mountain--after that everything is a piece of cake [pardon the expression].

    Even as a total neophyte, and this is not to pat myself on the back, the explicit and extremely clear directions will lead, after a careful reading, to a successfully completed, eminently enjoyable and some would say, very complicated dish suitable for any luncheon or dinner. These three women have drained away from these recipes all the little blank spots that inevitably occur in most recipes; those little places where the recipe does not fully explain the next step. The women that wrote this superb book, really a manual about how to cook, dissected the recipe steps precisely to the extent that there are no blanks anywhere in any of the recipes that I have tried and I have tried a great many in the 30 plus years I have been cooking from the book.

    At this point one may well ask, "Why am I writing these comments now, thirty-some years after buying and using the book"? The answer is that last night I made a pork chop with a mustard-cream sauce that was superb, as usual, and believe me that says infinitely more about the clearity of the book than my cooking. I love the number of sauces in the book so I looked specifically at the second chapter about sauces to find some for vegetables. It has been my primary cook book for all these years and I wanted to write something complementyary about this fabulous work.

    Treat the book like a university textbook--read it carefully, underline appropriate passages and then go back and take written notes on the material; you won't be disappointed and you will learn cooking, "... the way its 'spossed to be".

    3-0 out of 5 stars A little caution, August 24, 2009
    First of all, I'm a huge Julia fan, have owned this book since 1973, and saw the movie on opening weekend. I have also been to culinary school and own shelves full of cookbooks. I sometimes spend an entire day planning and cooking dinner. I have to say, however, that all of the gushing about this book surprises me. I have a 48" professional range and cupboards full of pots and pans, and I often run out of stovetop space and cooking vessels while preparing some of her recipes. I'm of the "fine ingredients cooked with respect" school of cooking, and Julia most often cooks her vegetables to death, and I'm not sure "medium rare" is in her vocabulary. Her pastry is to die for, her bread (vol 2) is heavenly, and the chocolate almond cake featured in the movie is one of my all time favorite cake recipes. The instructions in the book are clear, and I'm assuming that they have been updated since my edition was published. By all means this cookbook should be in your collection, but if you're looking for a cookbook with the best sauce instructions, I would choose the little gem from Williams Sonoma that is just sauces with wonderful photos of the whole process, and if you want French flavor with a more modern approach, I'd suggest Ina Garten's Barefoot in Paris. Her beouf is wonderfully tasty and takes just one pot. I'm not a fan of the 30 minutes till dinner cookbooks, but Mastering the Art of French Cooking is not the first cookbook I'd choose for a beginner. And if you're going to eat from Julia every night, be sure to serve French portions as well as French food.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Magnificent, Incomparable, August 29, 2004
    A book of unique importance in the culinary (& cultural) history of the United States. Before Child, this country was mired in a cuisine that had never really emerged from the depradations of wartime rationing, was being manhandled into the unsavory tinned world of industrialized food (soup in a can, noodles in a box, adulterated, nothing fresh), & had never had much in the way of a national cuisine. Onto this bare plate Child (& her co-authors) placed a sumptuous feast of perfect French food, & with it, an awareness of a better way of eating, a better way of living.

    A watershed, a monument. But how does it stand up as a cookbook? In a word, it remains one of the best cookbooks ever written. The recipes are elegant & their products are nearly without exception delicious. The writing is graceful, witty, & informative. The index & glossary are excellent.

    This book can teach you to cook. If you can cook, this book can teach you to cook better. If you can't cook, but love to eat, give it to someone who will cook for you, & you will eat better.

    Try the Potage Parmentier. The soul of simplicity & gustatory delight.

    5-0 out of 5 stars "If you're afraid of butter, as many people are nowadays, just put in cream!", July 25, 2009
    The movie "Julie & Julia" is built around the astonishing idea that a fan of "Mastering The Art of French Cooking, Volume One" would cook her way through the book's almost-600 recipes in a single year. I've been using this book for three decades and I've only made a fraction of the recipes. But I've made that fraction so many times that the pages fall open to my favorite recipes.

    The other way to identify my favorites? Greasy pages. Makes sense --- Child knew, when Michael Pollan and Nina Planck were still in their cribs, that it wasn't real food that kills you, it's grotesque American portions. As Child gaily told her television audience, "If you're afraid of butter, as many people are nowadays, just put in cream!"

    Such bluntness was her nature --- and her charm. She came from money and privilege; the challenge of her life was to find something worth committing herself to. First came Paul Child. Then, at 37, came the Cordon Bleu cooking school in Paris. And then, through a bit of luck, came an opportunity to work with Simone Beck on a French cookbook for Americans. As she tells the story in My Life in France, that book took almost a decade.

    Judith Jones was the first American editor to read the manuscript. She flipped: "I pored over the recipe for a beef stew and learned the right cuts of meat for braising, the correct fat to use (one that would not burn), the importance of drying the meat and browning it in batches, the secret of the herb bouquet, the value of saut�ing the garnish of onions and mushrooms separately. I ran home to make the recipe --- and my first bite told me that I had finally produced an authentic French boeuf bourguignon --- as good as one I could get in Paris. This, I was convinced, was a revolutionary cookbook, and if I was so smitten, certainly others would be."

    Quality mattered. So did timing. "Mastering The Art of French Cooking, Volume One" was published in 1961. In the White House was a President with a wife who loved France. Air travel was replacing ocean liners --- Americans in larger numbers were traveling to Europe. Frozen food and TV dinners were clogging the supermarkets; Child lobbied for accessible sophistication, and changed the way some of us ate.

    And then there was multi-media. WGBH, Boston's public TV station, invited Child to promote her book. The station had no studio kitchen, so she brought eggs, a whisk and a hot plate. On camera, she made an omelette, narrating the process with wit and confidence. A TV series soon followed --- she was Martha Stewart before there was Martha Stewart.

    Actually, she was much more. Back then, cooking was not a respected profession. She showed that it was a discipline --- and an art. And she legitimized the home-gourmet. Was cooking a chore? Not after you'd seen Julia Child, amusing herself as she prepared dinner.

    All these years later, I'm still charmed by Child's 13-page screed on omelettes. On the other hand, I never had much use for her p�t�s or terrines, souffl�s or sauces. Dessert still seems like overkill. And the seven recipes for kidney? Non-events. It's the classics that first appealed to me, and still do.

    5-0 out of 5 stars An essential book for every kitchen, November 16, 2002
    I really can't add anything to the previous reviews. This book is a classic and belongs in every kitchen, as does its companion, Mastering the Art of French Cooking Volume II. Which brings me to the REAL purpose for this review: Have you tried searching for volume two on the Amazon website? Not much luck, eh?

    Fear not...here's help! The ISBN number for the second volume is 0394721772. Search using this number to find it. ... Read more


    10. Good Eats 2: The Middle Years
    by Alton Brown
    Hardcover
    list price: $37.50 -- our price: $22.50
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 1584798572
    Publisher: Stewart, Tabori & Chang
    Sales Rank: 112
    Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    Good Eats 2: The Middle Years picks up where the bestselling Good Eats: The Early Years left off. Showcasing everything Alton Brown fans (and they are legion!) have ever wanted to know about his award-winning television show, The Middle Years is chock-full of behind-the-scenes photographs and trivia, science-of-food information, cooking tips, and—of course—recipes.

     

    Brown’s particular genius lies in teaching the chemistry of cooking with levity and exuberance. In episodes such as “Fit to Be Tied” (meat roulades), “Crustacean Nation” (crab), and “Ill-Gotten Grains” (wheat products), Brown explains everything from how to make the perfect omelet to how to stuff your own sausages. With hundreds of entertaining photographs, along with Brown’s inimitable line drawings and signature witty writing, this comprehensive companion book conveys the same wildly creative spirit as the show itself.
    ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars The Return of Good Eats, September 29, 2010
    Alton Brown continues his record of his distinctive and fun, but still educational food program Good Eats. He includes a DVD with 15 very short clips that include the subjects: cotton candy, plum pudding, cowboy chow talk, grog, egg nog, sugar, turkey carving, fish, French toast, knives, peanut brittle, macaroons, rice, pickles, diner speak. The turkey carving is very useful and well done.
    All are done in Alton's inimitable quirky style.
    Included in the book itself is an interview with Alton and seasons 6 through 10 which are episodes 81through 164. There are colour illustrations, diagrams and pictures to show various techniques such as shucking oysters. Two or three recipes are included with each episode. There are many good ones here including Cuban sandwiches and Alton's favorite on frying turkeys. Included are equivalent charts and a recipe index.

    Everything is done in the fun quirky style of the show which would make this a good book for those a bit hesitant about their ability or the fun of cooking. Cookbook collectors and fans of Alton Brown of course would also appreciate this book.

    3-0 out of 5 stars Kind of Disappointing, October 17, 2010
    I don't know if I just didn't remember the scripts from the first 80 episodes, but the first book it seemed like he took more time with the information at the beginning of each episode. The first book had stories and anecdotes about why each episode subject was chosen or a little story about it. In this one he just copied and pasted the opening script from the show. I still love that I get all the recipes plus a few extras, but I wish he had taken as much time with this one as he did with the first. Maybe it was the publisher's fault, pushing him to get it out faster.
    I just hope the next one goes back to the first book's style.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Volume 2 - following the same good template from volume 1, September 27, 2010
    This is the second book in the Good Eats "series" of book that Alton is putting out covering what he teaches us during the his TV show. It is a very valuable resource for people to learn a lot about a cooking in a fresh, innovative way as opposed to just reading another cookbook. It is a refreshing and entertaining way to discover they why's of cooking rather than just regurgitating recipes. For that I think this book is an excellent resource for people and I highly recommend it to anyone who wants to learn more about cooking.

    My only complaints are the same as they were for the previous edition. The main complaint is that the index doesn't really cover all of the books. This is a very minor problem and one that only real fans of the show will find difficult since, in my case I already have seen all of his shows and might know that I want to do a version of one of the recipes he covered in one of his shows but I have to remember which book contains that episode in order for me to find the recipe. True, the individual indices have all the values we need to go look things up but at the same time, they only index what is in that volume of the series, so if you are looking for something and don't find it in the index then you have to go look it up in the other index to see if the recipe is there instead. I think I'm just spoiled by how easy Alton makes it to understand everything on his show and am wishing that the same ease of use translated to looking things up in these books. I'm hoping/wishing that after a few volumes of the book are out that they include an overall index to make things easier to look up. (I also wrote in my review of the first book that not all of the recipes from the show were included in the book. I don't know if that is still the situation with this book since I have yet to find anything that is not included in the book.)

    Overall I HIGHLY RECOMMEND this book...especially for people that are new to cooking or shy about cooking since it does contain a treasure trove of information that can be unbelievably helpful to people whether they watch the show or not.

    Buy it if you have any interest at all in cooking and why things happen the way they do.
    Don't buy it if you don't cook or don't like thinking beyond just following a recipe step by step.
    Definitely buy it if you are a fan of Alton Brown and his show.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Another outstanding Voume to the series!, October 18, 2010
    What an excellent follow up to the 1st book, Good Eats "The Early Years." Yet again, I am very happy to have purchased the 2nd Volume in this series. Just a short blurb about us: I admit it, we are foodies. It started with my hubby (a bit like Alton Brown so naturally he was happily drawn to the show Good Eats) who quickly addicted myself and both of our daughters. We were immediately drawn to the entertainment factor and unbelievable tips and bits of information/education. We are devote Alton Brown fans. Anyone who can bring the level of education/information he does in such a fun way in just 30 minutes is awesome!

    This hardcover book is simply gorgeous and is of the same size and thickness of the 1st book in this series. Attractive and worthy of being a coffee table book and simply a delight to hold and look through. This is a large book (10.3 x 9.3 x 1.7 inches ) and not to mention VERY thick with each of the 431 pages filled to the brim with information, diagrams and photos. The handy Conversion Charts are on page 422-423 and the Index is from pages 424-431. The format of this book is similar however greatly improved in my opinion with an upgrade in font and general format of the added tips & photos. The easiest way to locate specific episodes is the by using the Contents page with very simply lists the episodes in a very easy to use format. Much tidier. The book covers Seasons 6- 10; Episodes 81-164. An added bonus of an included DVD from Alton Brown: 15 Short Stories (The Middle Years) The book cover also happily informs us that Volume 3 Good Eats: Infinity and Beyond is soon to come!

    After the section for his interview you jump right into the episodes. Each episode is very nicely set up:
    * Title of episode, along with Season and number, and information about the episode.
    * In depth "Knowledge Concentrate" which is VERY helpful things to know. Not too long, but just the right amount of information to keep you from drooling.
    * The recipes (which Alton refers to amusingly as "Applications") themselves in a VERY well written way that is easy to follow and understand. Outstanding job with putting the recipes in this book!
    And of course, in addition to the above, each episode is filled with diagrams, photos, tips and more.

    You will absolutely relive each episode and have the information in your hands to run to the kitchen with and use right away. Alton brings his humor, science and character to every inch of this book. At the end of the book, you also have your Conversion Charts/equivalents (for Weight, Volume & Oven Temperature) As with well the recipes (ahem: Applications), these charts are easy to understand and use. This book does NOT have a poster book cover but does include a fun DVD called "15 Short Stories"

    This was a gift for my hubby (You know, the guy who can't stop watching Good Eats and anything Alton Brown, lol) and I am very pleased with the quality and information in this gorgeous book. A must have for any Good Eats fan, a great idea for a gift (and useful as you don't have to go watch episodes and jot down recipes while watching) WELL worth the full price of $37.50 and even better at the Amazon price :o)

    4-0 out of 5 stars You've Seen the Movie; Now Read the Book!, November 7, 2010
    Alton Brown and his merry band of studio accomplices have created the best dual medium cooking product since Julia Child launched Mastering the Art of French Cooking and PBS' The French Chef. On his televised series (I also bought the DVD set), Alton demonstrates a gift for clearly presenting dishes I want to cook while increasing my understanding of cooking techniques and equipment and how things all come together. As in Good Eats 1: The Early Years (which I also own), the text closely tracks the televised episodes. For fans, the book has sidebars with inside tidbits about filming, which of the merry band did what and a written version of the DVD "Ask Alton" section. Buy the package and you won't regret it. Plus, you get the whole teaching-training program of tell 'em what you'll teach, show 'em how and finally, remind 'em what they've learned. With this book, Alton even gives you the notes!

    Alton organizes each recipe using "GeekSpeak" titles: 'knowledge concentrate', 'application', 'software' and 'procedure'. "Hardware" items are discussed in sidebars about, say 'pots and pans.' I find this presentation to be very well organized but the titles seem a little 'precious' with repeated cooking from the book. I do like Alton's commentary on running changes he has made to recipes and techniques based on his own experiences with food preparation. The overall effect is one of having a personal tutorial by Alton in your home, complete with conversational 'asides.'

    Unlike the "Iron Chef" series Alton hosts, there is nothing 'foodie' about ingredients and there is nothing elaborate about procedures. This is 'straight ahead' cooking for all of us but with really good recipes and techniques so things come out better than expected and better than the recipes do from the 'average' cookbook.

    5-0 out of 5 stars As good as the first....., October 2, 2010
    There are three places I turn to offline for culinary knowledge. I have tried and enjoyed dozens of AB recipes and I love the show Good Eats. In this book (as well as Volume 1, Good Eats: The Early Years) you will find recipes as well as instructions for preparation (and blueprints if you will of AB's most famous or notorious multi-tasking gadgets) sorted by episode. There's a good ol' fashioned index do-hickey included if you don't have the episode names and order memorized. Kids, you might have to get help from your parents to use it but don't worry, it won't hurt your eyes or anything. It's the perfect source for recipes and procedures I'm too lazy to write down and I can use it when the darn carpal tunnel is acting up.

    All the best recipes plus a few extras are included. Some of the recipes and procedures have been tweaked from their on air format. Often this has to do with feedback from the shows. Recipes are made easier, procedures are made more convenient, and sometimes they are even made tastier if AB has changed his way of thinking in the years since the original air date.

    Don't worry, these are improvements. It's nothing like the whole George Lucas, Star Wars Special Edition debacle.

    The other sources you ask? Well, there's the previously mentioned Good Eats Volume 1 and another AB book, Gear for Your Kitchen which I always consult before shopping. ... Read more


    11. Joy of Cooking: 75th Anniversary Edition - 2006
    by Irma S. Rombauer, Marion Rombauer Becker, Ethan Becker
    Hardcover
    list price: $35.00 -- our price: $21.00
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0743246268
    Publisher: Scribner
    Sales Rank: 110
    Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    When the last edition of the Joy of Cooking appeared in 1997, it was a chef-centric, rarified global ingredient kind of moment. And now, 1997 seems very far away. This country is in an economically wobbly, terror-filled time where Americans have kept close to home both literally and figuratively. The 75th Anniversary Edition of the Joy of Cooking -- as it has always done -- speaks to the time it is published into. This Joy has come full circle from 1997 with a huge emphasis on American home cooking. We are not chasing the authentic Oaxacan enchilada here -- we have cheese, chicken, and beef. We have returned the casserole; included slow cooker recipes; restored chapters on jams, jellies, pickles, ice cream, and drinks. There is an eye to economy with expanded discussions on how to get the best out of tougher cuts of meat; the art of leftovers; and keeping household stock. With 500 completely new recipes and hundreds of recipes long edited out of previous editions, this is a brand-new, best-loved Joy of Cooking that rejoices in the cooking of the country that made it the bestselling cookbook of all time -- America.

    BACK TO BASICSThe perfect boiled egg*fluffy rice*pancakes light as air*choosing the perfect cut of meat* no fail cakes* knife skills* vegetables for every meal*cooking with fresh herbs*how to cook fish*roast chicken with crispy skin*fresh salads and homemade dressings*crisp fritters, fries, and onion rings* casserole cooking*finding the right sauce for the pasta*easy homemade pie dough*simple stock making*chewy and cakey cookies and brownies*quick pan sauces for meats

    BRAND NEWA return to the American classics from enchiladas and chop suey to velvet cake and mud pie* all new illustrations*rich new soups*more grilling recipes*homemade ice cream and sorbet*slow cooker recipes*complete new grains*food for a crowd*how to freeze ingredients, dishes and entire meals*beverages and party drinks for entertaining and family meals* making jellies, jams and preserves* how to can fruits and vegetables*quick suppers*brining meats and shellfish

    RETURN TO REFERENCECutting-edge nutritional information*Expanded Know Your Ingredients*More information about storing and keeping foods*more menu planning*new illustrations of techniques*new sections on high altitude baking and cooking*cooking with wine and spirits*stocking your pantry*buying the right equipment*expanded index*botanical information*ingredient substitutions*expanded information on fish and game*entertaining how-to from supper clubs to children's parties ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars Cook up some classics!, September 9, 2008
    Originally a self-published book in 1931, and no less than nine revisions later, this thick volume of recipes (it's got to be at least 3 inches thick) is a great addition to anyone's cook book library.

    But wait! This book is not merely just a collection of recipes- although with 4000 classic recipes and an additional 500 new ones, that would make it worth buying alone. No, this cook book stands heads and shoulders above the rest because its what I call a "teaching" cook book. It contains recipes for just about every dish or food category you can think of which are arranged in various sections throughout the book. Then, at the beginning of each chapter, there is a kind of introduction which goes into detail about that category. For example, the section on grains starts off with an almost encyclopedic explanation of the types of grains, their anatomy, how to combine them, and so on.

    A handy, informative cook book with plenty of choices, there is sure to be something for everyone and even healthy eaters will find a great section on what makes up a healthy diet, how many calories you need, etc. Also recommend The Sixty-Second Motivator for readers who need more motivation to eat healthier and have trouble changing their diet habits.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Fantastic new edition, February 1, 2007
    I love the new edition. Love, love, love it! When it arrived, I sat down and started reading it. This will sound silly, but I actually CRIED because it was so fantastic and brought back so many good memories.

    I have used the 1975 edition since I started to cook. It was the first book I would turn to when I wanted to see the "standard" recipe for anything. I loved the friendly tone and always found the recipes reliable, producing consistently tasty results. Its only weakness was that it had become a bit dated, in terms of modern tastes and food trends.

    I was excited when a new edition of Joy was released in 1997. It turned out to be a total disaster. Among other things, it lacked recipes for pickling and canning, ice cream and lots of other American standards. Additionally, the 1997 edition eliminated the friendly tone and instructions I had come to love. Worst of all, the recipes were not reliable. I made a few really bad dishes from it before I stopped using it almost completely. Its only strength was in its updated instructions for cooking meat, fish and poultry.

    This new edition is a tremendous achievement. It keeps the down-to-earth tone of the older editions while providing a perfect selection of old favorites and new (primarily ethnic) dishes that are widely eaten in the US. The ice cream and pickling/canning sections are restored. It's actually an improvement on the 1976 edition, and that's saying something!

    I love this edition. I'm throwing out the 1997 edition and eventually I may even part with my old 1975 copy, though it has tremendous nostalgia value for me.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Worth Keeping for Life!, November 7, 2006
    I heard about this book long time ago but never was interested in getting one because I'm only interested in cookbooks with glossy pictures and fancy mouthwatering covers. While I was waiting for my car's rountine maintenance at Costco, I read it just to kill time there. I discovered that it was such a wonderful cookbook that I just got to buy it! I have about 100 cookbooks at home but this one is the best I ever bought. This book covers all kinds of dishes, and all cooking methods. They are easy to read and very illustrative. I think lots of recipes in other cookbooks are originated from this cookbook, or adapted from the ones in this cookbook. I think being the first comprehensive, illustrative and reliable cookbook in history, lots of cookbook authors referred to it when writing cookbooks of their own as time goes by. By reading this cook book, I can see Raychael Ray, Martha Stewart, and many other cooking moguls' recipes here. My suggestion is, buy this cookbook and you can toss away Rachael Ray's 30 minute meals and others. This books has all the recipes you want to cook exactly as it is or to adapt to create your own. This book is valuable in that it helps you build a very solid foundation and understanding in cooking, equipment and all kinds of food ingredients, like "fig" which the Chinese believe to have healing power on your acid damaged GI tract.... Now I can cook it like a tasty American dessert instead of the boring dull tasting Chinese herbal soup my mom taught me to make regularly to stay healthy. Like I say, with the cooking basics and all the wonderful recipes in Joy, I'm confident that I can create better recipes than Rachel Ray or Martha Steward. It's a cook book that is inspirational and helps everybody to discover new knowledge in cookery every time you refer to it! This is the cookbook that I'm definitely keeping and cherishing for the rest of my life ! I highly recommend this to everyone who wants to give a meaningful gift to the ones you care and love!

    5-0 out of 5 stars A must have for all cooks!, December 21, 2007
    The day I found out my grandmother was dying was the day I got this book.

    She was sick and I was very hopeful that she would get better. She was lying on the couch in the living room and asked me to boil her a potato. I, being 19, had NO idea how to boil a potato! But I did not want to bother her about it - so I went into the kitchen and started up the pot of water.

    Not only did I ruin that cute little potato ... but I saw my grandmother lose it! She came into the kitchen and saw the whole potato (not peeled or cut into fourths) hanging out in the pot and just lost it. She started crying... How can I leave you if you can't even boil a potato?!

    My grandfather happened to arrive home at that moment. He did a big sigh when he heard and saw the commotion. My poor frail grandma rolling around on the stool (too weak to stand up even), throwing pans around as she was trying to find another pot to make her potato in. He got her calmed down and fixed her another potato. But before it was even boiled she made him go out to the store "right this minute" and buy me the "Joy of Cooking" cookbook.

    She knew that she would not always be in the kitchen with me to help me cook -- so she got me a GREAT back up.

    That is how I knew my grandmother wasn't going to get better and that I had better learn how to boil a potato.

    In the years that have followed (quite a few of them too) I have used this book to learn how to cook. I love their instructions for cooking beets, steaming artichokes, roasting lamb, pork chops, pork tenderloins, chocolate cake, great pie crusts ... the list goes on and on.

    For anyone learning how to cook / wanting to cook or needing another great book - I highly recommend this and thank my grandmother for giving me great instructions on how to cook.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Still the Champ, if you can only have one cookbook!, October 11, 2007
    The `New Cookbook, 14th Edition' from `Better Homes and Gardens' is a heavyweight contender for best `if you have to have only one cookbook...' title, weighing in against the perennial champion, `The Joy of Cooking', now at its 75th Anniversary edition. The first of these contenders has been my mother's favorite for at least the last 40 years, and her original copy is so beat up (thus the purchase of a new edition), I can't even see the publication date on its binder, where the covers have literally fallen off the spine.
    Looking at the bare figures, `Joy' would seem to be a clear winner, with almost twice (1132 versus 656) the number of pages and almost three times (4000 versus 1400) the number of recipes. Going one step deeper and comparing the Tables of Contents, `Joy' has 39 chapters to `Better Homes' 23 chapters, meaning that `Joy' gives some topics a highlighted treatment missing from `Better Homes'. And yet, `Better Homes' has things going for it, especially considering the fact that there are millions of people such as my mother who have been going to it for so many years.
    `Better Homes' most obvious attribute is its 3 ring binder style, which means that every page will lay perfectly flat AND one can easily remove any page and photocopy it on an inexpensive home multipurpose copier / scanner / printer. No small consideration compared to `Joy's' sewn signatures which are a bit awkward if you are looking at candies at the end of the book or appetizers near the front of the book. This virtue is diminished just a tad by the fact that the binding is a non-standard size, not carried by your local Staples. (I looked, to try to replace the binder laying on my workbench in three pieces!). Another virtue associated with this design is the tabbed dividers for each section. This makes browsing to look for a nice egg recipe much easier than in `Joy'. The next obvious virtue is its color pictures. This is not a clear win, since `Joy's line drawings of how to techniques are often superior to `Better Homes' static pics.
    `Better Homes', after over 40 years on the bookshelves, primarily succeeds at the one thing every `general purpose' cookbook must do well. It has good recipes for virtually every basic, and most of the not so basic preparations the average home cook will want to do in the kitchen in the course of a year. The only stock recipes I could not find was one for Genoise and one for the en papillote cooking technique. Not only do both appear in `Joy', but the Rombauer / Becker clan gives us two different recipes under both rubrics! But, `Better Homes' still has things going for it!
    Looking at the layout, writing, and selection of recipes in `Better Homes', I find much that I like. Many standard recipes are provided with well-written variations, and especially variations I am really interested in trying, such as the blueberry variations on pancakes and muffins. There are also many full-blown parallel recipes when there are several classic ways for making a basic dish, such as biscuits, both rolled and cut and drop biscuits. I am also fond of how most of the recipes are written. Few details are overlooked, yet the writing is crisp and no nonsense direct and to the point. The one thing which will most appeal to the average home cook is that the book makes a point of using only familiar ingredients certain to appear even on the smaller local supermarket shelves. On the other hand, there is little or no holdover from the dark days of 1950s cooking making heavy use of canned or dried ingredients. On the other hand, canned mushrooms, mushroom soup, and hydrogenated shortening are not missing entirely and more than once I found recipes where butter does better than Crisco.
    The two things which most impressed me were the overall selection of recipes and the excellent introductory chapter on `Cooking Basics'. There is an entire library of cookbooks who try to give a good treatment of this subject, and end up giving us just a short chapter of filler to pad out their standard 250 pages. `Better Homes' does it right, as befitting its `be all things' ambitions. The recipe selection is broad enough to appeal to even the more adventuresome home cook, with its recipes for breads, homemade pasta, and homemade salad dressings. My problem with some of the more elaborate recipes is that the product is almost certain to be not as good as what you get from a commercial source. The cinnamon bun recipe, for example, is not nearly as good as my standard from `Baking with Julia'. I was also skeptical of it's hot cross buns recipe, a preparation which is remarkably difficult, as baked goods go. Remarkably, `Joy' passes on both these recipes, reinforcing my belief that for these specialties, one will be far better off going to a book specializing in baking for an authoritative recipe.
    IF I were limited to a single cookbook, my personal choice between these two is `Joy of Cooking', simply because it's recipes are just as good as `Better Homes', and there is more of it. But, if your family tradition belongs to `Better Homes and Gardens', you will not be disappointed by their offering.
    My final word on Joy is that I miss the notebook binding style, which made every page lay flat. Still a great book, however!

    2-0 out of 5 stars a sad echo of the original -- but you can still get the real thing, November 21, 2008
    The infamous and unfortunate late 1990s "update" of this important classic took it in a trendy, low-fat, vaguely-Northern-Italian-accented direction -- and worse, removed so many of the key instructions and techniques that made the classic Joy the one all-purpose reference. A sad day indeed. Fortunately, a happier day followed when it was announced, after some uproar, that the 1975 revision -- the Last Good One -- would remain in print, and so it does to this very day. Do yourself a favor: Forget this unfortunate hodgepodge and go get the real thing, ISDN #0026045702, available in lovely durable timeless hardcover right here at Amazon.

    4-0 out of 5 stars The Crepes Recipe and Squirrel Skinning are Gone!, November 27, 2007
    I bought the 1975 edition as my first cookbook after I was married in 1983. I am happy to report that the dust jacket is faded, yellowed, stained, and quite dirty; the spine of the book is cracked, and the pages are dog eared. I learned to cook with this book and still use it regularly. After all this time, I decided to upgrade to the new edition. It was so tempting - that bright white, clean, brand new cover was calling out to me. So I bought it and brought it home without showing it to my husband who uses it on the weekends to make his breakfast crepes, which are just like the ones his French Canadian mother made. I decided I would give my old book to a very good friend who lives in the city, doesn't really cook, and doesn't own a cookbook. I inscribed the front page to her (saying I hoped the book would inspire her to cook as it did for me) and then told my husband I had given it away. He said "Wait, that book has my crepes recipe". I said "Don't worry, that's such a basic recipe, they wouldn't have gotten rid of that". So I asked my friend to look and see if the recipe was still in the new book, and sure enough it was gone! How could they remove the "French Pancakes or Crepes" recipe?!

    My husband said "We have to get that book back!" I said "No, I can't ask for it back, we'll just copy the recipe into the new book." So I asked my friend to bring the book over so we could copy the recipe into the new book.

    Meanwhile, she had brought the book into work and had a good laugh with her co-workers going through the book, picking out recipes for meals that she would never make, and looking at the old illustrations. She pointed out the best illustration on page 515 on how to skin a squirrel. It's great! It shows disembodied gloved hands and a boot stomping on the tail and pulling the skin off in one fell swoop. We checked the new book and it's gone along with the crepes recipe!

    Well that was it. We had to ask for the book back. I gave my friend the new edition, tore out the page that had my inscription to her on, and put the book back in it's place on my kitchen bookshelf. I will never give away my 1975 edition again!

    2-0 out of 5 stars Good basic recipes, terrible quality book, February 22, 2008
    I am an avid cook and have loved previous editions. This was my wedding gift and I was very excited.
    The binding on my new edition began to split and fall apart within a couple months. They glued the edges of the paper to the binding in a way that I can't imagine lasting through the years as my mother's edition did. It's actually a loose stack of papers within the cover. Also, there are numerous recipe mistakes, more than are catalogued on their website. Some favorite recipes are gone.
    They really rushed this one through the printers and I can't believe how much they're charging for it. My advice is to look for a used copy from the 70's or 80's

    3-0 out of 5 stars Errors mar an otherwise fine book, November 18, 2006
    This edition of the classic work has all of the charm of the previous volumes but has a number of errors. The Simon and Schuster web site notes a number of "revised" recipes. For instance, one problem highlighted on the discussion board is that the pancakes need 1 3/4 teaspoons of baking powder not 1 3/4 tablespoons.

    My first dish out of the new edition turned up a glaring omission. The Chicken Papirikas recipe didn't mention the stock that obviously was needed. I knew to put it in but novices might not.

    I'm delighted that we have a new volume to work with but I hope that the publisher will issue a more accurate version soon.

    1-0 out of 5 stars Over 1100 pages and BINDING IS GLUED NOT SEWN!, March 21, 2010
    The content is fine, but this binding is just unacceptable! My 5 month old copy is heavily creased on the binding because it is glued, not sewn. The 1975 version of Joy of Cooking I have has a sewn binding. The content of the book is 5 stars.. but I just had to give this a 1 star, so you'd notice that the BINDING IS HORRIBLE.

    Check out your copy's binding.. are you satisfied with it? I'm not. :(

    I hope you are reading this Scribner! Please make the next version of the book with sewn binding! ... Read more


    12. Mastering the Art of French Cooking (2 Volume Set)
    by Julia Child, Louisette Bertholle, Simone Beck
    Hardcover
    list price: $89.95 -- our price: $50.51
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0307593525
    Publisher: Knopf
    Sales Rank: 132
    Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    The perfect gift for any follower of Julia Child—and any lover of French food. This boxed set brings together Mastering the Art of French Cooking, first published in 1961, and its sequel, Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Volume Two, published in 1970.

    Volume One is the classic cookbook, in its entirety—524 recipes.
    “Anyone can cook in the French manner anywhere,” wrote Mesdames Beck, Bertholle, and Child, “with the right instruction.” And here is the book that, for nearly fifty years, has been teaching Americans how.

    Mastering the Art of French Cooking is for both seasoned cooks and beginners who love good food and long to reproduce at home the savory delights of the classic cuisine, from the historic Gallic masterpieces to the seemingly artless perfection of a dish of spring-green peas. The techniques learned in this beautiful book, with more than one hundred instructive illustrations, can be applied to recipes in all other French cookbooks, making them infinitely usable. In compiling the secrets of famous Cordon Bleu chefs, the authors produced a magnificent volume that continues to have a place of honor in American kitchens.

    Volume Two is the sequel to the great cooking classic—with 257 additional recipes.
    Following the publication of the celebrated Volume One, Julia Child and Simone Beck continued to search out and sample new recipes among the classic dishes and regional specialties of France—cooking, conferring, tasting, revising, perfecting. Out of their discoveries they made, for Volume Two, a brilliant selection of precisely those recipes that not only add to the repertory but, above all, bring the reader to a new level of mastery of the art of French cooking.

    Each of these recipes is worked out step-by-step, with the clarity and precision that are the essence of the first volume. Five times as many drawings as in Volume One make the clear instructions even more so.

    Perhaps the most remarkable achievement of this volume is that it will make Americans actually more expert than their French contemporaries in two supreme areas of cookery: baking and charcuterie. In France one can turn to the local bakery for fresh and expertly baked bread, or to neighborhood charcuterie for pâtés and terrines and sausages. Here, most of us have no choice but to create them for ourselves.
    Bon appétit!
    ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars THE French cookbook, after all these years, December 12, 2009
    Like the famous Julie of "Julie and Julia", a lot of us aspiring amateur cooks tried to work through this book in the 70's. We made a lot of the recipes, including a memorable "Dacquoise" meringue and praline cake for grad school parties. (We eked out a seminar dinner budget to cover the speaker and two or three guests at a restaurant and turned it into dinner for 30 or so by cooking at a faculty member's house. This was our main cookbook for many of those dinners.)

    The basics on vegetables are here--maybe a bit plain by today's standards, or sometimes overly complicated (who is going to fight with an artichoke or make a moussaka a la turque steamed in a lining of eggplant skin in a timbale mould) but most of the recipes are well worth the effort.

    Book One has main dishes and a few desserts, soups, of course and vegetables. Book Two has more ambitious baking (the infamous Dacquoise) and even baguettes, which still don't come out quite right as American flour has a different ash content and American ovens don't produce steam like professional ovens. The pastry section is particularly good in both; you can learn to make a pate sable or a kind of sugar-cookie like crust that is dead useful for tarts. I've also used the Creme Bavaroise many a time; a lot of work, beating gelatin, cream and carefully unmolding what looks like a simple mousse in a decorative ring mould but is a very elegant dessert that serves quite a few, especially sliced, and plated with fresh berries and a drizzle of sauce. It adapts to many flavors (passion fruit, strawberry, chocolate, mocha) and is one of my favorite classics that you just don't see anymore. The Reine de Saba cake (chocolate almond, under-baked in the center and with a ganache glaze) is equally elegant and again, serves a number of people when sliced and plated elegantly.

    This book has the only French Onion Soup recipe I really like. A lot of work (you have to peel and slice a hellacious pile of onions, oh the tears) and when I had this book the first time, there were NO food processors. Even so, with the food processor, it takes a lot of time to cook down and brown those onions and you need REALLY good broth but the result is by far the best onion soup there is. Just writing about it makes me want to go slice onions this very minute.

    I can't imagine being without these books, and the packaging is nice, as the originals were two different sized volumes and sit kind of funny on the shelf.

    I suppose I should mention that even if you aren't going to make most of these dishes (who can find veal these days?) the book is excellent reading on culinary arts.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Few books have had such a profound influence in their field, December 7, 2009
    There are very few books that have had such a profound effect on their field. This book set is transformative - you will never view cooking food the same way again. I grew up watching Julia Child on my local PBS affiliate with no idea that she was anything other than a local cooking talent with a strange affect. After college, I found a copy of volume one in a used book store and can hear her voice in every recipe, stage of directions, and sage advice.
    After many years, my family loves her beef stew - a regular dinner in our home. I despised French Onion soup growing up, but after following her directions it is my favorite.
    One criticism of this book is the production. After many years of publishing technology improvements, the lack of photos to explain some butchery techniques makes this set a bit dated if you expect visual guides to some steps. Be patient, re-read, and have confidence. These are spectacular dishes made with simple techniques that even someone who grew up on canned soup and boxed dinners figured out.
    If I was trapped on a remote island with only one cooking instructional resource, then this would be my choice. Everything else is a far distant second place.

    5-0 out of 5 stars To me this book is irreplaceable, so I'm ordering a new one., August 23, 1998
    With the help of this book, I taught myself to cook using the basic French cooking instructions in the book. Thirty some years later, after two-year's work/study in a small (then non-accredited) cooking school, I still refer to it. I refer to it for many reasons, least of which is to jog my memory. My ancient copy (circa 1960?) is coming apart at the binding, so I need to replace it. This book is inspiration!

    5-0 out of 5 stars Can make anyone into a French Chef, December 12, 1998
    I discovered this cookbook several years ago and, at least gastronomically, it changed my life forever. The recipes are broken down into the absolute simplest steps possible. The sauces are phenomenal. One can finally appreciate the notoriety that French cooking has (deservedly) earned by preparing and tasting any of these recipes. Julia has confirmed me as a French cooking fan!

    5-0 out of 5 stars WOW-The Very Best Cookbook of any cuisine, September 22, 1999
    I became interested in cooking when I moved out of the dorm in 1970. The quest for good food led to a life-long passion for honest good food. The French approach eating with a sincereity Americans lack. Julia has been able to present classic French Cuisine to generations of Americans. This set of two volumes contains the essence of French cooking that will serve as a foundation to wherever one travels on the food road. Mine is almost disentegrating from years of loving use, and I am replacing one for the library, but plan to continue to use my dog-eared friend!

    5-0 out of 5 stars Deliciously Detailed, December 18, 2009
    I recently received this set and could not be more pleased! The recipes I have tried so far have been fantastic, while the descriptions and details for preparing and cooking the meals are excellent. I would highly recommend these cookbooks to anyone who wants to do some authentic French cooking or who simply wants a great way to shake up the same old recipes for family and friends!

    5-0 out of 5 stars Cassidy's Review, May 29, 2009
    I formerly owned this set of cookbooks but lost them in a divorce. I just purchased them from Amacon.com and am thrilled to be reacquainted with them. Ms. Child's descriptions are straight forward and quite simple to follow. French cooking is not difficult to work with and that is Ms. Child's approach. They take a basic approach and do not go off on fanciful tangents. You will love it!

    5-0 out of 5 stars Well published matched set, December 29, 2009
    Excellent matched bound set gives the finishing touch to the pair. Volume two is usually only available in paperback and now this set looks like it belongs together. Each volume is as excellent as their predecessors with only minor touch ups to this edition. Exactly what I was hoping for and expecting.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Julia Child's Art of French cooking, June 7, 2009
    One of the best gastronomic French cookbooks around. Always a classic - full of receipes that work. May take a little time to achieve but I've never had a failure and the results are equal to eating at restaurants in France.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Too busy experimenting to write more..., December 27, 2009
    There are books which will keep you up all night reading but this is a different kettle of fish entirely. This is a book which will keep you in your kitchen experimenting with French cuisine.
    I must admit I have been a little too busy trying out various recipes to write a long review of the book. So many goodies you can try to prepare on your own. So many fancy names you read about in books and heard in the movies and now you can cook them in a few minutes.
    You can find here an appropriate dish for any occasion - tete a tete with your better half and official dinner for inlaws included. And your sex is immaterial - even the most untalented gentlemen will find a dish to impress the family and friends if they only find an hour or two to go through these two bulky volumes to choose something within their range. Onion soup, maybe? Well, and if they feel like a small experiment before the big night...
    A fair bit of warning - these recipes are not always very easy and some dishes take time to prepare but great cuisine must require a bit of effort and best ingredients.
    What are you waiting for? Get a copy and start cooking! ... Read more


    13. Ad Hoc at Home
    by Thomas Keller
    Hardcover
    list price: $50.00 -- our price: $31.50
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 1579653774
    Publisher: Artisan
    Sales Rank: 113
    Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    Thomas Keller shares family-style recipes that you can make any or every day.

    In the book every home cook has been waiting for, the revered Thomas Keller turns his imagination to the American comfort foods closest to his heart—flaky biscuits, chicken pot pies, New England clam bakes, and cherry pies so delicious and redolent of childhood that they give Proust's madeleines a run for their money. Keller, whose restaurants The French Laundry in Yountville, California, and Per Se in New York have revolutionized American haute cuisine, is equally adept at turning out simpler fare.

    In Ad Hoc at Home—a cookbook inspired by the menu of his casual restaurant Ad Hoc in Yountville—he showcases more than 200 recipes for family-style meals. This is Keller at his most playful, serving up such truck-stop classics as Potato Hash with Bacon and Melted Onions and grilled-cheese sandwiches, and heartier fare including beef Stroganoff and roasted spring leg of lamb. In fun, full-color photographs, the great chef gives step-by-step lessons in kitchen basics— here is Keller teaching how to perfectly shape a basic hamburger, truss a chicken, or dress a salad. Best of all, where Keller’s previous best-selling cookbooks were for the ambitious advanced cook, Ad Hoc at Home is filled with quicker and easier recipes that will be embraced by both kitchen novices and more experienced cooks who want the ultimate recipes for American comfort-food classics.


    ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars A beautiful, wonderful, accessible Keller book, October 10, 2009
    Although I've only had Thomas Keller's ad hoc for a short time, I ready love it and have found many things that make it a must-buy if you're a lover of food or books about food. Keller's quote on the back of the book really sums up the theme of this book: "...a big collection of family meals and everyday staples, delicious approachable food, recipes that are doable at home. No immersion circulator required. No complicated garnishes. I promise!"

    Keller delivers on this promise in ad hoc. The book assumes far less prerequisite knowledge than his other books, The French Laundry, Bouchon, and Under Pressure. In fact, the first section of the book is called "Becoming a better chef," and Keller outlines the techniques, ingredients, and tools that can help anyone become a better home cook.

    I own all 3 of Keller's other books, and regularly cook from them. This is, by far, the most accessible book for the casual home cook. The recipes in here can easily be made as weeknight meals--most don't require any excessive time demands or preparation. Many of the recipes are dishes you're probably familiar with: chicken pot pie, fried chicken, braised short ribs, beef stroganoff, apple fritters, chocolate brownies, etc. But, this being a Thomas Keller book, many of these classic dishes are refined and made more elegant. For example, his beef stroganoff uses fresh cremini mushrooms, creme fraiche, braised short ribs, and pappardelle pasta. All of the recipes I've made have turned out perfectly so far, which has been the case with his previous books.

    Consistent with his previous books, the look of ad hoc is beautiful. It's also a nice change to see Keller's fun side featured, and he's displayed in a number of whimsical photographs throughout the book, warning you: "shh... the lamb is resting," and telling you, "That's how I roll," when showing off his lobster roll. In addition to these photos of Keller, there are numerous beauty shots of the food and technique photos.

    Overall, I think this book strikes a perfect balance between elegance and approachability. The recipes are refined enough that the most experienced food lover will be satisfied, but simple enough to prepare that the willing novice can easily tackle them. For those who have looked at The French Laundry or Under Pressure and were scared off by rare ingredients, expensive equipment, or advanced technique, this book is a great initiation into the world of Thomas Keller's food.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Accessible? Yes. Weeknight dinner? Maybe..., October 15, 2009
    As Ruth Reichl recently said on Fresh Air, if it's four o'clock at work, and you're trying to decide what to have for dinner, you've already half-lost the battle. You can't start out from that position with most of the recipes in this book. What I'm trying to say is that these recipes take something most cookbooks and even television shows that are about food avoid: time and advanced planning. Most of the recipes contain sub-recipes. Most of the chicken and pork dishes require brining, and many dishes require some type of stock. However, most of the time consuming processes in the book don't require much active time, but they do require planning. I'm not putting this up as a negative. In fact, so many wonderful things about cooking simply require time. My first Thomas Keller cookbook was Bouchon, and some of the more time-consuming components used there (soffritto, tomato confit (in Ad Hoc oven roasted tomatoes), garlic confit, duck confit, preserved lemons, peeled shelled fava beans before blanching) make an appearance in this cookbook as well. The first reaction I had to cooking things for more than four hours, which some of these require in total time, was incredulity. Seriously? MORE than four hours? Having eaten at TK's restaurants I put my trust in him, and I learned how wonderful things happen when food is given time.

    If you've been cooking for many years some of the tips you may have known: put a towel under your cutting board, you only really need four knives, some salts weigh differently; however, others will most likely be new if you haven't cooked out of TK's other cookbooks. Thinking back on the difficulties I had when I first started cooking, how I wish all of these things had been spelled out to me as clearly and as simply as they are in this book. TK's cookbooks improved my cooking so quickly that I can't recommend them enough. Not only will you make amazing food, but you will learn skills and techniques that will help you even when you aren't cooking one of his recipes. The chalkboard drawing in a way emphasizes the daily changing meal, and the quite gracious TK as teacher and reader as student looking at the teacher in front of the chalkboard. Some of the photos don't quite work for me, but hey, this review is mainly about food, not graphic design.

    With that note of caution, if you're afraid these recipes are as complex as Heston Blumenthal's In Search of Perfection recipes, you'll be relieved. Most of the ingredients in the book are relatively standard, and sources are provided for the few esoteric ingredients. The types of dishes are very familiar, and the product description gives a good idea about what to expect. Part of me was hoping this book might feature a lot of chervil, and this would lead to other people requesting it so that it would be stocked in stores just as TK mentions about people requesting cilantro from grocers in this book. Another disappointment for me is the lack of what he calls in his cookbook Under Pressure, "variety meats". I understand that this book is based on a restaurant's food that serves a daily changing set menu, and tongue may not be something everyone wants to eat, but I was hoping for at least one or two involving the aforementioned tongue or tripe, liver, kidneys, sweetbreads or cheeks. Even though he promises no immersion circulators on the back, I'm curious about what is cooked sous vide at Ad Hoc as he has mentioned that they use circulators at the restaurant, and if these dishes are, then what are those alternate preparations?

    Something that surprised me and delighted me was the "Lifesavers" portion of the book. This section is full prepared foods that you can make and store like (to name a few) compotes, chutneys, jams, marmalades, spiced nuts, pickles and mustards.

    This is a quick note meant to be helpful: if you live in an area that is a culinary wasteland, you might think about ordering Piment D'esplette and Vanilla Paste along with the book as they are used somewhat frequently. TK also highly suggests a Vita-Mix (don't I wish I had one!).

    To sum up, I can't recommend this book highly enough if you are serious about food or a home cook wanting to improve.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Accessible Recipes and Tips by a Master, October 15, 2009
    This book is humbling. That's the best way I can put it. I adore the premise of the book. A celebrated chef sharing home cooked recipes that inspired him to create his world class restaurant in Yountville.

    Lets take the famous fried chicken recipe. It doesn't start with a simple set of ingredients and steps on how to do it. It first will train you on how to use the basic tools in your repertoire. Then it will take you through the process of choosing the right ingredients and how to manage them (think spice dating). Then comes the crucial part of choosing the right bird. Then cutting the bird so it will walk you through the various ways of cutting the chicken and how it will impact various meals you will prepare on your own and through this book.

    The best thing about this book is that it will teach you to be a better chef with the recipes you are already familiar with and cooking on a daily basis as well as introduce you to a wealth of recipes that will truly expand your horizons. Truly a masterpiece.

    3-0 out of 5 stars "Staff meals" do not make a great cookbook, February 28, 2010
    I've worked in restaurants and understand the concept of preparing a "staff meal" in which great ingredients plus last night's leftovers are used imaginatively to make a meal for the employees. Keller explains at one point that is the inspiration for Ad Hoc and for this cookbook, and therein lies the problem.

    If you have never baked or fried a chicken or brined a cut of pork, you'll find directions here. But you can find equally good and less fussy recipes in the Joy of Cooking or another more encyclopedic/basic source. Some of what's here is solid home-cooking advice, but other dishes are astonishingly high in fats. If I'm going to clog my arteries I'd rather find a more creative way to do it.

    Also, hidden in the recipes are a number of specialty ingredients that make it difficult to reproduce Keller's methods without a lot of advance mail-order shopping. And while some dishes can be made "ad hoc" or on the spur of the moment, others depend on advance preparation of enhancements such as pickled vegetables or spice mixes. Actually I love Keller's pickling section and that, plus the pictures, comes close to justifying the purchase of the book. But understand what you are getting, and not.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Make sure you use the right salt., October 23, 2009
    [I've updated this review after getting comments on the original review from one of the authors.]

    Having cooked (and learned a tremendous amount) out of "Under Pressure" and "Bouchon" (having spent 5 hours caramelizing onions for TK's onion soup I now claim that I engage in "extreme cooking"), I was very happy when "Ad Hoc at Home" arrived. On the surface, it looks great.

    Last night I made the caramelized scallop recipe which is simply brined scallops sauted in clarified butter over high heat. This recipe ruined $20 work of scallops because its brine is 10 cups of water (5 lbs) and 2 cups of salts (1 lb) for a 17% brine. This brine way oversalted the scallops even though they were only in it for the recommended 10 minutes (actually a little less since the scallops were smaller than the U7s called for in the recipe). I thought something was amiss when making the brine but was only sure after the fact.

    The problem was that I used Morton's Kosher Salt instead of Diamond Crystal Kosher Salt, which is way less dense. Page 52 of this book talks about the different salts, but who reads page 52 before trying an interesting looking recipe? So be warned, use Diamond Crystal for recipes in this book.

    I love the book's recommendation to temper poultry before roasting it. I've been doing this for years to avoid uneven roasting, and am very happy a cookbook is willing to discuss this technique in these days of overblown microbe fears.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Exceptional Cookbook for Home Cook, October 19, 2009
    To my tastes, what makes a great cookbook? First, that it meets the needs of the target user; Second, that it inspires the user to greater competency and enjoyment of preparing its dishes; third, that the style aids in number one and two.

    Keller certainly meets these conditions, if by #1 one realizes his target in this one has shifted as the other reviews have noted by noticeably addressing "food I love to sit down to with my family and friends" recipes, says the author. By starting what Keller thought was to be a short-term venture that would present the staff dinner approach at this restaurants, it took off to become a fixture. This fixture inspired this cookbook offering and one its specific goals is to make us better cooks. Keller writes five large pages on it. They are excellent, although many of us have learned these valuable and pertinent topics from other chefs and their TV shows and cookbooks, but his writing is superb and right on. The style is large and lays flat and of course, from the paper stock to the prose to the color photography, it is inspirational in drawing the chef at home to try its cuisine for oneself. Am especially into the well-done help additions, e.g. Parchment lid construction.

    I look forward to cooking many of this collection. Made one whole offering which started with a delightful Lentil and Sweet Potato Soup, followed by Tomato and Handmade Mozzarela Salad, Main Course was Pan Roasted Duck Breast which served on Butter-Braised Radishes, Kohlrabi and Brussel Sprouts; ended with Blackberry Cobbler (substituted these for called for Blueberries.)

    This is wonderful home chef resource, while not advancing the exoticness of his previous offerings, is totally geared more to our usefulness when we don't want to tackle the complicated ingredient-technique recipes.

    Will be a classic!

    5-0 out of 5 stars A Wonderful Resource for All Cooks, November 28, 2009
    I knew I had to have this book after dining at the Ad Hoc restaurant in Yountville. My husband and I loved our meal there, and after reading reviews, we decided to take the plunge and buy this book. What a fabulous decision!

    I am not a skilled cook, and there are few things that I have made well. My parents are both amazing cooks, so I was hesitant to cook them dinner one night. I decided to jump right into the cookbook and make 3 Keller recipes: Broccolini salad, Roast Poussin, and Smashed Marble Potatoes. My husband told me I was crazy to attempt 3 recipes in one evening when we were having guests. I followed all three recipes to the letter and I think it was one of the best meals I have ever made. My dad was so impressed he immediately put this book on his amazon wish list. After growing up eating meals from Julia Child and the Joy of Cooking, I was blown away that this cookbook helped me make such a delectable meal.

    No matter what your skill level, Keller aids you in cooking a successful meal. BUY THIS BOOK!

    5-0 out of 5 stars A must for food fans of all culinary levels, October 15, 2009
    Thomas Keller's reputation might make his cookbooks seem intimidating to the average home chef, but this book is so accessible and straight forward that no one should be afraid to try out the wonderful recipes. I own very few cookbooks, preferring to browse food blogs and cooking websites for inspiration but the simplicity, beautiful presentation, and expert advice on selecting ingredients and cooking from a true master will make this book one I treasure for years to come. The photos alone make it worth owning! But I challenge anyone to thumb through this and not find themselves wanting to try out Keller's recipes. From every day dinners and side dishes to salads, soups, breads, desserts to more complex fare to impress your foodie dinner party guests - this book is a great "go to". I imagine several years from now it will be covered in flour, grease splattered with favorite items ear marked but for now it's a beautiful sight on my kitchen table making me want to spend an afternoon in the kitchen trying Mr. Keller's recipes.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Awesome Recipes, Great Pictures, Worth every penny, October 18, 2009
    Just finished the left overs from the Wine Braised Short Ribs. The recipe was wonderful. The only thing I changed was a bit of butter in the wine reduction. This book is a stunner and the recipes are much easier on your time and patience than his others. The quality of the recipes are very good. I own a restaurant and was excited to get this book as a present.

    Pick it up, you will be happy with it.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Best cookbook on my shelf, December 23, 2009
    With online recipes and great newspaper food sections, I had considered cookbooks obsolete and had vowed never to buy another one. I needed to spend an extra five dollars to get free shipping; somehow I ended up spending $30 on ad hoc at home. I had recently read an article about Thomas Keller's relationship to his father in the NYTimes, and was curious about the cookbook. Once purchased, I vowed to make a commitment to the book and actually read it and use it several times a week.
    The results? Incredible. My wife and kids cannot believe the level of cuisine coming out of our kitchen. I love the cookbook. The recipes are stunning, the cooking tips the best I've read in a cookbook, and the pictures are lovely and actually very helpful. Still more, there seems to be an undercurrent regarding the centrality of cooking and food in our communal lives. It starts with the first, lovely "lightbulb moment" and recipe in the book and extends to the recipes that require sub-recipes that come from traditional cuisines. Who would have thought that cooking tomatoes, onions, garlic and olive oil together for five hours could make such a deep, rich ingredient for meat and other dishes? Mr. Keller seems to be a teacher, not just of the nuts and bolts of creating a great dish, but of why we bother to do it at all. ... Read more


    14. The Flavor Bible: The Essential Guide to Culinary Creativity, Based on the Wisdom of America's Most Imaginative Chefs
    by Karen Page, Andrew Dornenburg
    Hardcover
    list price: $35.00 -- our price: $22.83
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0316118400
    Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
    Sales Rank: 185
    Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    Winner of the 2009 James Beard Book Award for Best Book: Reference and Scholarship


    Great cooking goes beyond following a recipe--it's knowing how to season ingredients to coax the greatest possible flavor from them. Drawing on dozens of leading chefs' combined experience in top restaurants across the country, Karen Page and Andrew Dornenburg present the definitive guide to creating "deliciousness" in any dish. Thousands of ingredient entries, organized alphabetically and cross-referenced, provide a treasure trove of spectacular flavor combinations. Readers will learn to work more intuitively and effectively with ingredients; experiment with temperature and texture; excite the nose and palate with herbs, spices, and other seasonings; and balance the sensual, emotional, and spiritual elements of an extraordinary meal.Seasoned with tips, anecdotes, and signature dishes from America's most imaginative chefs, THE FLAVOR BIBLE is an essentialreference for every kitchen. ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars An extraordinary book!, October 12, 2008
    I recently added this book to my cookbook collection, which numbers more than 1,000 volumes (probably more like 1200 but I'm still cataloging). It has immediately become one of my favorites (and definitely my #1 favorite in English). If you are a serious cook, love to read cookbooks like novels, and view recipes as suggestions rather than as requiring strict adherence to precise measurements, then this is the book for you! (Did I say I LOVE this book?)

    I make all of the desserts for my husband's restaurant. If I snag some particularly luscious fruit and want to make it into a dessert, this is the book I reach for first. I don't WANT to be told how to make a fruit sorbet. I already know how. But I love having a list of suggested flavors and products that go with what I already have. It's like having an uber-creative friend at your side saying "hey, why not try THIS?"

    And if you are not an experienced cook, this book provides invaluable guidance that a recipe book never could. It is wholly different from every food book I have ever read.

    The book is clever, useful, and obviously the product of prodigious research. To the authors, I send my humble gratitude. You have made my life immeasurably easier, and my dishes far more interesting than ever before.

    This book is a must-read if you love to eat or love to cook. I have already bought six copies and have given two as gifts. It's THAT good.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Amazing Answer to a Prayer, October 15, 2008
    Bought this book w/o a whole lot of information about it. Can't believe it -- I now have the resource I've been looking for --

    I'm a cook with some years of experience, a huge cookbook collection, a list of classes taught by renowned experts and cookbook writers, and still I yearned for a reference that gave me the info on what goes with what (w/o me researching my whole library or classnotes. I guess I need "permissions" and this book gave it to me.

    Tonight I made redfish (snapper in the book) with a crust of almonds, chives, parsley and dill (methodology learned in all those classes). Served w a favorite zuchinni recipe that included the "go-to" ingredients for snapper, and roasted potatoes with light sprinkling of rosemary and salt (again, a "go-to" herb for the main dish).

    It wasn't overkill (my worry) -- it just plain worked and I did it w/o a single recipe. Cut my cooking time in half and raised my personal culinary "thermometer" by a ton of degrees.

    If you cook, know methodology and are looking for a silent but knowledgeable help in the kitchen, buy this book. It's a gem!!!

    4-0 out of 5 stars Flavor, because you can't live on Bread and Water alone, September 16, 2008
    Flavor is the basis for all food, without it, the world would seem less colorful, lifeless, and bland. Food isn't just about what you can taste in your mouth but also what you can see with your eyes, what you smell with your nose and what you feel in your heart. That's what is presented in this book. (The authors wrote two other acclaimed books, Culinary Artistry and What to Drink with What You Eat.)

    Culinary Artistry showcased was that food can be art. That colors structure on a plate can evoke emotions the same as any other art work. And like any art work, is in the eye of the beholder.

    What to Drink with What You Eat gave us the understanding that beverages (not just wine) can be paired and should be thought of as a condiment rather than an afterthought

    The Flavor Bible talks about, well, flavor; but more then that, it talks about what flavor is and how we perceive it, receive it, balance it and emphasize it. All coming to the climax which is a very in depth list (3/4ths of the book) of ingredients detailing its profile (weak, strong), seasonality, and every herb, spice, fruit, vegetable, meat, fish, poultry and alcoholic related item and what would go exceptionally well with it.

    So, if it is so good, why did I give it only 4 stars? The list for the most part is just an update from Culinary Artistry; most flavor companions haven't change since the days of Escoffier. The "new" list does give mention of the seasonality of produce and also the break down of different cuts of meat such as beef, lamb, pork, and poultry into their respected parts and given their own listings.

    Culinary Artistry was my best friend going through culinary school and now I have a great addition that I am sure I'll end up burning through as well. I look to this book every time I cook to add that extra something to a dish. So if you are even the slightest bit interested in cooking or making good food taste even better then you can't go wrong buying this book.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Great reference when experimenting with flavors, December 3, 2008
    I absolutely love this book! I first discovered it when it was cited as a reference for a cookbook and am glad I did. While I am not a trained chef, I am an avid home cook that enjoys writing my own recipes, experimenting with foods, and as of late, entering recipe contests. This book helps me be more daring in my flavor combinations and has inspired new recipes.

    The first section of the book is a great introduction to flavor. It talks about what is perceived by the mouth, what is perceived by the nose, and my personal favorite, what is perceived by the heart, mind, and spirit. It has great passages from chefs from all over the country talking about things like balancing flavor.

    The second section expands on this further by talking about things like seasonality, taste, weight, volume, function, region, and flavor affinities. This helps set up the flavor matching chart since many of these dimensions are used to describe key aspects of each ingredient.

    The final section, and bulk of the book, is comprised of matchmaking charts. Simply look up a listing alphabetically and you will be presented with a list of ingredients that pair well with it as well as 'flavor affinities' that include the featured ingredient with more than two additional ingredients. This book gives you the ability to look up cheeses, chile peppers, cuisines, fishes, flavorings, fruits, herbs, ingredients, meats, oils, peppers, salts, spices, tastes, vegetables, vinegars and more! Overall these charts are very extensive and include a variety of ingredients from around the world. If you are interested in an ingredient there is a good chance you will find it in here. Also in this section you will find different tips and comments from Chefs that relate to the ingredients as well as examples of dishes (without recipes) that incorporate the ingredient. These can be great in bringing the combinations to life and jump starting ideas.

    It is also worth noting that this is really a reference book. There are no recipes in this book. However, this does not bother me at all as I have tons of cookbooks and come to this book when I want to create something on my own.

    This is quite a fantastic reference book that I cannot say enough about! I believe it is something that an avid cook who likes to experiment and create their own recipes would find not only helpful, but enjoyable to have in the kitchen.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Interesting combinations...., January 10, 2009
    This book has a short introduction with comments from many great chef's giving snippets of sundry approaches to balancing taste. It contains an overview of what goes into "flavor": taste, mouth feel, aroma, plus "the x-factor"(our emotional reaction including presentation, associations, etc.). But the "meat" (pardon the pun) of the book is a listing of most of the common flavorings with lists of flavors that compliment each other. The listings are also interspersed with advice from famous chefs. The authors are not fans of traditional recipes so do not expect "cook by numbers". However, the authors are students of flavoring, so do expect many suggestions for ways to be more creative (or, more systematic and sophisticated in your creativity).

    Positives: the introduction is a fun and quickly read, the advice from the chefs is excellent, the flavor combinations are very helpful (I have several new developments underway) and the listings are quite comprehensive (there are a few ingredients missing -- like one quoted chef recommends palm sugar which is not listed, but as it is not available locally either that may make little difference).

    Negatives: lack of an index. The flavors are alphabetical, but good luck finding a specific tidbit from a favorite chef. It glances on, but only glances on technique. It would be helpful to flesh out how to get different flavors out of the same ingredients by changing technique.

    Overall: a fun book that spurs creativity. I recommend it -- but will not give five stars to any reference without an index.

    5-0 out of 5 stars The next step in the evolution of a cook, August 17, 2009
    I started learning to cook by following recipes that were either handed down to me or that I got out of a cookbook or magazine. When comparing this method to professional chefs who pull together wonderful, creative dishes with seemingly effortless ease it seems amateurish and simplistic, however it is a necessary phase. By following recipes I learned crucial techniques as well as what a well prepared meal should look and taste like.

    The next phase started when I tried to create my own recipes by first substituting one ingredient for another and later by going off the reservation completely by trying food combinations that I had never encountered in my recipes. Sometimes this worked, sometimes it led to disaster. Enter The Flavor Bible.

    A few reviewers have criticized this book for being a mere collection of lists of ingredients. Far from that, I see it as the Rosetta Stone for serious home cooks and professional chefs alike. As I have learned to use fresh, locally grown foods more I am often searching for a way to combine them. Trying to find a recipe that allows me to take advantage of a bumper crop of artichokes, sweet onions and garden grown thyme can be challenging. By using The Flavor Bible I look up artichokes and I can see what ingredients compliment it and I can put together a great tasting dish. However, this is only one element of the book.

    Beside listing ingredients and pairing them with other flavors the book also lists cuisines that make use of the ingredient in question. You may also look up a specific cuisine (Indian, Thai, Tex-Mex, Moroccan, etc.) and find commonly used ingredients, Flavor Affinities and often, a paragraph or two from a professional chef. Something else that I liked was that you could look up seasons (summer, winter, etc.) and find what foods are best served when it is hot or cold outside.

    The photographs (by Barry Salzman) are top notch and very inspirational. There are not very many of them but I don't think that there needs to be since this is not a cookbook you don't need to see what a particular dish is supposed to look like when completed.

    If you are still a little rusty on technique and are unsure about relative proportions you may not be ready for this book. If however you have graduated from only using the recipes of others and would like to explore unique and wonderful flavor combinations, I couldn't recommend this book any higher.

    5-0 out of 5 stars A Great Reference for Experimental Cooking, March 24, 2009
    This book is for the person who wants to understand flavor combinations, and a good assist toward cullinary creativity. It's definitely for the more experienced chef - it is assumed that the reader has an understanding of how to work with ingredients to make the classic flavor combinations that are recommended in the book. For example, the book will tell you that carrots and lime go well together. It does not tell you whether to chop, puree or juice the carrots, use lime juice or zest, or what other ingredients to combine with them. That's the part that's up to your creativity as a chef. Get into the kitchen and go wild!

    5-0 out of 5 stars Love Love this book, September 18, 2008
    This book is the answer to most of your combination questions.I have created my own recipes from just looking up what I have on hand (anything from a meat to veggies and the book helps you combine just the right flavors.Have already given it as gifts!Love love this book,I spend time just dreaming up new dinners for my family.

    5-0 out of 5 stars The Perfect Book for Real Cooks, October 11, 2008
    The Flavor Bible: The Essential Guide to Culinary Creativity, Based on the Wisdom of America's Most Imaginative Chefs This is a book for real cooks who want to explore new tastes. It's for people who love to play around in the kitchen, who go to their local farmer's market and find fresh romaine lettuce or chanterelle mushrooms and want to create something different. It's for individualists who don't want to be bound by someone else's recipe, but want to make an original dish of their own, guided by the world's great chefs.

    5-0 out of 5 stars I love this book, even though its not really a book!, September 4, 2010
    It's more of a compendium of alphabetical listings of foods that are paired together. The format basically goes something like this:

    Blueberries
    Season: spring-summer
    Taste: sour-sweet
    Botanical relatives: huckleberries
    Weight: light
    Volume: quiet-moderate
    Techniques: cooked, raw
    Tips: Can subtitute huckleberries

    allspice
    almonds
    apricots
    bananas
    blackberries
    butter, unsalted
    buttermilk
    chocolate, white
    CINNAMON
    cinnamon basil
    cloves...


    It is like a book that is a giant index, which refers you to things that can pair well. This book is more for people who have a willingness to experiment. It gives pointers on what other people think might go good with an item, such as blueberries. You have to figure out your own proportions. Of course, responsible cooks probably want to taste the food they serve beforehand anyways. ;)
    ... Read more


    15. Good Eats: The Early Years
    by Alton Brown
    Hardcover
    list price: $37.50 -- our price: $22.50
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 1584797959
    Publisher: Stewart, Tabori & Chang
    Sales Rank: 230
    Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    Alton Brown is a foodie phenomenon: a great cook, a very funny guy, and—underneath it all—a science geek who’s as interested in the chemistry of cooking as he is in eating. (Well, almost.) Here, finally, are the books that Brown’s legion of fans have been salivating for—two volumes that together will provide an unexpurgated record of his long-running, award-winning Food Network TV series, Good Eats
     
    From “Pork Fiction” (on baby back ribs), to “Citizen Cane” (on caramel sauce), to “Oat Cuisine” (on oatmeal), every hilarious episode is represented. Each book—the second will be published in fall 2010—is illustrated with behind-the-scenes photos taken on the Good Eats set. Each contains more than 140 recipes and more than 1,000 photographs and illustrations, along with explanations of techniques, lots of food-science information (of course!), and more food puns, food jokes, and food trivia than you can shake a wooden spoon at.
    ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars Gorgeous book - Good Eats at your fingertips!, August 27, 2009
    I admit it, we are foodies. It started with my hubby (a bit like Alton Brown so naturally he was happily drawn to the show Good Eats) who quickly addicted myself and both of our pre-teen daughters. We were immediately drawn to the entertainment factor and unbelievable tips and bits of information/education. We are devote Alton Brown fans. Anyone who can bring the level of education/information he does in such a fun way in just 30 minutes is awesome!

    This hardcover book is simply gorgeous. Attractive and worthy of being a coffee table book and simply a delight to hold and look through. This is a large book (10.3 x 9.3 x 1.7 inches ) and not to mention VERY thick with each of the 395 pages filled to the brim with information, diagrams and photos. This book has a chapter for each of the 1st 80 episodes of Good Eats (thus the reason behind the title: The Early Years. The book prologue happily informs us the volume 2 "The Middle Ages" is soon to come)

    After the section for his interview you jump right into the episodes. Each episode chapter is very nicely set up:
    * Title of episode and information about the episode.
    * In depth "Knowledge Concentrate" which is VERY helpful things to know. Not too long, but just the right amount of information to keep you from drooling.
    * The recipes themselves in a VERY well written way that is easy to follow and understand. Outstanding job with putting the recipes in this book!
    And of course, in addition to the above, each chapter is filled with diagrams, photos, tips and more.

    You will absolutely relive each episode and have the information in your hands to run to the kitchen with and use right away. Alton brings his humor, science and character to every inch of this book. At the end of the book, you also have your Conversion Charts/equivalents (for Weight, Volume & Oven Temperature) As with the chapters and recipes, these charts are easy to understand and use. This book also comes with a book cover which is actually a poster in disguise, pretty cool.

    This is a gift for my hubby (You know, the guy who can't stop watching Good Eats and anything Alton Brown, lol) and I am very pleased with the quality and information in this gorgeous book. A must have for any Good Eats fan, a great idea for a gift (and useful as you don't have to go watch episodes and jot down recipes while watching) WELL worth the full price of $37.50 and even better at the Amazon discounted price right now. Not to mention free amazon shipping eligible.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Good Eats for your countertop - a multi-use tool., August 26, 2009
    Finally! No more having to dig through the search engine of the food network website or dreading that I wrote the wrong measurement or ingredient while watching the show and frantically trying to copy all the juicy "tidbits"! No more looking at the DvD collection and sighing at the price, knowing I could never afford it! It's Good Eats, concise, compact and affordable.

    This volume contains the first 6 seasons and covers all 80 shows, covering: steak, spuds, eggs, baking, grilling, jams, frying, apples, mushrooms, and many more Good Eats.

    All of the tidbits are here and I dare say if not all, most of them, including updates on some of the tips and hints since the episodes were made (such as the recent teflon scare and how teflon isn't bad below 550F). The recipes from each episode are listed with procedures, diagrams, pictures and notations. It takes the fear away from the complexity of cooking and gives you fun history tips that you can pass on during dinner chat or use in a friendly game of trivial pursuit. Having seen other works of Alton's and considering him the best of the best for telling you how, when and why with science to back it up, I rate this the #1 must have.

    BTW, it's printed in a durable binder and the dustjacket folds out into a pulp-fiction type poster (cover art) that I'm seriously considering hanging in the game room due to its fun nature.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Great book but could use some tweaks, September 11, 2009
    Ok, I didn't give this five stars...which really kind of hurts to do because I am a huge Alton Brown fan. (My DVR is set to record every episode of Good Eats as it airs, I have autographed copies of all his other books and I've cooked just about everything on the show so far.) Anyway, the book is great, the "knowledge concentrate" is great in that it gets to the point of each topic/show, the recipes that are there are great and well written and the book is very well put together in general.

    So why didn't I give it five stars...well mainly because I find myself wishing it had a better way of organizing it and making the information and the related recipes easier to get to when you are cooking and don't really want to improvise and want to try his recipes out. Case in point, I had a bunch of friends coming over for dinner and I had very short notice to throw something together so I was following Alton's recipes for meatloaf and mashed potatoes. Finding the recipes was kind of challenging because i first tried to use the table of contents but that is sorted by the order of the episodes so it isn't really that helpful. next I turned to the index which actually worked very well. I think I am just spoiled by the ease of use of some good eats fan pages websites as easier ways to find recipes by searching by things like food and find myself wishing that was included in the book. I am also hoping (Wishing) that future editions will include some sort of master index (hopefully by food too) so that I can just look up something like "Pork, tenderloin" and see that it was used in his schweinbrauten recipe in episode x, and the recipe is contained in book y on page z kind of thing. Otherwise it is going to be messy to find something since the reader will have to remember which season/book the recipe is in. Other minor complaints involve the recipes. I got very excited to see in the first episode that he included an additional recipe that wasn't in the show but was kind of let down by the scarcity of more of these recipes throughout the book. Also, some of the recipes seem to be missing. Case-in-point, the chapter about pickling is missing some of the recipes he went over on the show such as for "firecrackers" and I had hoped that this book would become my one-stop source for all Good Eats recipes but some of them are missing and must be found on the internet.

    The above complaints may be things that are specific to me and not something other general readers would find as a problem. Me, personally, I'm a bit spoiled by how easy Alton makes it to explain and understand some of the complex things about cooking so I wish they took some extra steps to make the book easier to use. Overall though I HIGHLY RECOMMEND this book...especially for people that are new to cooking or shy about cooking since it does contain a treasure trove of information that can be unbelievably helpful to people whether they watch the show or not.

    3-0 out of 5 stars Alton is great His work deserves 9 stars *********, June 27, 2010
    I hate to give this book a THREE STARS.
    My hope is that the editor will correct the problems
    before the next edition of the MIDDLE YEARS.

    The book is better than expected.
    Organized greatly ... how else could you do it except
    by Episode. There is an index for looking up by
    specific items.

    Well thought out.
    But if you are buying this book as a gift for someone,
    then make sure that someone is YOUNG with young eyes

    The MAIN text is okay ... as least it is black text on a white background.

    Other texts like tidbits is like white font on very light colored background.
    I have to hold the book just right ... light over my left shoulder with the
    book on an angle AWAY from the light source. This helps to get rid of the glare.

    Tomorow I will try some COLOR GLASS to look thru.
    Hopefully there is a color combination out there that will increase the contrast.

    The publisher must have been worried about people copying the pages.

    The pages are probably larger than what a scanner would read and some of the fonts
    appear to be less than size 6.

    I took my bifocals off and replaced them with just reading glasses.

    Book is great ... info is great ...Alton is great ... I would buy again even with the poorly designed fonts.

    I will be getting the follow up book also and was hoping this review would help in getting others to also suggest
    changing the font color in the next book. Could be the smaller font is there in order to fit in all the good info

    5-0 out of 5 stars Alton Brown's epic trilogy begins with GOOD EATS: THE EARLY YEARS, October 2, 2009
    To celebrate the tenth anniversary of the hit Food Network show, "Good Eats," Alton Brown, the series' creator, star, producer, writer and director has released the first book in a planned three volume epic tome on all things culinary, entitled GOOD EATS: THE EARLY YEARS. Covering the first eighty episodes of the show's run, GOOD EATS: THE EARLY YEARS features each episode broken down into its constituent parts, beginning with the "Knowledge Concentrate" section that gives all of the pertinent scientific background on the food featured in the episode and ending with the "Application," Brown's tech-jargon moniker for the recipes from the show. Done in true Alton Brown style, each section also features behind the scenes trivia interspersed with some cooking tidbits and tips along with plenty of diagrams of some of the "hardware" that one will need to carry out certain recipes. The massive book is jammed with 140 recipes, over 1,000 photos and weighs in at over three pounds, though Alton claims that this is due to the depleted uranium that they added to the ink. For good measure, the dust jacket also folds out into a full size poster of Alton.

    The book is exactly what you would expect from the phenomenally talented Alton Brown. It is exceptionally researched and written in an easily accessible and incredibly entertaining manner. The recipes are simply not just rehashed versions of those learned while Brown was a student at the New England Culinary Institute, but rather are approached always from an inquisitive and innovative perspective. Brown never does something simply because that is how it has always been done. He instead breaks each recipe down to ascertain exactly why things are done a certain way and what exactly each ingredient is bringing to the finished product. Brown even states that some of the recipes differ slightly from when he first presented them on his show, because over time he found better ways to improve the flavor.

    There is something for everyone in this book, including basics like preparing various meats and seafood, livening up comfort food standards such as macaroni and cheese and baking a variety of desserts. The book even moves into the more exotic when Alton gives instructions on how to make a "Moo-Less Chocolate Pie" that has a secret ingredient that will most likely shock most readers. Brown has also gone through and converted any of the volume measurements originally used in some of the baking recipes on the show into the more widely accepted, and more precise, weight measurements and includes a conversion chart between metric and imperial in the index.

    Just as Brown describes the show "Good Eats" as being a cross between Julia Child, Mr. Wizard and Monty Python, GOOD EATS: THE EARLY YEARS follows suit, with Brown's trademark humor used to not only make cooking more fun, but also to teach something along the way. If there is one cookbook that you buy this year, it should definitely be GOOD EATS: THE EARLY YEARS. With its extensive encyclopedic information, great recipes, and humorous tone, GOOD EATS: THE EARLY YEARS is a book that you will be coming back to again and again.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Excellent book, but missing a few key recipes, October 24, 2009
    Alton Brown is, quite simply, the best talent the Food Network has, and this book is a great review of the first few years of Good Eats. Brown manages to cram all the important stuff in each episode into less than a page in each chapter, as well as bringing *most* of the best recipes from each show into the book and giving much background and trivia on the production and cast of each show. It's a very worthy addition to anyone's cooking science shelf.

    That said, I wish they hadn't left out a lot of the second-string recipes -- there's only one chocolate chip cookie recipe out of a show that featured three (though there's presumably enough information in the "knowledge concentrate" to recreate them), and the recipe for stovetop mac and cheese (a huge favorite of mine, and one I've recommended to others) simply isn't here. That's rather a shame -- it's not like they're hard to find on the Food Network website, but in focusing only on the marquee recipes Brown left out a lot of hidden gems.

    Still, nothing that is in here is the least bit disappointing, and most of it is flat out awesome; it's not the bible of kitchen geekery by a long shot, but it definitely belongs on the same shelf with Shirley Corriher, Harold McGee, and Herv� This.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Great Gift for Alton Brown Addicts & Foodies, August 11, 2010
    If you are a fan of Alton Brown and his detailed food information and trivia, you will love this book. It is organized by episode with all the great information he provides in each of his shows. It is a huge book with volumes and volumes of information. My husband sat down and read it like a book, not a cookbook when I gave it to him. This is a great companion to the episodes and a superb reminder of all those facts and details you wish you could remember when you watch the show. My only complaint is that I wish there were a list of the recipes in the book you could quickly scan when you are looking for something. A great gift for all Alton Brown addicts and foodies.Good Eats: The Early Years

    5-0 out of 5 stars I absolutely love it., January 17, 2010
    The only food book you will ever need. It's not only informative, but entertaining and easy to read. This book has lots of good information in it, and isn't just another "recipe book." I love his style because he shows you how to
    do things from start to finish, instead of just making a recipe. I have learned so much from Alton Brown that I
    rarely use any of my other cook books. I can't wait for the next volume. If there were six star ratings, I would
    give it six stars.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Alton does it again!!, September 9, 2009
    I am a big Alton Brown fan and this book exceeded my expectations. I am a cook for whom information is a catalyst to go cook something. Alton's approach arms me with the information I need to be successful in the kitchen. Yahoo!

    That said, what I love about this book is all the great information presented in an excellent format. There are 'knowledge concentrates' which give you the fabulous (and very 'Alton') core data about a particular item. There are additional blurbs (in green boxes) which give you explanations for things like clarified butter and flan vs. creme, etc. which don't turn up in the recipe searches online. There are tips called out and background stories about episode ideas, etc. All this is presented episode by episode. When I have something to prepare, I turn first to Alton. This is a great resource!!

    The book is a substantial tome (almost 400 pages) and I think well worth the money. The poster is just a bonus (ok, not something I'd ever hang!). A must have for my fellow foodies-in-the-making. I can't wait for the next installment.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Incredible resource, February 24, 2010
    I have gotten myself addicted to watching his shows. This allows me to bring them into the kitchen with me without having to endanger my laptop. I was disappointed to find a few of his recipes from the shows are missing here, but there are bonus ones that aren't covered so it evens out, I guess. This book is for the people who want to try everything they see on the show, but don't want to bring their televisions or laptops into the kitchen. ... Read more


    16. One Big Table: 600 recipes from the nation's best home cooks, farmers, fishermen, pit-masters, and chefs
    by Molly O'Neill
    Hardcover
    list price: $50.00 -- our price: $27.00
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0743232704
    Publisher: Simon & Schuster
    Sales Rank: 197
    Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    Ten years ago, former New York Times food columnist Molly O’Neill embarked on a transcontinental road trip to investigate reports that Americans had stopped cooking at home. As she traveled highways, dirt roads, bayous, and coastlines gathering stories and recipes, it was immediately apparent that dire predictions about the end of American cuisine were vastly overstated. From Park Avenue to trailer parks, from tidy suburbs to isolated outposts, home cooks were channeling their family histories as well as their tastes and personal ambitions into delicious meals. One decade and over 300,000 miles later, One Big Table is a celebration of these cooks, a mouthwatering portrait of the nation at the table.

    Meticulously selected from more than 20,000 contributions, the cookbook’s 600 recipes are a definitive portrait of what we eat and why. In this lavish volume—illustrated throughout with historic photographs, folk art, vintage advertisements, and family snapshots—O’Neill celebrates heirloom recipes like the Doughty family’s old-fashioned black duck and dumplings that originated on a long-vanished island off Virginia’s Eastern Shore, the Pueblo tamales that Norma Naranjo makes in her horno in New Mexico, as well as modern riffs such as a Boston teenager’s recipe for asparagus soup scented with nigella seeds and truffle oil. Many recipes offer a bridge between first-generation immigrants and their progeny—the bucatini with dandelion greens and spring garlic that an Italian immigrant and his grandson forage for in the Vermont woods—while others are contemporary variations that embody each generation’s restless obsession with distinguishing itself from its predecessors. O’Neill cooks with artists, writers, doctors, truck drivers, food bloggers, scallop divers, horse trainers, potluckers, and gourmet club members.

    In a world where takeout is just a phone call away, One Big Table reminds us of the importance of remaining connected to the food we put on our tables. As this brilliantly edited collection shows on every page, the glories of a home-cooked meal prove how every generation has enriched and expanded our idea of American food. Every recipe in this book is a testament to the way our memories—historical, cultural, and personal—are bound up in our favorite and best family dishes.

    As O’Neill writes, "Most Americans cook from the heart as well as from a distinctly American yearning, something I could feel but couldn’t describe until thousands of miles of highway helped me identify it in myself: hometown appetite. This book is a journey through hundreds of ‘hometowns’ that fuel the American appetite, recipe by recipe, bite by bite." ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars Real America, November 24, 2010
    It's easy to forget how diverse America truly is when reading traditional American cookbooks. This book, however, gives us a glimpse inside the menus of real Americans of various backgrounds and their families. We see local and regional culture reflected, as well as immigrant culture and how immigrants have evolved their menus to reflect their surroundings. I own many cookbooks (somewhere over 400 or so), but this is probably the best one that I have read recently. Every page draws me in and reminds of the America I know and love. This is not a heartless collection of text as some cookbooks can be, but it's a survey of who we are as Americans, defined by what we eat. There are many great renditions of traditional foods included, as well as many unique recipes incorporating influences from multiple cultures (local and foreign). Even better, there are brief vignettes preceding each recipe describing the background behind the recipe, which often includes some family history of the contributor (and sometimes a photo of the contributor or photo otherwise related to the recipe), bringing the reader even closer to these people kind enough to share their family recipes with us. There are limited photos of the recipes themselves (caution to those who prefer visual aids), but each story is interesting and well worth reading. It feels a little inadequate to call this simply a cookbook, as it could be just as well labeled a collection of short stories (that just happen to include a recipe or two at the end of each story). I currently live as an American expat overseas, but every page of this book is like a slice of home and well enjoyed.

    4-0 out of 5 stars A must-have for serious cookbook collectors, December 2, 2010
    Full disclosure: I read everything by Molly O'Neill not because of the cachet associated with her former ties to the New York Times, but because my husband was one of her classmates at Denison University in Granville, Ohio. Consistently delightful and, more importantly, an important voice, her incisive research and writing raises her works to a level heard above the din of other culinary voices

    So, OK. What about this book?

    It's a keeper, but not for the reason I expected. When I read that O'Neill invested a decade in creating this book, that she traveled over 300,000 miles in the pursuit of research and that she selected 600 recipes from 20,000 that were submitted, I was on the lookout for a "best of," the tastiest this-or-that.

    The crux of O'Neill's work is the _connection_ to the food we put on our tables. The recipes may be -- or may not be -- the best. They might not even be unique. It's the passing along of recipes, the regionalism, the importance of contining to apply chemistry in our kitchens that make this book spectacular.

    The jacket blurb describes One Big Table as "brilliantly edited," and it is.

    My favorite part of the book? The illustrations, folk art, vintage advertisements, and romp through the history of stoves. Is it worth parting with $50 to have illustrations, etc., under cover? Depends on how serious you are. To not have a copy of One Big Table in your collection, if you are a serious cook, would be akin to not having, say, at least one Julia Child volume in your culinary library. You decide.

    5-0 out of 5 stars America Never Tasted So Good, November 23, 2010
    This book is one big, delicious bite of American cooking. It's filled to the brim with more than 600 recipes and stories galore ranging from potpies to the social history of chocolate cake. For those of us who have moved a time or two...or 10, Molly O'Neill has captured the foods of each area I've called home. These recipes take the reader from coast-to-coast with lots of practical cooking know-how. No matter how many cookbooks are on your shelf, this encyclopedic resource is the definitive in rounding out a true collection.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Big Standing Ovation for 'Big Table', December 6, 2010
    I love this book! I'm not surprised it took author Molly O'Neill over 10 years to travel around America researching, talking with home cooks and food experts "in the field" and gathering their stories and recipes. I absolutely love the stories, no unnecessary blah-blah here, they are short and punchy, and then boom, there's the recipe.

    The book is beautiful, with abundant photos, many of which are quite old and historical. It's a pleasure to read.

    One quibble, and not sure how it could be avoided, since there's certainly nothing I'd cut, and I wouldn't change it to paperback, or change the high-quality stock, but it must be said: this is a monster of a book to hold and read. I'm sure it weighs at least 15 pounds. I like to read in bed at night and...well...I did it! But it was constant work to hold the book. It was worth it though. Aside from its physical size, the book is very pleasurable to read, and is definitely meant to be enjoyed that way. It's not a dry "put it on the shelf" reference book. This is a beautifully illustrated, interesting and well-written book to get lost in.

    Recommendation: Two thumbs way way up. Loved it.

    5-0 out of 5 stars A Classic "Encyclopedia Americana" Cookbook, November 29, 2010
    I found this on the shelf in Borders and was intrigued by the cover. As I delved deeper, I found it increasingly difficult to put down. This is a literary documentary of Americana cuisine, with a treasure trove of photos right out of a Time/Life edition. It is a snapshot of real people and the food that captures the heart of America, whether it be traditional Southern, Creole, Mexican, or Asian cuisine. America is the universal melting pot of cultural diversity, and Molly O'Neill gives a taste of American culinary history, with of course -- a hearty helping of the comfort-foods that nourish the very soul of America.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Wonderful and Delicious, December 1, 2010
    So many recipes from which to choose - Some are unusual some are familiar. The few I've already made since getting the book took a while but were delicious and worth the effort.

    5-0 out of 5 stars One Big Table, December 11, 2010
    This is a dream of a cookbook, chock full of stories. Every recipe is a living vignette. A cookbook is a great hit with me when I want to try almost every recipe right away. Some of them take you back years and years, others show you how and why to cook something you've always wanted to cook. It also makes great bed-time reading!!

    5-0 out of 5 stars Love It!, December 10, 2010
    I am to the point where all cookbooks look the same; same recipes, just a different title. YAWN! What a bore! Not this book. Love the regional recipes. Love the pictures and stories. Love the book! Best purchase I have made in a long time. I can't tell you if the recipes are any good but they sure sound good. Finally a cookbook that is just different!

    4-0 out of 5 stars YEAY!, December 21, 2010
    I was so worried about what to get for my boyfriend, and i was surfing the web and came appon this book for %50 at borders, And was not paying that much for a book so i came on amazon.com and i found it for half that price! I was really surprized at the content, it is really interesting with all the history and the author's store about the book being written. It is a def. present to someone who cares about history, and loves food, also a great gift to yourself! I can't wait until he'll wip up something good from this book! =]

    2-0 out of 5 stars Well its sure is big, but useless, December 26, 2010
    I found this book to be horrible. Half the recipes require ingredients you can only find in certain areas, the other half (unless you're a chef) you cant tell what they are because there are nearly NO pictures of the food. What kind of cookbook has recipes that can only be made if you live in X state/ doesnt give you a picture of what the freaking dish looks like. I hate how people are trying to make cookbooks into book you sit and read. I would like a book full of recipes that i can use and know what it should come out looking like. HORRIBLE BOOK! i am looking to get my refund ASAP! ... Read more


    17. Giada at Home: Family Recipes from Italy and California
    by Giada De Laurentiis
    Hardcover
    list price: $35.00 -- our price: $20.47
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0307451011
    Publisher: Clarkson Potter
    Sales Rank: 330
    Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    Since her debut on Food Network in 2002 with the hit program Everyday Italian, Giada De Laurentiis has been enticing Americans with her updated twists on Italian favorites. Her dedication to ease, healthfulness, and—above all else—flavor have won her a permanent place in the hearts of home cooks. In Giada at Home, she shares a personal look into how she cooks for those dearest to her, with simple recipes inspired by her television show of the same name.
     
    Born in Italy, Giada was raised in Los Angeles by a gregarious Italian family. While her grandmother, aunt, and mother brought her up on generations-old recipes, Giada also became enamored with the bright and clean flavors of California’s abundant seasonal fruits and vegetables. Giada at Home presents recipes from both traditions, all with Giada’s signature style. She shares classic Italian recipes passed down through the years, like cheese-stuffed dates wrapped in salty prosciutto, creamy risotto with the earthy and deep flavors of mushrooms and gorgonzola, and lamb chops basted with honey and balsamic vinegar. New family favorites include grilled asparagus and melon, game hens roasted with citrus and herbs, and a sorbet made with pomegranate and mint, all bursting with fresh, vibrant flavors.
     
    No meal would be complete without the company of family and Giada particularly enjoys bringing her loved ones together over meals. For the first time, she incorporates her go-to brunch recipes—what she cooks when setting up a feast on her back patio for everyone on weekend mornings—from Jade-approved Panini, with gooey mozzarella, luscious raspberries, and a sprinkling of brown sugar, to Todd’s favorite pancetta-studded waffles scented with cinnamon.
     
    No matter which recipe you choose—classic or contemporary—Giada at Home makes gathering the favorite people in your life for fabulous weeknight meals and family celebrations delicious and easy.
     
     
    GIADA DE LAURENTIIS is the Emmy-winning star of Food Network’s Everyday Italian, Giada's Weekend Getaways, and Giada at Home; a contributing correspondent for NBC’s Today; and the author of four New York Times bestselling cookbooks. She attended the Cordon Bleu in Paris and worked at Wolfgang Puck’s Spago restaurant in Los Angeles before starting her own catering company, GDL Foods. Born in Rome, she grew up in Los Angeles, where she now lives with her husband, Todd, and their daughter, Jade.
    ... Read more

    Reviews

    4-0 out of 5 stars Capriccio Gustoso--Variations on a Tasty Theme, February 22, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    During my nine years of living in Rome, I discovered that the best dishes were based on simple recipes that could be prepared with infinite variations. In her latest book, celebrity chef Giada de Laurentiis demonstrates this proposition, presenting us with what in Italy is called cucina casareccia--and in California, home cooking.

    Among her most mouth-watering concoctions are the antipasti: prosciutto-wrapped dates stuffed with blended mascarpone and goat cheese; smoked salmon and apple carpaccio; and fried cheese-stuffed zucchini blossoms (I was particularly grateful for her suggestion for testing the heat of the oil: toss a cube of bread into the olive oil--medium heat; when the bread browns, the oil is ready.). Similarly, her salads--"easy to throw together"--are truly inviting: an example is her green-bean salad, seasoned with fresh rosemary, parsley, chopped garlic, drizzled with olive oil (Her advice on choosing the best olive oil is especially enlightening.). Her lentil salad--mixed with grapes and cucumbers, among other ingredients, including hazelnuts--tickles one's tastebuds. And her recipe for Involtini--rolled-up beefsteaks filled with a mixture of various ingredients including garlic and basil--recalled forgotten memories of my father's putting me to work as a child, chopping parsely, garlic, together with something he called "fatback," which I imagine was lard, but which has now been substituted by olive oil. The strings with which he used to tie the involtini together have also been replaced by easier-to-use 4-inch skewers. Merely reading the recipe causes me to remember the aroma of involtini simmering in marinara sauce.

    The beauty of these recipes is that they invite one to be adventurous, as the author suggests in combining the best of Italy with the best of California. Are lobster tails too expensive when preparing her divine brown butter risotto? Substitute shrimp. Too much sugar for you in her imaginative strawberry and rosemary scones? Use half the amount! The amazing thing about Italian cooking is that, as the author remarks, it is always "evolving."

    Although "Giada at Home" contains some shortcuts, such as her tempting lemon-chicken soup, which calls for "low-sodium chicken broth" and " diced rotisserie chicken" [My father would turn over in his grave if he caught me following her suggestion to break the spaghetti into two-inch pieces!], many of her recipes, such as those which call for slicing, dicing, beating, and grating, require one to spend considerable time in the kitchen.

    If you have the patience and enjoy cooking, I am certain that the results will be worth the trouble.

    Buon' appetito!

    5-0 out of 5 stars More fabulous Italian-inspired recipes from Giada!, February 28, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    When my younger sister first got me into The Food Network a few years ago, Giada's Everyday Italian become a quick favorite. From the very beginning, I felt like I had a connection with Giada. I was enamored by her tasty modern twists on Italian classics and simpler, more everyday approach to traditionally complex dishes -it also didn't hurt that I'm a big fan of Italian food and I my boyfriend has strong Italian heritage, so he's always happy to try out the recipes I get from Giada.

    It didn't take long for my sister and I to introduce Giada to our parents, who also quickly become fans, and we started welcoming Giada into our kitchen regularly in the form of what we called "Giada dishes." Particularly after my sister and I gave my mother Everyday Pasta for Mother's Day last year, making Giada dishes become a big event that brought the family together. When I had the opportunity to check out Giada's latest cookbook, Giada at Home, I was more than excited and couldn't wait to see what tasty treats she had in store.

    Giada at Home: Family Recipes from Italy and California builds on the already fabulous library of Giada recipes that put a twist on Italian dishes. This cookbook includes tasty appetizers like stuffed baby peppers (which can easily be turned into a main dish) and beef skewers; a great selection of soups and sandwiches such as white bean and chicken chili and mini Italian pub burgers (a great twist on silders); mouth-watering pastas such as rigatoni with creamy mushroom sauce and penne with treviso and goat cheese; meat selections, such as a succulent turkey meatloaf with feta and sun-dried tomatoes; lovely salads that could become meals on there own; some Italian twists on desserts and, in a unique addition, a selection of Italian-style brunch foods, such as baked provolone and sausage frittata, campanelle pasta salad and even an Italian version of steak and eggs! I particularly liked the blend of more traditional Italian dishes and more modern dishes with a Californian flair. The collision between classic and modern really gave the recipes here some dimension and variety.

    Giada at Home follows the standard of gorgeous food photography set forth in previous Giada cookbooks. Along with photos of mouthwatering Italian treats, there are also several photos of Giada and her family, particularly her young daughter, Jade.

    My only tiny criticism of this cookbook is that I felt like Giada lost a little bit of her "everyday" aspect here. Some of the recipes got a little too complex or called for ingredients that are a little more difficult to find and have a much stronger appeal to "foodies." While I personally still loved the recipes here, some would have trouble with wide-spread appeal.

    Overall though, another fabulous cookbook from Giada!

    5-0 out of 5 stars As delightful as the chef who wrote it, February 27, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    Giada's show is the only cooking show I watch on a regular basis, because the pleasure she takes in the preparation and eating of a great meal is infectious, but never overboard. The recipes in this book offer the same fresh, almost joyful attitude towards food.

    I have only tried three of the recipes--for one thing, they are seasonal and locally oriented, so I can't get any zuchinni blossoms or seasonal squash in February. But the white bean and chicken chili was a delightful winter meal (I made it with ground turkey). The rigatoni with creamy mushroom sauce was also delicious...and a great vegetarian option, as she pointed out in her notes. But the best of all was the pasta ponza. I love the concentrated flavor of roasted tomatoes, and with the addition of bread crumbs, this was a real treat.

    I have many more recipes to try, and look forward to it.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Her best book so far, April 12, 2010
    I have all her cookboks and this one, her latest (Giada at Home) is the best so far. If you're new to Giada and thinking about buying one of her cookboks, I would strongly recommend to start with this one. And of course, if you own her previous ones, I'm sure you will love this one as well.

    I own tons of cookbooks, I simply have a passion for cookboks. But most of the time I don't cook more than one or two recipes from each book, they tend to spend most of their time on the shelf. Giada's books are the exception to that rule. Her books (and especially this one# are my to go to books. I love that most recipes in this book are easy,fast and uncomplicated everyday kind of meals/recipes, at the same time as they are so delicious, festive and special that they work more than well for special occasions and parties.

    I've already tried several recipes from this book and been more than happy with the results. New favorites are the smoked mozzarella meatballs, pasta ponza, gorgonzola stuffed tomatoes and pea crostini. And there are many many more recipes in the book that I'm looking forward to try. Every Sunday, I plan the meals for the upcoming week #a real timesaver for our busy schedule). Every week I always have at least one Giada recipe on the menu, an old favorite or a new one. Like I said, she is the to go to girl when it comes to delicious everyday as well as weekend food.

    Yes, there are some heavy and caloric recipes, but I always think that Giada tries to make her recipes a bit lighter. A splash of lemon here and there, small things like that really make her dishes feel lighter and perfect for my taste buds.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Giada does it again!, March 19, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    Giada has always been good about striking a balance between interesting dishes that impress and with realistic kitchen skills of the average cook. Her dishes are easy enough for a beginner to pull off and interesting enough to impress friends and family. Everytime I buy one of Giadas cookbooks I end up cooking and trying something totally new that I have never tried before. I have yet to be unable to cook a dish correctly and I have always enjoyed her recipes.

    Giada at home focuses on family and recipes she loves for family meals. It has great pictures of her with her family, and the dishes are photographed with wonderful detail.

    The sections included, along with some top picks are:
    Appetizers- Stuffed Baby Peppers, Beef Skewers with cherry tomatoes and parsley sauce, bruchettas and crostinis.

    Soups and Sandwiches- Zucchini and Olive pizza, Chicken Burgers with Garlic-Rosemary Mayonnaise, Mini Italian Pub burgers and Lemon Chicken Soup with Spaghetti.

    Pasta and Grains- Gorgonzola and Porcini Mushroom Risotto, Fusilli with Spicy Pesto, Cheesy Baked Faro and Brown Butter Risotto with Lobster.

    Meat, Poultry and Fish- Honey Balsamic Lamb Chops, Grilled Salmon with Citrus Salsa Verde, Grilled Tuscan Steak with Fried Egg and Goat Cheese and Chicken Milanese with Tomato and Fennel Sauce.

    Vegetables and Salads- Grilled Asparagus and Melon Salad, Vegetable Parmesan, Roasted Tomatoes with Garlic, Gorgonzola and Herbs, and Skewered Greek Salad.

    Desserts- Espresso Caramel Bars, Lemon Hazelnut Tiramisu, Pomegranate and Mint Sorbet and Chocolate Honey Almond Tart.

    Brunch- Ginger Tea Lemonade with Basil, Citrus Salad, Egg White Frittata with Lox and Arugula, and Crispy Parmesan Biscuits.

    Those are just a few of the recipes featured in each section.

    This is an excellent recipe book that you will find yourself pulling out on a weekly basis.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Part Cookbook, Part Biography, March 10, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    Giada at Home / 978-0-30745-101-9

    Part cookbook, but with biographical elements that provide interesting insight and reading into the featured chef's adjustment from Italian cuisine to American cuisine, and her fusion attempts with both, this book is an interesting read with several mouth-watering recipes. Many of the recipes feature full-page finished photos, and most of the Italian cuisine dialect is carefully explained to the reader (finally, I now know the difference between prosciutto and pancetta).

    It's worth remembering, when considering the purchase of this book, that the recipes here may be challenging for some American palates. Although Giada has tastefully combined American cuisine with her Italian childhood memories, the Italian flavors shine through heavily. Many of the recipes call for ingredients that may not be found outside of the nearest specialty market, almost none of the recipes utilize beef (and even the chicken and pork recipes are fairly sparing on the meat content), and there is a noticeable reliance on salty flavors in the meat and cheese dishes.

    Of course, none of this makes the cookbook less worthy of purchase, but like all specialty cookbooks, I would recommend flipping through a few recipes before purchase. Having said that, this is a very nice specialty cookbook - the flavor and variety are appreciated, the writing style is quite engaging, the pictures are beautiful, and the assembly instructions are adequate (although I would prefer pictorial assembly instructions where applicable, but I suppose that's a bit much to ask from a specialty book).

    ~ Ana Mardoll

    5-0 out of 5 stars Great, simple dishes, March 7, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    I really enjoyed this cookbook and it's gotten a spot on my 'referred to' cookbook shelf. I tried a couple of dishes and they turned out great. While some use more exotic ingredients, most don't and you could whip them up without a lot of trouble.

    Also, I'm a 'mostly vegetarian' and I found myself dog-earing a ton of recipes that look good and will please both me and my meat-eater husband.

    The little stories from Giada actually are informative (often I feel the author is just indulging themself with these little bits) and interesting. Though I saw a pre-pub edition so the pics were all kinda blurry and in black and white, it looks like there WILL be a photo included for almost (or possibly all) every recipe.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Delicious!, March 21, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    I think this is Giada's most well-rounded book to date. There's a nice mix of fast, easy recipes and more complicated (but not too much so) "weekend" type recipes, as well a familiar and more adventurous combinations. There's also a nice balance of main ingredients (beef, fish, chicken, pasta, veggies) and a good selection of desserts. The espresso caramel bars are divine, just divine. She says it's a more complicated recipe, but it was easy to prepare. Making the caramel is the hardest part, but if you don't trust your skills, you can buy caramels and melt them. The turkey meatloaf with feta and sun-dried tomatoes and Nonna Luna's rice are going to become a staple in my house, too. Both come together quickly, and while they have longer cooking times, it's in the oven so you can be doing other things.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Beautiful Book, Filled With Fabulous Recipes, March 18, 2010

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    As always, Giada comes through for us with the best recipes! The photos in this book are stunning and make me want to cook them all right now!! However, this book arrived just when I had to go on a specialided diet, so I've adapted a few to fit in with what I can eat, but I'm just awaiting the day when I can enjoy them the way they are meant to be. Many of the Italian recipes are similar to the old faded handwritten ones from my own grandmother, yet made more current somehow. Giada is skilled in updating the old Italian recipes.

    5-0 out of 5 stars GIADA AT HOME IS A GUSTATORY DELIGHT, October 6, 2010

    Those who follow Giada De Laurentiis on her Emmy Award winning TV program (and there are jillions of you) know just how delicious, healthful, and beautifully presented her dishes are. Her four previous cookbooks have all topped bestseller lists, however, for this Giada fan GIADA AT HOME is something very special because not only are there a multitude of tasty recipes, but it is also a warm affectionate look at family, friends, and her adopted state of California.

    I cannot remember seeing a cook who took so much pleasure in the preparation of food - perhaps it is because she's preparing for those she loves. Whatever the case, the recipes included in this book are family recipes form Italy and California. Some are generations old recipes (identified by being set in orange type), while others are new family recipes (set in green type). Readers will find that Giada has been happily influenced by what she finds at her local farmer's market - beautiful seasonal fruits and vegetables. Thus, she prepares dishes that spotlight these flavors. Delightful offerings!

    GIADA AT HOME begins with Appetizers followed by Soups & Sandwiches, Pasta & Grains, Meat, Poultry & Fish, Vegetables & Salads, Desserts, and Brunch.

    Photographs of the dishes by Jonelle Weaver are so real that one is tempted to take a bite. Relaxed candid shots of family and friends allow readers glimpses of the happiness engendered when loved ones gather to share a meal.

    For this reader Brunch is one of my favorite chapters, especially as described: "In Italy weekends are all about the leisurely lunch, a meal that can start any time after one-thirty in the afternoon and might well stretch on into the early evening." It is the day's "main event."

    It's so much more than a main event, it's a dreamed of libation if it begins with Limoncello and Blueberry Cooler and includes Mozzarella, Raspberry, and Brown Sugar Panini plus a Strawberry and Rosemary Scone or two.

    Enjoy - I know you will!

    - Gail Cooke ... Read more


    18. Diners, Drive-ins and Dives: An All-American Road Trip . . . with Recipes! (Food Network)
    by Guy Fieri, Ann Volkwein
    Paperback
    list price: $19.99 -- our price: $11.49
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0061724882
    Publisher: William Morrow Cookbooks
    Sales Rank: 263
    Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    Food Network star Guy Fieri takes you on a tour of America's most colorful diners, drive-ins, and dives in this tie-in to his enormously popular television show, complete with recipes, photos, and memorabilia.

    Packed with Guy's iconic personality, Diners, Drive-ins and Dives follows his hot-rod trips around the country, mapping out the best places most of us have never heard of. From digging in at legendary burger joint the Squeeze Inn in Sacramento, California, baking Peanut Pie from Virginia Diner in Wakefield, Virginia, or kicking back with Pete's "Rubbed and Almost Fried" Turkey Sandwich from Panini Pete's in Fairhope, Alabama, Guy showcases the amazing personalities, fascinating stories, and outrageously good food offered by these American treasures.

    ... Read more

    Reviews

    4-0 out of 5 stars A little disappointing ..., November 20, 2008

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    I really wanted to LOVE this book, I really did. I'm such a huge fan of Guy Fieri's "Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives" television show, and I've been hoping he'd come out with a cookbook containing recipes featured on his shows.

    I'm a sucker for great road food, and often go out of my way to try a "hole in the wall" diner. Guy has traveled the US highlighting exactly the kinds of places I love to visit. His show on Food Network is loads of fun. No one can describe food like Guy, with his blend of humor and killer adjectives.

    The humor doesn't translate all that well in print, and the jokes just aren't that funny. But I didn't get this book for the jokes -- I got it for the recipes.

    The recipes that are included are OK -- but if you're a fan of the show, don't expect to find very many of the dishes Guy spotlighted. There are a few (the Cap'n Crunch French Toast from the Blue Moon Cafe in Baltimore, for example), but the bulk of the recipes are "new."

    It was more than a little frustrating to read about the wonderful dishes in Guy's descriptions of the restaurant, only to find few recipes for any of them. While each establishment is represented by a recipe, almost none of the recipes are described in the narrative.

    For example, Baby Blues Bar-B-Q in Venice, CA -- Guy waxes rhapsodic over the "killer mac and cheese made from four cheeses" and "grilled corn with chipotle-poblano butter and cotijo cheese sprinked on top." The featured recipe: saut�ed okra. Huh?

    That's not to say these are not GOOD recipes -- in fact, most of them look pretty darned tasty. And if your expectations don't include recipes for dishes featured on the show, these will be just fine.

    As a travelogue, it's probably OK, too. And maybe that was its intended purpose, rather than a "cookbook." Or maybe it can't really decide what it wants to be.

    But if you're like me, you might be a little disappointed that the dishes included in the book are NOT the ones that made your mouth water when you watched the show OR read about them here.

    4-0 out of 5 stars What fun!, October 22, 2008

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    And one book I will take on my next road trip - although why CaveMan Chicken is not in here......

    Guy Fieri from the Food Channel takes the reader on a tour of his favorite Diners Drive-Ins and Dives around the country. The book is broken up into regional sections - Northeast and Mid-Atlantic, South, Midwest and West & Southwest. Each place gets a two page bit with pictures describing the restaurant, its history, owners and their specialty to fame. There's also a box on a sidebar called "Track it Down" with full business name, address, phone numbers and website (if available). Also included are recipes from many of the featured restaurants, and most look quite simple with minimal fuss and ingredients. Whilst I'm not much for spending time in the kitchen a few of these are putting me in the mood -- Cap'n Crunch French Toast, BBB Mac and Cheese, Chorizo Garbage Plate, a potato chip "In"crusted Dolphin (mahi mahi) sandwich and more.

    The book is paperback 7" x 9" (should slip easily into your luggage), and the photos are all black and white and not on glossy paper. At the back of the book is a recipe index by type (breakfast, starters, dinner, etc.) along with a List of restaurants. I've not perused others roadside dining books to draw a comparison to, but I've found it quite entertaining perusing the recipes, as have my coworkers -- definitely a good conversation piece. Four stars.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Like diners and dives? Check this out!, November 6, 2008
    I'm addicted to Guy Fieri's Food Network show, "Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives." Whenever I have a chance, I tune in; normally, it's a cool one hour trip across the country. His enthusiasm comes right through the screen as he tries out different dishes at each establishment.

    This book provides a sampling of some of those establishments across the country. The format is simple: a brief description of the diner or deli or dive, a photo of the place, and one or more illustrative recipes. In a sense, using one of his own terms, this is a trip to "Flavortown." One nice touch: his recognition of key players in his crew, as they work together as a team across the country.

    Some examples of the places he looks at and the recipes that he spotlights. The "Blue Moon Cafe" in Baltimore, Maryland. I am looking forward, in the near future, to a long weekend in Baltimore; it's an enjoyable visit. This time, I may choose to try out this place. He focuses on breakfast in his two cafe examination of this cafe. The recipe given is intriguing--but not for me, Cap'n Crunch French Toast. I'm not going to ever make this, but it's fun to imagine making it and tasting it. Ingredients: heavy cream, eggs, vanilla, Cap'n Crunch, sugar, bread, sugar, berries. The 5 steps in the recipe sure look doable for amateur chefs. Interesting. . . .

    Then, there is "Panini Pete's," located in Fairhope, Alabama. One interesting aspect: the head cook is a classically trained European chef. One recipe: Pete's Rubbed and Almost Fried Turkey Sandwich. Focaccia bread, balsamic vinegar, olive oil, Kosher salt and pepper, Dijon mustard, fried turkey (a menu provided for that, too), roasted red pepper, baby greens, mozzarella, and garlic mayo. Oooh. Read the recipe and imagine the tasty results!

    Then, there is Joe's Farm Grill in Arizona. Much of the food is grown right there. One specialty is hamburgers, with all sorts of eye popping toppings (e.g., apple-cider smoked bacon, pepperoni, roasted red peppers, and so on). But this isn't just a burger joint. Witness the recipe provided--Asian Slaw with Spicy Thai Vinaigrette. Combine the vegetables, including green and red and napa cabbage, julienned green onion, julienned red bell pepper, shredded carrots, salt and pepper, topped with spicy Thai vinaigrette. Looks yummy.

    Anyhow, this is worth the price of purchase simply for the description of the diners, delis, and dumps--and seeing the building where the establishment is located. The recipes are interesting, too, although I would not even think of making many of these (some may be great tasting, but they're awfully fatty and loaded with cholesterol). If you like Guy Fieri's show, you'll enjoy this book, I think.

    5-0 out of 5 stars crazy tasty, October 24, 2008

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    Guy Fieri was the first winner of the "Next Food Network Star" andhe is no flash in the pan. His tv show is entertaining. But how does the book stack up?
    Very well. Mr Fieri visits (and revisits) over 50 "diners, drive-ins and dives" with a signature recipe from each location. The recipes are as diverse as "Cap'n Crunch French Toast" from the Blue Moon Cafe' in Baltimore, Maryland to a falafel from the Original Falafel's Drive-In in San Jose', California. The restaurant descriptions make you want to hop in the car and check them out.
    I would recommend this book to anyone who wanted to try any sort of new recipe, as the book includes a diverse group of recipes. I would also recommend it to anyone who is a fan of Mr Fieri (and who isn't?). Finally, if you're planning a road trip, this is the book for you. You can stay away from the chain restaurants and try something unique to the area you're visiting. Or you might find a homegrown delight in your own backyard. This book is great fun to read.

    3-0 out of 5 stars Okay, but not much of a cookbook..., October 30, 2008

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    I love the TV show and could not wait to get the book. While it's a fun book, it's a bit of a disappointment in terms of being a recipe book (most of the recipes in the book are not anything I would want to try making), but it's still a very good companion piece to the TV show. Anyone looking for an actual "cookbook" might want to avoid this one, but if you're a fan of the show. Go ahead and give it a try. Three and a half stars for this one.

    2-0 out of 5 stars Sadly, It Doesn't Live Up To Potential, November 9, 2008

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    This book, given the places Guy Fieri has visited, had great potential, but it failed to live up to that potential. I love the show and to eat at the types of places that he frequents, so I had high hopes that the book would provide a number of new places to explore and provide recipes so that I could recreate the food from some favorites at home.

    While the book looks substantial, it only highlights a relatively few establishments. There are regional headings, which tend to be very broad (New England/ Mid-Atlantic, etc) and each only has a small number of eateries. New England has a whooping 4 places listed, which is about the number that I could point him towards in single towns in New England. And, with the exception of Baltimore and the State of New Jersey, most other areas are equally under represented.

    The recipes are equally sparse in most cases. A goodly number feature recipes that could be easily figured out by a diner at a particular establishment without the help of a trained restaurateur. There are recipes for burgers and sandwiches galore, along with such things as coleslaw. Not the most interesting or inspiring book.

    I would have preferred that he visited a number of establishments in a given region and then written a book by region. By doing that, he would have created a series of books that could have traveled with me on trips...as it is, this isn't worth the trouble to pack. I usually know where I am headed, so I can easily photocopy the places that might hold interest.

    This had strong potential, which in my opinion was wasted. More time spent on the book would have yielded a better product that could have started a line of books. I doubt I will bother with anything else he prints unless I check it out in advance.

    5-0 out of 5 stars A "Must Have" for DD&D Fans, November 1, 2008

    Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
    The perfect natural extension of the Food Network show. If I ever take a cross-country road trip, this is going to be my primary reference - kept right on the front seat.

    In the book, Fieri hightlights over 50 of his 'discoveries' across the nation from his show. He includes a short recap, interesing facts about each place, pictures (usually of Fieri hamming it up with the staff), and interesting side-bars written in true Fieri style.

    The biggest surprise bonus is you also get a recipe or two from each establishment. (Getting the recipe for Duarte's crab cioppino is, in itself, worth the price of the book!)

    I'm guessing a big source of hits on the Food Network web site is to find the exact location of restaurants featured on Fieri's show. (I'm still trying to find the elusive taco truck north of San Jose. Also, is it just me, or is the Food Network web site truly one of the more difficult ones to navigate?)

    Regardless, you now have the perfect reference -- descriptions, locations and recipe's included! And, as expected -- coming from Fieri -- it's all done in a very entertaining manner.

    1-0 out of 5 stars What was the point of this?, June 24, 2009

    I don't know what I was thinking here. I like the show, but what was I hoping for from this book? Perhaps, A bit more depth and behind the scenes info? Well, if you're looking for an overview of the show with even less information than the show supplied, buy this book. Even the recipes are weak, with nothing here that couldn't be found someplace else or figured out from watching the show (We're not talking haute cuisine.). Throughout the book there are even "Guys Asides," little comments attached to the main article, which seem strangely redundant in a book that he has "written." Hey, this is my fault, I bought it without checking. Unless you are a huge fan of the show or of Guy's odd coif and bling, this one will not be missed on your bookshelf.

    1-0 out of 5 stars money thrown away, January 27, 2009
    While the show is interesting and entertaining the book is just the opposite. Not well organized, and receipes are disappointing. Would not recommed this book,if you want to visit the places he visits, just watch the show and make note of the names and locations and take the list when you travel to that area. Looked up several areas of interest we had seen on the show, and none of the resturnats are mentioned in the book.

    2-0 out of 5 stars Too little of everything, November 6, 2008
    I have been a DDD fan from the beginning. I have seen every episode at least once, some thrice. I have wanted a book forever, and have long thought about what I wanted it to be. So maybe that is why I am disappointed so much.

    I was hoping for a travel guide that I could use to seek out DDD favorites. But this guide does not cover everyplace he has been, just some of them. And it lacks a good index by state and city for the locations he does cover. You can flip thru the pages by part of the country, but it is tedious and not as easy as it could be. A national map with numbered locations would have been good too. The fact that the pictures of the people and locations are black and white keeps it from becoming exciting or make me want to visit. A black and white picture of a building sign is just a waste of book space. These places have character, and you get NONE of it in the pictures. The whole book feels boring and drab from the minute you pick it up.

    The book tries to be part travel guide, part cookbook, and part show diary. IMHO, it fails at all three. It has a recipe from most of the selected locations, but no pictures of the food. That may be just as well, because black and white pictures of food would take the book to a new level of dullness. The narratives for each location are uninspired, and sound like they were written by a newly-graduated ghost writer rather than the inimitable Guy. Most of it reads more boringly than a small-town restaurant review. As a show diary, it lacks any funny stories or off-camera tidbits that might have brought some humor and interest to an otherwise exceedingly dull book.

    Maybe i will feel better about this book once I make a few recipes. But I suspect that this one is going to end up on eBay or Amazon Used Books in a few weeks. ... Read more


    19. The Complete America's Test Kitchen TV Show Cookbook: Every Recipe from the Hit TV Show With Product Ratings and a Look Behind the Scenes, 2001-2011
    by America's Test Kitchen
    Hardcover
    list price: $39.95 -- our price: $26.37
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 1933615710
    Publisher: Boston Common Press
    Sales Rank: 397
    Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    Amazon.com ReviewProduct Description
    Since its debut in 1999, America's Test Kitchen has been public television's most-watched cooking show. This new comprehensive cookbook captures ten seasons of the show in a lively collection featuring more than 500 foolproof recipes and dozens of tips and techniques. You'll learn the secret to rich-tasting Weeknight Bolognese and Cheesey Garlic Bread in Bringing Home Italian Favorites. Prepare a platter of the best-tasting nachos you've ever had in Tex-Mex tonight. And discover a new way to cook the Thanksgiving turkey in Talking Turkey and All the Trimmings--choose among nine different recipes for the holiday bird--from Classic Roast Stuffed Turkey and Crisp-Skinned Butterflied Turkey to Herbed Roast Turkey, Grill-Roasted Turkey, and more.

    Want to learn how to be a better cook? Throughout the book you'll find a special behind-the-scenes feature highlighting the most important test kitchen techniques from the past decade. In addition, we take you behind the scenes of the show for a fascinating look at how recipes are developed, why our equipment and ingredient ratings are different, what's involved in putting together an episode, and more. And assembled just for this collection, The America's Test Kitchen Guide to Recommended Ingredients and Equipment unites all our important tastings and testings into an easy-to-navigate buyer's guide so you can be a savvy consumer whether you're investing in a new gas grill or picking up a can of tomatoes. This new volume gives you a decade of great cooking and expertise from America's most trusted test kitchen.



    Recipe Excerpts from The Complete America's Test Kitchen TV Show Cookbook


    Cheesy Nachos with Guacamole and Salsa

    Chocolate Cookies




    1 ... Read more

    Reviews

    4-0 out of 5 stars Flawed, October 14, 2009
    I love the show, the recipes are great and this book has many. However, it does not contain all of the recipes from the TV show, and the index is poor.

    The first thing I looked for in the book was Pepperoni Pan Pizza, Season Eight, Disk three, first show, if you own the DVDs, as I do. It's not in there. Yes, there are pizzas, but not the recipe I wanted to make. The dough for the others is different, as is the sauce. Other than that, I'm all set. For a book which promises every recipe from every show, being 0 for 1 was not a pleasant surprise.

    It's conceivable that the Pizza Dish is in there, please flame me in the comments, so long as you specify the page (it's not under Pizza, and it's not in the Italian dish section where the other pizzas are). I say that because the second recipe I wanted, from the same DVD, was a kuchen I plan to make tomorrow. Look up kuchen in the index, no go, look in the table of contents instead and, ah, there it is! They called it New York Style Crumb Cake in the show, so ... you find it under "N" in the index. How convenient!

    This is a common flaw with ATk books (e.g. the season 9 recipe book I also have). They give an ordinary recipe a spiced up name, which by itself is all well and good. But then they list the thing only under the fancy name. They'd call an apple pie "xanadu" then list it under "x". The one thing I'd have expected is an episode list with a page reference for each recipe. It would have added 5-10 pages to a very large book. They list only the recipes for season ten. This would have helped find episodes as well, if you locate a recipe you'd like to make. I found Breaded Chicken Cutlets, and cannot find online which season it's from, so although I probably own the DVD, I can't watch it without starting up many disks and plowing through til I see it.

    If you plan to flip through recipes, or when you can find what you're looking for, the book is fantastic, and the recipes are wonderful. They certainly didn't leave out many, the book is huge and heavy, with many nice photographs, equipment lists, and grocery lists. But, it does not do what they say it does - include every recipe - and the index is best described as jesuitical.

    2-0 out of 5 stars Misrepresented, October 16, 2009
    While I generally enjoy everything about America's Test Kitchen and its related publications, this book came up short. This book is billed as containing "every recipe from 10 years" of the ATK TV show. Unfortunately, that is not true.

    The recipe for my favorite "Triple Chocolate Cookie" (which feature melted bittersweet chocolate chips) is not included. Ironically, these cookies were featured in the ATK episode entitled "Cookie Jar Favorites"--the title of the cookie chapter of this book. The previous poster mentioned a pan pizza recipe featured in Season 8 which was also not included. That's at least two recipes missing--who knows how many others?

    One of the other flaws of this book is that it is missing an index of all of the recipes for each show by season. However, if the publishers were leaving out recipes, then I can understand why they would leave out such a list. Including an episode-by-episode list would surely draw attention to the fact that this book is not nearly as complete as promised.

    This book does not contain every recipe from every show. If that's what you are looking for, as I was, then you will be sorely disappointed.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Wow...if you like America's Test Kitchen?, November 11, 2009
    If you like America's Test kitchen, you might like this book. It is, as usual a great resource, but after looking through the pages of this book, I can see many repetitions of recipes from other books of the Test Kitchen. I do notice that despite the claim of having all of its' recipes, 650 from 10 years of the show, some seem to be missing.
    What you can love about this is how America's Test Kitchen covers almost any question you might have on how to cook their recipes and their advice on types of kitchen equipment and helpful hints just can't be beat; as are their explanations on how they come up with their versions of their recipes
    This volume covers: soups and salads, skillet suppers and one pot dinners to chicken, turkey, specific meats and fish, diner dinners, pasta, tex mex, French, take out, grill, sides, brunch, bread, cookies, cake, desserts are all included. There is also a kitchen shopping guide, conversions and equivalents, a 2010 TV episode guide as well as the adequately done index with recipe names and main ingredients. There are colour pictures for about every 3rd or 4th recipe and why the recipe works. There are not as many of the small diagrams in this book as in previous ones that show how to roll and cut cinnamon rolls for example.
    The print is good and easy to read. It would make a good basic cookbook or an addition to a collection, as long as you know there will be some duplications from other Test Kitchen books
    Also just know if you will be making pies or biscuits, they will be made from scratch, this is not a book for you to expect them to tell you to pop open a can of refrigerated biscuits. The bread section is mostly quick dough, if you are looking for long rising bread recipes, they are not here.
    I also wish that the Test Kitchen would give charts for cooking times of different sizes of meats and roasts, after all some of us need to cook a 20 pound turkey for Thanksgiving, a 12 pound bird will just not cut it. However their grill instructions are some of the best around. It's a good book, but I wish it was the comprehensive one that I thought was coming.

    5-0 out of 5 stars terrific -- with one exception, May 10, 2010
    I almost didn't get this book. I subscribe to the ATK magazines and have many of the cookbooks, which often repeat the recipes from the magazines, so the last thing I needed was a book that had all the recipes again. But I'm glad I got it. Up til now I'd kept a database I made from the magazines, or I had to remember which cookbook a particular recipe was in. But now it's very easy -- I just head to this (relatively) comprehensive tome. At 646 pages it's hefty, but it's great to find things organized and in place whenever I want.

    The recipes are fabulous and the commentaries informative. I have made many recipes from here and 95% turn out brilliantly. The apple pie and pie dough are real keepers, the strawberry cream cake is a gorgeous crowd pleaser, and almost every poultry recipe is superb; sauces are wonderful and the buttermilk waffle recipe is delicious. ATK also does a great job of making ethnic recipes do-able, with ingredient lists that most cooks should be able to fill without too much trouble. The commentaries tell you how the ingredients work together, and what variations work (or don't) and why. Chapters cover: soup. salads, skillet suppers, one pot dinners, chicken, turkey and trimmings, steak, pork, roasts & loafs, fish, diner food, pasta, Italian favorites, French food, Tex-Mex cooking, takeout (Chinese, Thai and Indian food), grilling, side dishes, brunch, breads, cookies, cake, puddings & souffles, fruit desserts, and pie.

    The negatives: not ALL the recipes are here. There're at least two I looked for after watching the show but couldn't find, and other reviewers seem to have had the same problem. Also, as usual with ATK books, the index is bad. MANY times I can't find something in there but after leafing and browsing, there it is! There is also a shopping guide which shows all the winners of the shows' equipment testings (from knives and bakeware to pans, utensils and appliances) as well as winners from taste testings (such as cheese, meats, spices , pantry items etc). There is a rudimentary index to the 2010 tv shows, also, but none for the other seasons.

    Despite the index and incompleteness flaws, I love this book.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Wanting More, December 4, 2009
    I'm missing a couple of the annual editions and despaired not having a complete set until this book came along. I bought it immediately and love what's there. I happily transferred my Post-It bookmarks from my annual editions to this book, and seeing the variations and other ideas gathered around my favorites got me to thinking I may give them a try too. In that sense - many years of recipes reorganized in a more-or-less sensible fashion - this is a rather complete cookbook. But I miss what's not there - the things that would make this a complete America's Test Kitchen cookbook. The equipment ratings are almost an afterthought, and the tasting panel results aren't much better. I need to know if a particular piece of equipment that catches my eye at the store should be snapped up or shunned, and this book doesn't tell me that while the annual editions did. The candid photos are, as far as I can tell, all of the current staff; not one, for example, of "Doc" Willoughby who reported from the Science Desk in early years. And how much trouble would it have been to add a line to each recipe title, stating the year and episode it came from? The Index could have had references to a recipe's year (Consumer Reports style) so we hardcore fans could crack open our annual editions to read more about them. I like this book a lot but would have loved it if it was complete. It has earned a permanent place on my kitchen bookshelf, but I think maybe I'll resume searching for my missing annual editions, because I'll still be needing them close by.

    5-0 out of 5 stars 10 Years of A Great Show, September 26, 2009
    The America's Test Kitchen TV Show Cookbook features the best recipes from the past 10 years of the show. America's Test Kitchen is great because they not only cook but they test each recipe and fix it dozens and dozens of ways to find the best way to prepare a dish. I love it because it's not just another chicken dish, etc. but it's the best way to fix the kind of dish that they are preparing. I always to go to them to find the best recipe to prepare dishes.

    The book highlights their best and favorite recipes from the show. You can go on their website and get recipes too but you can only access the ones from the current season, this book features recipes since 1999.

    Highly recommend.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Best Cookbook I have ever owned...., January 15, 2010
    I was given this book as a gift this past Xmas. I've been cooking for several decades...mostly out of neccessity. I consider myself a basic level cook with a good sense for flavoring and experimentation but lacking in technique, timing and process. I can follow a recipe easily enough without understanding the underlying principle behind each step in the recipe.

    But this book is taking me to the next level. I have never watched the show or read the magazine before, so if recipes are missing; I wouldn't know. I LOVE reading the "Why this recipe works" prefaces to each recipe...Wow! I felt this book was written just for me. I now know how to shop for a medium onion...the redipe tells me how much of a yield to expect upon chopping it. The illustrations are clean and clear and very easy to grasp. I think this book will boost the confidence of any novice or basic cook. I'd guess that this book might be somewhat elementary for a more advanced or experienced cook, but I would highly recommend it for anyone leaving the nest or striking out on their own. I wish I had this book when I got my first apartment.

    The writing is not presumptious, intimidatting or boring. I find this book inspiring and fun. The recipes are accessible (many familiar dishes), straightforward, achievable and (so far) foolproof. The book is quite educational. I love this book so much, I'm giving it as a gift to my culinary-challenged and kitchen-phobic friends.

    4-0 out of 5 stars Overwhelming and complete, November 5, 2009
    As I have said in many, MANY reviews, I'm a beginner cook. I hope to improve that status eventually. Life in the Corps just doesn't allow for that...yet.

    This book is extremely complete. If they are missing any recipes, it can't be many. I would expect a book this large to have a few mistakes. That is what the website and user feedback is for.

    I'm working my way through this book. It is not designed to simply sit down and read. It is more of a reference book. It definitely gives me plenty of options as to what to do and how.

    I like it alot. I will be using it more in the future. Especially with the holidays coming up.

    The only drawback from a beginner cook's point of view is that there are very few pictures. The ones that are included are drawings done in black and white. I would like to see more picutres.

    5-0 out of 5 stars the most complete cookbook ever, May 9, 2010
    I purchased The Complete America's Test Kitchen TV Show Cookbook recently. I am overjoyed...I enjoy reading it, looking at the product reviews and of course, cooking with it. It is so nice to have all of my favorite ATK recipes in one beautiful book. The recipes are easy to understand with readily available products. This would make a perfect gift for a new Bride or your favorite "foodie". The America's Test Kitchen staff tirelessly tweak recipes so you get an easy to follow recipe with perfect results. Family and friends don't even ask me anymore where I got the recipe...they know ATK!!!! The Chicken Francais recipe turned out better than our favorite Italian Restaurant. The Banana Bread was phenomenal! I look forward to picking out more recipes...the only problem is what to make first!

    4-0 out of 5 stars Great recipes, April 13, 2010
    The recipes have been great and am I'm pleased with the book overall. The biggest complaint I have is that the layout could be improved in some instances. I was reading a recipe that somehow felt incomplete, and it turned out that there was an intro to the recipe on the previous page. It was a weird place to put a page break and there was no indication that I was missing anything. They didn't cut off any ingredients or instructions, but it was still annoying. Other than that, I love the book and so far the recipes have been great ... Read more


    20. Semi-Homemade The Complete Cookbook
    by Sandra Lee
    Hardcover-spiral
    list price: $29.95 -- our price: $14.98
    (price subject to change: see help)
    Isbn: 0470874058
    Publisher: Wiley
    Sales Rank: 485
    Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars
    US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

    Editorial Review

    Amazon.com ReviewFall into Cooking Featured Recipe: Herbed Pork Roast and Cranberry-Pine Nut Chutney from Semi-Homemade: The Complete Cookbook by Sandra Lee

    Serves 4

    Ingredients

    PORK ROAST
    2 1⁄2 pounds boneless pork loin roast, rinsed and patted dry
    Salt and pepper
    2 tablespoons herbes de Provence, McCormick®
    1 teaspoon onion powder, McCormick®
    1 tablespoon crushed garlic, Christopher Ranch®
    1 tablespoon lemon juice, ReaLemon®

    CHUTNEY
    1 can (16-ounce) whole cranberry sauce, Ocean Spray®
    1⁄3 cup pine nuts, lightly toasted
    1 teaspoon lemon juice, ReaLemon®
    1 teaspoon herbes de Provence, McCormick®
    1⁄4 teaspoon crushed garlic, Christopher Ranch®

    Preheat oven to 450°F.

    For the roast, season pork roast with salt and pepper. In a small bowl, stir together herbes de Provence, onion powder, garlic, and lemon juice. Rub over pork roast and place roast in shallow roasting pan. Place roast in oven and reduce heat to 325°F.Roast for 30 minutes per pound or until internal temperature reaches 165°F. (Roast will continue to cook up to 170°F out of the oven.) Let pork roast rest for 5 to 10 minutes before slicing.

    For the chutney, combine all chutney ingredients and stir thoroughly. Serve chutney at room temperature over pork roast.

    Tip: Herbes de Provence is a blend of dry herbs most commonly used in southern France. It usually contains basil, fennel seeds, lavender, marjoram, rosemary, sage, summer savory, and thyme.



    This new compilation is filled to the brim with 1,001 of Sandra Lee's most popular recipes including 200 brand new recipes from Sandra's personal recipe box and never-before-seen full-color photos taken at Sandra's new home, Lilly Pond, in Bedford Falls, NY.

    Sandra Lee's Semi-Homemade The Complete Cookbook serves up delicious recipes from 20 in depth, unique chapters like Sandra's Cooking Basics, Poultry & Beef, 20 Minute Meals, International Fare, Slow Cooker & One Pot Wonders and provides an insiders' view of Sandra's new kitchen, pantry and three at home eating areas-formal, family and kitchen dining. Sandra, who can often be seen on the Today show and Good Morning America, is thrilled to share with her readers, an exclusive chapter featuring cherished recipes from her sister, muse and frequent guest on Semi-Homemade Cooking with Sandra Lee, Kimber Lee.

    These quick and easy recipes, straight from Sandra Lee's dining room table to yours, are based on Sandra's Semi-Homemade philosophy and use roughly 70 percent ready-made products and 30 percent fresh ingredients, so you can take 100% of the credit.

    • Includes 1,001 semi-homemade recipes-800 fan favorites from the show and 200 brand-new for this collection-the biggest Sandra Lee collection ever
    • These family-friendly recipes featuring food for every dining occasion are quick to make and easy to put together
    • An insider's look into the personal home of Sandra Lee and the re-launch of a brand-new, modernized Semi-Homemade Cooking with Sandra Lee show on Food Network
    • The first book Sandra has published in partnership with Food Network with extensive on-air promotion

    For Sandra Lee fans, this is the ultimate Semi-Homemade collection, packed with all-time favorites, fresh fares and fun new recipes. Between the stresses and duties of family and work, it's tough to put a delicious meal that saves time and money on the table every night of the week. Thankfully, there's Sandra Lee!

    Recipe Excerpts from Semi-Homemade The Complete Cookbook


    Italian Baked Pork Chops

    Mushroom Risotto

    Blue Cheese-Crusted Filet Mignon
    1 ... Read more

    Reviews

    5-0 out of 5 stars Everything Sandra at your fingertips!, November 11, 2010
    I found this to be the best of Sandra Lee's cookbooks. It's a much larger book with many more receipes than the earlier ones. The receipes I've tried are excellent. I love the way her receipes cut the time involved down by using prepared items. It makes an everyday meal special with the extra touches.

    5-0 out of 5 stars The Complete Sandra Lee Cookbook - a MUST in any kitchen, November 18, 2010
    Sandra Lee's Semi-Homemade Food Network show is one of my all time FAVORITES shows! I love to watch her pull together simple ingredients to make delicious meals for the family.

    Sandra's trademark 70/30 Semi-Homemade philosophy, alongside her beautiful tablescapes and creative cocktails suck me into every episode and get my cooking senses going.


    And thanks to wonderful people at Wiley Publishing, I was able to get a copy of Sandra's brand new Semi-Homemade Complete Cookbook to review.

    I dug right into this cookbook, flipping the pages back and forth, soaking in all the great photos, helpful hints, and great chapters like:

    * Cooking Basics
    * Breakfast & Brunch
    * Light & Healthful
    * International Flare
    * Slow Cooker & One Pot Meals
    * Cocktails & Appetizers
    * Tablescapes & Entertaining

    It's Sandra Lee at her best!

    And I don't know about you, but one of my BIGGEST pet peeves when it comes to cookbooks, is being able to have the opened with ease as I cook.

    A lot of cookbooks have funky binding or awkward 3 rings, but Sandra Lee's Complete Cookbook has this great spiral binding that allows the pages to sit flat while open and closes easily when done. I LOVED that!

    Of course I couldn't review a cookbook without trying out a recipe...

    Since pork loins were on sale at our local store, I decided to try out her Pork Chips Stuffed with Spinach and Ricotta.


    With a little adjustment for our `gluten free' diet - this recipe was simple and easy to put together.

    I really wish this picture had turned out a little better,
    because it's really not doesn't do the dish justice.

    The pork chops were moist and my whole family loved the spinach & cheese filling. This recipe is definitely going to be created again in our house.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Awesome, Awesome, Awesome!, December 14, 2010
    Buy this cookbook now! You will not be disappointed! I love, love, love this book!

    The first section is titled "Basics." Here you will find tips on how to organize your kitchen, what timesaving gadgets to buy, tips for a quicker/easier cleanup, and she even includes a checklist of things you should stock your shelves with (dry, frozen, refrigerated, spices, meats, and produce). For beginning cooks and for those of us that need to clean and organize our kitchens once in awhile, this is very helpful.

    The rest of the book includes the following sections:
    -dairy, eggs, and cheese
    -breakfast and brunch
    -salads, soups, and sides
    -light and healthful
    -pasta and pizza
    -poultry
    -beef and veal
    -pork and lamb
    -fish and shellfish
    -family favorites
    -weeknight meals
    -international cusine
    -slow cooker and one-pot meals
    -grilling
    -cakes, cobblers, puddings, and pies
    -cookies, candies, bars, and breads
    -cooktails and appetizers
    -tablescapes and entertaining

    I also love the fact that this book is spiral bound.

    Trust me - you won't regret buying this book! The recipes are so easy to follow and Sandra includes specific directions on how long prep should be, how long you need to marinate, how long you should grill/roast, etc. I also love that the recipes use some pre-packaged items to save you time! This is a must have cookbook.

    5-0 out of 5 stars Just like watching her show, December 8, 2010
    This is a great cook book. It is full of recipes that follow the way we cook in our busy world. My Mom used to make spaghetti sauce from scratch. It would cook all day long. She finally said, "Use the good products God gave you from the market. Why make extra work for yourself?"

    Sandra Lee has found ways to combine time saving and flavorful products into dishes that the entire family enjoys as 'something different for a change.' And it's all good.

    Of all the cookbooks I have, this is the most used one. Bravo Sandra Lee Bravo

    5-0 out of 5 stars The Semi-Diva, November 16, 2010
    Sanda Lee is the Diva of Dining, she can put it all together and make it look like childs play. I love watching her work her magic with store bought ingredients, turning out a feast that's fit for royality. My favorite is when she makes those wonderful drinks, what a joy to watch, I intend to make some of these creations from this great cookbook.

    3-0 out of 5 stars Awesome cookbook, December 21, 2010
    I love "Aunt Sandy" so I bought her newest cookbook right away. The recipies are so easy, but my favorite section is the cocktail recipes! So yummy... ... Read more


    1-20 of 100       1   2   3   4   5   Next 20
    Prices listed on this site are subject to change without notice.
    Questions on ordering or shipping? click here for help.

    Top