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chief1284
Member since Nov 08th 2004
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Fri Feb-06-09 05:44 PM

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"The cookbook post"


  

          

As far as I know this hasn't been done before, only touched on in some Anthony Bourdain posts. I know I've passed on a few recommendations in here, so let's consolidate. I own maybe 15-20 cookbooks, and am always on the lookout for more. I mean more real real books. I don't want any supplement crap, or those such and such generic guide to a cuisine. Let's talk books that matter to real chefs or serious homecooks. Here's some of the best of what I've got:

Fuschia Dunlop - Land of Plenty: A Treasury of Authentic Sichuan Cooking

This is my single favourite book. It's by far the best book in the English language on Sichuan food (nay probably Chinese food per se). This is the real deal, none of that westernized, MSG-ridden gloopy sweet rubbish. Pictures are scarce, the ones that are there are fairly average, some ingredients might be hard to come by, you have to be ready to deal with drastically different cooking methods than you might be used, but damn the results are awesome. I lived in China for a year and used to ate almost exclusively Sichuan food whilst there (despite not living in Sichuan). I'd like to think I know what it should be, and this is it. The book is a real treasure trove and I'd say a 100% compulsory purchase for anyone who wants that good Chinese food.


Fuschia Dunlop - The Revolutionary Chinese Cookbook

This is her second book on Hunanese food. It's also excellent. However due to my near obsession with all things Sichuanese I rarely find myself using it. I really should, I've made a few bangers out of this.


Thomas Keller - The French Laundry

Ok let's get serious. This is to be avoided like the plague unless, like me, you are devoted to food to social deprivation levels. There are almost no recipes in here that are easy or quick to make, no matter what level you can cook. Don't be put off though, because as anyone out there who saw Bourdain go to the French Laundry will know, this man cooks on a Yoda like level. What's more, he writes better than any other chef I've come across, leaves out no details, and gives you word for word how to make all of the best dishes at one of the best restaurants in the world. If you're dedicated enough, you can make the stuff in here. Who the hell wouldn't want that?! This is the BEST cookbook I've ever read, and if anyone has a suggestion to trump it, I suggest they've never read it or they don't know what they're talking about, or I need to know ASAP what book they're talking about. The boeuf bourguignon i made from this was ridiculous, as was the sweet potato agnolotti, as was anything I've made from it! If you're serious about food - order this from Amazon right now.
PS - check out this blog - http://carolcookskeller.blogspot.com/
This woman cooked every recipe from the French Laundry. Insane, expensive, very difficult, but great reading.


Thomas Keller - Bouchon

Probably a better book in reality for most people. Here Keller does more Bistro fare from his Bouchon restaurant. A lot of things in here are very do-able, and very very good. This is proper French cooking, and I use it waaay more than The French Laundry. It's also equally brilliantly written and brilliantly made. As above - buy this.


Prue Leith - Leith's Cookery Bible

To me this is the best cooking reference book available and is equally useful to a great cook as it is to an absolute amateur. I really really like it. It will cover any basic cooking idea or popular dish you can conceive of, and deal with it well. She runs a cooking school and every recipe here is tested day after day, so you know it will work.


Stephane Reynaud - Pork and Sons

If you like pork, as the name suggests, this is fucking brilliant. It deal with every cut of pork cooked in every conceivable way, from cured hams, to pot roasts, to terrines. In fact all of the charcuterie stuff in here is pure gold. It's also really pleasantly put together.


Shizuo Tsuji - Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art


A really good classical Japanese cookery book (I think it's around 25 years old). It really brings you proper traditional Japanese cuisine, avoiding some of the rubbish crossover cuisine, and shortcut books you might find around. The hand-drawn pictures in it are real nice, as is the writing. The author has a great ability to convey that kind of Japanese attention to detail and simple elegance essential to doing Japanese food properly. Well recommended.


M Lee - The Lee Brothers Southern Cookbook: Stories and Recipes for Southerners and Would-be Southerners

Creole cooking. It's ugly big pot cooking. There's no finesse, no subtlety, but yeah it tastes real good. I've only recently got it, and haven't used it extensively yet, still sometimes you just know you're gonna get to love a book.


Ok that's too much for now, I'm too tired. But I'll add some more if this post takes off and I have the time. But I'll leave you with some A+++ food porn which I only ever use for coffee table reading and inspiration:

Thomas Keller - Under Pressure

Keller Sous-Vide-ing. Rid-ic-u-lous cooking. However, it's not only technically too difficult for me, it requires £1000's of machinery. Oh well.


Yoshihiro Murata - Kaiseki: The Exquisite Cuisine of Kyoto's Kikunoi Restaurant: The Exquisite Cuisine of Kyoto's Kikunoi Restaurant

Again technically impossible. Even worse there's not one recipe in it which doesn't contain some insanely obscure ingredient only available as specialities in rural Japan. But if you wanna see the mad mad levels crazy Japanese people can go in search of perfection in food, this is the book for you (the author drives water from his Kyoto restaurant to his Tokyo one because its the right pH level). It's stunning.

Ferran Adria - A day at El Bulli

You need a lab fit for a PHD student to cook most of this, so forget about it. It's not meant to be cooked by anyone other than Ferran Adria. As the second longest book ever written about 24 hours (after Ulysses) this is stacked with great shots of food that should never have even been conceived of. Oh and in case you didn't know, it's also the book from the restaurant which has been voted the best in the world for a number of consecutive years. They serve 5000 guests a year, and have 2,000,000 applications for those places.

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Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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Topic Outline
Subject Author Message Date ID
The cookbook I use the most often BY FAR
Feb 06th 2009
1
RE: The cookbook I use the most often BY FAR
Feb 07th 2009
4
Here's what I really appreciate about Bittman
Feb 08th 2009
8
      RE: Here's what I really appreciate about Bittman
Feb 08th 2009
9
      it's the simplest damn thing in the whole entire world
Feb 08th 2009
10
           RE: it's the simplest damn thing in the whole entire world
Feb 09th 2009
11
      Another reason Bittman is the truth
Feb 09th 2009
20
      Sticky rice
Feb 10th 2009
22
Have you seen Bittman on Spain...On the Road Again? -
Feb 10th 2009
21
      gosh
Feb 11th 2009
32
           Batali and Paltrow brought down my enjoyment of it
Feb 11th 2009
33
i get cookbooks but i don't cook
Feb 06th 2009
2
I don't know that le bernadin book
Feb 07th 2009
3
      For my b-day, my brother got me 'A Return to Cooking'...
Mar 31st 2009
45
           Oooh that's a new one to me
Mar 31st 2009
47
great thread
Feb 07th 2009
5
RE: great thread
Feb 08th 2009
6
have you read bill buford's heat?
Feb 09th 2009
12
      will check on it
Feb 09th 2009
15
      worth a read
Feb 09th 2009
17
      Have you read Ruhlman's trilogy? That's great stuff, too. n/m
Feb 10th 2009
23
           read the second two
Feb 10th 2009
25
                RE: read the second two
Feb 11th 2009
31
      Yup, that was a really good book.
Mar 27th 2009
38
Andrew Carmellini- Urban Italian
Feb 08th 2009
7
Marcella Hazan's The Classic Italian Cookbook (1973)
Feb 09th 2009
13
Best.Post.Ever.
Feb 09th 2009
14
Appreciated
Feb 09th 2009
18
RE: Appreciated
Feb 09th 2009
19
Is it Nancie McDermott?
Mar 27th 2009
39
Some good stuff in here already - I'm gonna continue on with a few more
Feb 09th 2009
16
RE: The cookbook post
Feb 10th 2009
24
picked up On the Line with my Borders gift card remains last week
Oct 14th 2009
62
great post. anyone get those cook's illustrated annuals?
Feb 11th 2009
26
about a year ago I started buying Fine Cooking
Feb 11th 2009
27
forgive me for plugging my brother's
Feb 11th 2009
28
I LOVE this book
Feb 11th 2009
29
very glad to hear that.
Feb 11th 2009
30
that is such a great idea
Mar 27th 2009
37
I love to cook, and I'll be picking this up - thanks!
Jun 25th 2009
60
Right I wanna revive this thread...
Mar 25th 2009
34
Sorry for delay
Mar 27th 2009
35
      Right here's one
Mar 31st 2009
41
      Tudor Feast
Mar 31st 2009
42
      Roman Feast
Apr 01st 2009
50
      Medieval Feast
Apr 02nd 2009
53
      Heston's Perfect Christmas
Apr 02nd 2009
54
Wow, I've been away from OKP too long.
Mar 27th 2009
36
I have a lot of cookbooks, but I don't use them much...
Mar 27th 2009
40
i have cookbooks i love but find myself using the internet more
Mar 31st 2009
43
Yep, I really like allrecipes, too.
Mar 31st 2009
44
      thanks.
Mar 31st 2009
46
           Yes!!
Mar 31st 2009
48
The Silver Spoon & The Doubleday Cookbook
Mar 31st 2009
49
I forgot to do The Silver Spoon
Apr 01st 2009
52
The Splendid Table's How to Eat Supper
Apr 01st 2009
51
I'm shameless
Jun 06th 2009
55
Er, the Pigman picture doesn't exactly put me in the mood for food.
Jun 25th 2009
58
      Haha - cheers!
Jun 25th 2009
59
recently bought
Jun 06th 2009
56
huge, "new release four weeks early" type props
Jun 24th 2009
57
Got 'The Best Bread Ever' by Charles Van Over
Jul 13th 2009
61
finally got White Heat
Oct 14th 2009
63
THE FLAVOR BIBLE by Karen Page and Andrew Dornenburg
Oct 15th 2009
64

janey
Charter member
123124 posts
Fri Feb-06-09 06:24 PM

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1. "The cookbook I use the most often BY FAR"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

How To Cook Everything Vegetarian, by Mark Bittman

I'm a huge Bittman fan now. I have three of his cookbooks and have yet to be disappointed by anything I've made using any of them.

~ ~ ~

Grrrrrr © Tatiana

  

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blkbetty
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336 posts
Sat Feb-07-09 11:22 AM

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4. "RE: The cookbook I use the most often BY FAR"
In response to Reply # 1


  

          

I just started reading Food Matters based on some talk here. I'm finding the transition so much easier because of this book.

I'm a cookbook junkie... It's bad... Don't get me started on my love of vintage ones. There is something about 1950's style menus for seasonal events that fascinate me.

  

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janey
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123124 posts
Sun Feb-08-09 03:29 PM

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8. "Here's what I really appreciate about Bittman"
In response to Reply # 4


  

          

everything he does is for taste & nutrition. Nothing is for show. I learned recently that he does have a tv show, but how his cookbooks come of is as someone who likes to cook but isn't some grand chef who's doing difficult & tricky things that will make his guests go woooooo. He's just putting food together that tastes great, is completely reasonable to make, and is good for you.

Sticky rice with coconut milk and soy sauce is one of the best food EVAR.

~ ~ ~

Grrrrrr © Tatiana

  

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blkbetty
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336 posts
Sun Feb-08-09 03:47 PM

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9. "RE: Here's what I really appreciate about Bittman"
In response to Reply # 8


  

          

That's so true. Some cookbook writers elevate cooking to this unattainable thing. Sometimes, I think that this is why some people have this dislike for cooking. Some cooking can be a high art kind of thing, but cookbooks should be accessable to everyone, not just a "look at talented me" thing for the writer. Janey, I'm still reading Food Matters and I'm trying hard not to skip to the recipes...But that Rice sounds too good to be true.

  

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janey
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123124 posts
Sun Feb-08-09 04:52 PM

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10. "it's the simplest damn thing in the whole entire world"
In response to Reply # 9


  

          

and it's vegan
how perfect is that?

he also has a bunch of recipes for stuck-pot rice which is just so great. I mean, I love rice, and I also love the baked on or burnt part of ANY dish, you know, the cheese that gets baked on to the bowl in french onion soup, or the dark brown bits at the edge of the mac & cheese, etc. So stuck pot rice was made for me.

oh dear

I'm starving now LOL

~ ~ ~

Grrrrrr © Tatiana

  

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blkbetty
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336 posts
Mon Feb-09-09 05:09 AM

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11. "RE: it's the simplest damn thing in the whole entire world"
In response to Reply # 10


  

          

Thanks Janey... because of your descriptions I skipped to the recipes.. Breakfast couscous... Mmmmmm

  

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magilla vanilla
Member since Sep 13th 2002
18769 posts
Mon Feb-09-09 06:41 PM

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20. "Another reason Bittman is the truth"
In response to Reply # 8


  

          

101 simple meals from the NYT.


http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/18/dining/18mini.html?_r=1&scp=8&sq=bittman%20100%20quick%20meals&st=cse

July 18, 2007
The Minimalist
Summer Express: 101 Simple Meals Ready in 10 Minutes or Less
By MARK BITTMAN
The pleasures of cooking are sometimes obscured by summer haze and heat, which can cause many of us to turn instead to bad restaurants and worse takeout. But the cook with a little bit of experience has a wealth of quick and easy alternatives at hand. The trouble is that when it’s too hot, even the most resourceful cook has a hard time remembering all the options. So here are 101 substantial main courses, all of which get you in and out of the kitchen in 10 minutes or less. (I’m not counting the time it takes to bring water to a boil, but you can stay out of the kitchen for that.) These suggestions are not formal recipes; rather, they provide a general outline. With a little imagination and some swift moves — and maybe a salad and a loaf of bread — you can turn any dish on this list into a meal that not only will be better than takeout, but won’t heat you out of the house.

1 Make six-minute eggs: simmer gently, run under cold water until cool, then peel. Serve over steamed asparagus.

2 Toss a cup of chopped mixed herbs with a few tablespoons of olive oil in a hot pan. Serve over angel-hair pasta, diluting the sauce if necessary with pasta cooking water.

3 Cut eight sea scallops into four horizontal slices each. Arrange on plates. Sprinkle with lime juice, salt and crushed chilies; serve after five minutes.

4 Open a can of white beans and combine with olive oil, salt, small or chopped shrimp, minced garlic and thyme leaves in a pan. Cook, stirring, until the shrimp are done; garnish with more olive oil.

5 Put three pounds of washed mussels in a pot with half a cup of white wine, garlic cloves, basil leaves and chopped tomatoes. Steam until mussels open. Serve with bread.

6 Heat a quarter-inch of olive oil in a skillet. Dredge flounder or sole fillets in flour and fry until crisp, about two minutes a side. Serve on sliced bread with tartar sauce.

7 Make pesto: put a couple of cups of basil leaves, a garlic clove, salt, pepper and olive oil as necessary in a blender (walnuts and Parmesan are optional). Serve over pasta (dilute with oil or water as necessary) or grilled fish or meat.

8 Put a few dozen washed littlenecks in a large, hot skillet with olive oil. When clams begin to open, add a tablespoon or two of chopped garlic. When most or all are opened, add parsley. Serve alone, with bread or over angel-hair pasta.

9 Pan-grill a skirt steak for three or four minutes a side. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, slice and serve over romaine or any other green salad, drizzled with olive oil and lemon.

10 Smear mackerel fillets with mustard, then sprinkle with chopped herbs (fresh tarragon is good), salt, pepper and bread crumbs. Bake in a 425-degree oven for about eight minutes.

11 Warm olive oil in a skillet with at least three cloves sliced garlic. When the garlic colors, add at least a teaspoon each of cumin and pimentón. A minute later, add a dozen or so shrimp, salt and pepper. Garnish with parsley, serve with lemon and bread.

12 Boil a lobster. Serve with lemon or melted butter.

13 Gazpacho: Combine one pound tomatoes cut into chunks, a cucumber peeled and cut into chunks, two or three slices stale bread torn into pieces, a quarter-cup olive oil, two tablespoons sherry vinegar and a clove of garlic in a blender with one cup water and a couple of ice cubes. Process until smooth, adding water if necessary. Season with salt and pepper, then serve or refrigerate, garnished with anchovies if you like, and a little more olive oil.

14 Put a few slices of chopped prosciutto in a skillet with olive oil, a couple of cloves of crushed garlic and a bit of butter; a minute later, toss in about half a cup bread crumbs and red chili flakes to taste. Serve over pasta with chopped parsley.

15 Call it panini: Grilled cheese with prosciutto, tomatoes, thyme or basil leaves.

16 Slice or chop salami, corned beef or kielbasa and warm in a little oil; stir in eggs and scramble. Serve with mustard and rye bread.

17 Soak couscous in boiling water to cover until tender; top with sardines, tomatoes, parsley, olive oil and black pepper.

18 Stir-fry a pound or so of ground meat or chopped fish mixed with chopped onions and seasoned with cumin or chili powder. Pile into taco shells or soft tacos, along with tomato, lettuce, canned beans, onion, cilantro and sour cream.

19 Chinese tomato and eggs: Cook minced garlic in peanut oil until blond; add chopped tomatoes then, a minute later, beaten eggs, along with salt and pepper. Scramble with a little soy sauce.

20 Cut eggplant into half-inch slices. Broil with lots of olive oil, turning once, until tender and browned. Top with crumbled goat or feta cheese and broil another 20 seconds.

21 While pasta cooks, combine a couple cups chopped tomatoes, a teaspoon or more minced garlic, olive oil and 20 to 30 basil leaves. Toss with pasta, salt, pepper and Parmesan.

22 Make wraps of tuna, warm white beans, a drizzle of olive oil and lettuce and tomato.

23 The New York supper: Bagels, cream cheese, smoked salmon. Serve with tomatoes, watercress or arugula, and sliced red onion or shallot.

24 Dredge thinly sliced chicken breasts in flour or cornmeal; cook about two minutes a side in hot olive oil. Place on bread with lettuce, tomato and mayonnaise.

25 Upscale tuna salad: good canned tuna (packed in olive oil), capers, dill or parsley, lemon juice but no mayo. Use to stuff a tomato or two.

26 Cut Italian sausage into chunks and brown in a little olive oil; chop onions and bell peppers and add them to the pan. Cook until sausage is browned and peppers and onions tender. Serve in sandwiches.

27 Egg in a hole, glorified: Tear a hole in a piece of bread and fry in butter. Crack an egg into the hole. Deglaze pan with a little sherry vinegar mixed with water, and more butter; pour over egg.

28 New Joe’s Special, from San Francisco: Brown ground meat with minced garlic and chopped onion. When just about cooked, add chopped spinach and cook, stirring, until wilted. At the last minute, stir in two eggs, along with grated Parmesan and salt and pepper.

29 Chop prosciutto and crisp it in a skillet with olive oil; add chopped not-too-ripe figs. Serve over greens dressed with oil and vinegar; top all with crumbled blue cheese.

30 Quesadilla: Use a combination of cheeses, like Fontina mixed with grated pecorino. Put on half of a large flour tortilla with pickled jalapenos, chopped onion, shallot or scallion, chopped tomatoes and grated radish. Fold tortilla over and brown on both sides in butter or oil, until cheese is melted.

31 Fast chile rellenos: Drain canned whole green chilies. Make a slit in each and insert a piece of cheese. Dredge in flour and fry in a skillet, slit side up, until cheese melts.

32 Cobb-ish salad: Chop bacon and begin to brown it; cut boneless chicken into strips and cook it with bacon. Toss romaine and watercress or arugula with chopped tomatoes, avocado, onion and crumbled blue cheese. Add bacon and chicken. Dress with oil and vinegar.

33 Sauté 10 whole peeled garlic cloves in olive oil. Meanwhile, grate Pecorino, grind lots of black pepper, chop parsley and cook pasta. Toss all together, along with crushed dried chili flakes and salt.

34 Niçoise salad: Lightly steam haricot verts, green beans or asparagus. Arrange on a plate with chickpeas, good canned tuna, hard-cooked eggs, a green salad, sliced cucumber and tomato. Dress with oil and vinegar.

35 Cold soba with dipping sauce: Cook soba noodles, then rinse in cold water until cool. Serve with a sauce of soy sauce and minced ginger diluted with mirin and/or dry sake.

36 Fried egg “saltimbocca”: Lay slices of prosciutto or ham in a buttered skillet. Fry eggs on top of ham; top with grated Parmesan.

37 Frisée aux lardons: Cook chunks of bacon in a skillet. Meanwhile, make six-minute or poached eggs and a frisée salad. Put eggs on top of salad along with bacon; deglaze pan with sherry vinegar and pour pan juices over all.

38 Fried rice: Soften vegetables with oil in a skillet. Add cold takeout rice, chopped onion, garlic, ginger, peas and two beaten eggs. Toss until hot and cooked through. Season with soy sauce and sesame oil.

39 Taco salad: Toss together greens, chopped tomato, chopped red onion, sliced avocado, a small can of black beans and kernels from a couple of ears of corn. Toss with crumbled tortilla chips and grated cheese. Dress with olive oil, lime and chopped cilantro leaves.

40 Put a large can of chickpeas and their liquid in a medium saucepan. Add some sherry, along with olive oil, plenty of minced garlic, smoked pimentón and chopped Spanish chorizo. Heat through.

41 Raita to the rescue: Broil any fish. Serve with a sauce of drained yogurt mixed with chopped cucumber, minced onion and cayenne.

42 Season boneless lamb steaks cut from the leg with sweet curry powder. Sear on both sides. Serve over greens, with lemon wedges.

43 Migas, with egg: Sauté chopped stale bread with olive oil, mushrooms, onions and spinach. Stir in a couple of eggs.

44 Migas, without egg: Sauté chopped stale bread with chopped Spanish chorizo, plenty of garlic and lots of olive oil. Finish with chopped parsley.

45 Sauté shredded zucchini in olive oil, adding garlic and chopped herbs. Serve over pasta.

46 Broil a few slices prosciutto until crisp; crumble and toss with parsley, Parmesan, olive oil and pasta.

47 Not exactly banh mi, but... Make sandwiches on crisp bread with liverwurst, ham, sliced half-sours, shredded carrots, cilantro sprigs and Vietnamese chili-garlic paste.

48 Not takeout: Stir-fry onions with cut-up broccoli. Add cubed tofu, chicken or shrimp, or sliced beef or pork, along with a tablespoon each minced garlic and ginger. When almost done, add half cup of water, two tablespoons soy sauce and plenty of black pepper. Heat through and serve over fresh Chinese noodles.

49 Sprinkle sole fillets with chopped parsley, garlic, salt and pepper; roll up, dip in flour, then beaten egg, then bread crumbs; cook in hot olive oil about three minutes a side. Serve with lemon wedges.

50 The Waldorf: Toast a handful of walnuts in a skillet. Chop an apple or pear; toss with greens, walnuts and a dressing made with olive oil, sherry vinegar, Dijon mustard and shallot. Top, if you like, with crumbled goat or blue cheese.

51 Put a stick of butter and a handful of pine nuts in a skillet. Cook over medium heat until both are brown. Toss with cooked pasta, grated Parmesan and black pepper.

52 Grill or sauté Italian sausage and serve over store-bought hummus, with lemon wedges.

53 Put a tablespoon of cream and a slice of tomato in each of several small ramekins. Top with an egg, then salt, pepper and grated Parmesan. Bake at 350 degrees until the eggs set. Serve with toast.

54 Brown small pork (or hot dog) chunks in a skillet. Add white beans, garlic, thyme and olive oil. Or add white beans and ketchup.

55 Dredge skate or flounder in flour and brown quickly in butter or oil. Deglaze pan with a couple of spoonfuls of capers and a lot of lemon juice or a little vinegar.

56 Make a fast tomato sauce of olive oil, chopped tomatoes and garlic. Poach eggs in the sauce, then top with Parmesan.

57 Dip pork cutlets in egg, then dredge heavily in panko; brown quickly on both sides. Serve over lettuce, with fresh lemon, or bottled Japanese curry sauce.

58 Cook chicken livers in butter or oil with garlic; do not overcook. Finish with parsley, lemon juice and coarse salt; serve over toast.

59 Brown bratwursts with cut-up apples. Serve with coleslaw.

60 Peel and thinly slice raw beets; cook in butter until soft. Take out of pan and quickly cook some shrimp in same pan. Deglaze pan with sherry vinegar, adding sauce to beets and shrimp. Garnish with dill.

61 Poach shrimp and plunge into ice water. Serve with cocktail sauce: one cup ketchup, one tablespoon vinegar, three tablespoons melted butter and lots of horseradish.

62 Southeast Asia steak salad: Pan- or oven-grill skirt or flank steak. Slice and serve on a pile of greens with a sauce of one tablespoon each of nam pla and lime juice, black pepper, a teaspoon each of sugar and garlic, crushed red chili flakes and Thai basil.

63 Miso steak: Coat beef tenderloin steaks (filet mignon) with a blend of miso and chili paste thinned with sake or white wine. Grill or broil about five minutes.

64 Pasta with fresh tomatoes: Cook chopped fresh tomatoes in butter or oil with garlic until tender, while pasta cooks. Combine and serve with grated Parmesan.

65 Sauté squid rings and tentacles in olive oil with salt and pepper and garlic; add chopped tomatoes. Cook until the tomatoes break down. Serve over pasta.

66 Salmon (or just about anything else) teriyaki: Sear salmon steaks on both sides for a couple of minutes; remove. To skillet, add a splash of water, sake, a little sugar and soy sauce; when mixture is thick, return steaks to pan and turn in sauce until done. Serve hot or at room temperature.

67 Rich vegetable soup: Cook asparagus tips and peeled stalks or most any other green vegetable in chicken stock with a little tarragon until tender; reserve a few tips and purée the rest with a little butter (cream or yogurt, too, if you like) adding enough stock to thin the purée. Garnish with the reserved tips. Serve hot or cold.

68 Brush portobello caps with olive oil; sprinkle with salt and pepper and broil until tender. Briefly sweat chopped onions, then scramble eggs with them. Put eggs in mushrooms.

69 Buy good blintzes. Brown them on both sides in butter. Serve with sour cream, apple sauce or both.

70 Sauté squid rings and tentacles in olive oil with salt and pepper. Make a sauce of minced garlic, smoked pimentón, mayo, lots of lemon juice and fresh parsley. Serve with a chopped salad of cucumber, tomato, lettuce, grated carrot and scallion, lightly dressed.

71 Press a lot of coarsely ground black pepper onto both sides of filet mignon or other steaks or chopped meat patties. Brown in butter in a skillet for two minutes a side. Remove steaks and add a splash of red wine, chopped shallots and a bit of tarragon to skillet. Reduce, then return steaks to pan, turning in the sauce for a minute or two.

72 World’s leading sandwich: prosciutto, tomato, butter or olive oil and a baguette.

73 Near instant mezze: Combine hummus on a plate with yogurt laced with chopped cucumbers and a bit of garlic, plus tomato, feta, white beans with olive oil and pita bread.

74 Canned sardines packed in olive oil on Triscuits, with mustard and Tabasco.

75 Boil-and-eat shrimp, cooked in water with Old Bay seasoning or a mixture of thyme, garlic, paprika, chopped onion, celery, chili, salt and pepper.

76 Make a thin plain omelet with two or three eggs. Sauté cubes of bacon or pancetta or strips of prosciutto until crisp. Cut up the omelet and use it and the meat to garnish a green salad dressed with olive oil and balsamic vinegar.

77 Sear corn kernels in olive oil with minced jalapeños and chopped onions; toss with cilantro, black beans, chopped tomatoes, chopped bell pepper and lime.

78 Cook shrimp in a skillet slowly (five minutes or so) to preserve their juices, with plenty of garlic and olive oil, until done; pour over watercress or arugula, with lemon, pepper and salt.

79 Liverwurst on good sourdough rye with scallions, tomato and wholegrain mustard.

80 Not-quite merguez: Ground lamb burgers seasoned with cumin, garlic, onion, salt and cayenne. Serve with couscous and green salad, along with bottled harissa.

81 Combine crab meat with mayo, Dijon mustard, chives and tarragon. Serve in a sandwich, with potato chips.

82 Combine canned tuna in olive oil, halved grape tomatoes, black olives, mint, lemon zest and red pepper flakes. Serve with pasta, thinning with olive oil or pasta cooking water as needed.

83 Pit and chop a cup or more of mixed olives. Combine with olive oil, a little minced garlic, red pepper flakes and chopped basil or parsley. Serve over pasta.

84 Cook chopped tomatillos with a little water or stock, cilantro and a little minced fresh chili; serve over grilled, broiled or sautéed chicken breasts, with corn tortillas.

85 A winning sandwich: bresaola or prosciutto, arugula, Parmesan, marinated artichoke hearts, tomato.

86 Smoked trout fillets served with lightly toasted almonds, shredded fennel, a drizzle of olive oil and a sprinkle of lemon.

87 Grated carrots topped with six-minute eggs (run under cold water until cool before peeling), olive oil and lemon juice.

88 Cut the top off four big tomatoes; scoop out the interiors and mix them with toasted stale baguette or pita, olive oil, salt, pepper and herbs (basil, tarragon, and/or parsley). Stuff into tomatoes and serve with salad.

89 Pasta frittata: Turn cooked pasta and a little garlic into an oiled or buttered skillet. Brown, pressing to create a cake. Flip, then top with three or four beaten eggs and loads of Parmesan. Brown other side and serve.

90 Thai-style beef: Thinly slice one and a half pounds of flank steak, pork shoulder or boneless chicken; heat peanut oil in a skillet, add meat and stir. A minute later, add a tablespoon minced garlic and some red chili flakes. Add 30 clean basil leaves, a quarter cup of water and a tablespoon or two of soy sauce or nam pla. Serve with lime juice and more chili flakes, over rice or salad.

91 Dredge calf’s liver in flour. Sear in olive oil or butter or a combination until crisp on both sides, adding salt and pepper as it cooks; it should be medium-rare. Garnish with parsley and lemon juice.

92 Rub not-too-thick pork or lamb chops with olive oil; sprinkle with salt and pepper plus sage or thyme. Broil about three minutes a side and drizzle with good balsamic vinegar.

93 Cut up Italian sausage into chunks and brown in a little olive oil until just about done. Dump in a lot of seedless grapes and, if you like, a little slivered garlic and chopped rosemary. Cook, stirring, until the grapes are hot. Serve with bread.

94 Ketchup-braised tofu: Dredge large tofu cubes in flour. Brown in oil; remove from skillet and wipe skillet clean. Add a little more oil, then a tablespoon minced garlic; 30 seconds later, add one and a half cups ketchup and the tofu. Cook until sauce bubbles and tofu is hot.

95 Veggie burger: Drain and pour a 14-ounce can of beans into a food processor with an onion, half a cup rolled oats, a tablespoon chili powder or other spice mix, an egg, salt and pepper. Process until mushy, then shape into burgers, adding a little liquid or oats as necessary. Cook in oil about three minutes a side and serve.

96 A Roman classic: In lots of olive oil, lightly cook lots of slivered garlic, with six or so anchovy fillets and a dried hot chili or two. Dress pasta with this.

97 So-called Fettuccine Alfredo: Heat several tablespoons of butter and about half a cup of cream in a large skillet just until the cream starts to simmer. Add slightly undercooked fresh pasta to the skillet, along with plenty of grated Parmesan. Cook over low heat, tossing, until pasta is tender and hot.

98 Rub flank steak or chuck with curry or chili powder before broiling or grilling, then slice thin across the grain.

99 Cook a couple of pounds of shrimp, shell on or off, in oil, with lots of chopped garlic. When they turn pink, remove; deglaze the pan with a half-cup or so of beer, along with a splash of Worcestershire sauce, cayenne, rosemary and a lump of butter. Serve with bread.

100 Cook red lentils in water with a little cumin and chopped bacon until soft. Top with poached or six-minute eggs (run under cold water until cool before peeling) and a little sherry vinegar.

101 Hot dogs on buns — with beans!


---------------------------------
Photo zine(some images NSFW): http://bit.ly/USaSPhoto

"This (and every, actually) conversation needs more Chesterton and less Mike Francesa." - Walleye

  

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Sponge
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22. "Sticky rice"
In response to Reply # 8


          

There's this killer Vietnamese sticky rice breakfast recipe consisting of sticky rice, coconut milk, mung beans, sesame seeds, roasted peanuts and optional scallions and coriander leaves.

  

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Sponge
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Tue Feb-10-09 10:00 PM

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21. "Have you seen Bittman on Spain...On the Road Again? -"
In response to Reply # 1


          

http://www.netflix.com/Movie/Spain_..._On_the_Road_Again/70111122

I really liked him in it. Wish Paltrow wasn't in it. Great food and places, though.

  

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janey
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32. "gosh"
In response to Reply # 21


  

          

I have to admit that I have a hard time watching those programs. Back a couple of years ago when I was less busy I would watch some No Reservations, but I don't know if I could do that now

~ ~ ~

Grrrrrr © Tatiana

  

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Sponge
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33. "Batali and Paltrow brought down my enjoyment of it"
In response to Reply # 32


          

It should've been way better than it ended up being. I like Batali, but here his flirting with Paltrow (and just the presence of her) and Bassols was insufferable.

  

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zero
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2. "i get cookbooks but i don't cook"
In response to Reply # 0


          

i just get them for the pictures and the stories

lately, i've gotten bouchon, alinea, and the le bernardin books, and my girlfriend just got me the fat duck cookbook.

some really interesting insights into food and they make for GREAT browsing

  

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chief1284
Member since Nov 08th 2004
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Sat Feb-07-09 05:04 AM

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3. "I don't know that le bernadin book"
In response to Reply # 2


  

          

Will look it up. But yeah Alinea and the Fat Duck are on my hitlist. Like you I love to absorb amazing cooking, just reading and looking at it, but principally I like making it. So I would love to see those books, I have more pressing needs right now. Anyway, if you just love looking at food, Kaiseki, Under Pressure and especially A Day at El Bulli are probably just for you.

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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kurlyswirl
Member since Jul 13th 2002
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Tue Mar-31-09 01:28 PM

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45. "For my b-day, my brother got me 'A Return to Cooking'..."
In response to Reply # 3


  

          

by Eric Ripert and Michael Ruhlman. I haven't made anything from it yet. The recipes don't look difficult, considering it's Eric Ripert. But, just from skimming, the recipes do seem to be more spring-summer fare, so I'll get to it. It's the size of the book that is intimidating - It's huge! It's chock full of gorgeous photography, so it's really more of a coffee table book.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~


<------ Serena Williams: Bench pressing dump trucks since 1993.

I be Scrobblin': http://www.last.fm/user/TasteeTreat/

kurly's Super-Duper Awesome DVD Collection:
http://kurlyswirl.dvdaf.com/owned

  

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chief1284
Member since Nov 08th 2004
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47. "Oooh that's a new one to me"
In response to Reply # 45


  

          

I'll have to look it up. Anything involving Ruhlman interests me.

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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will_5198
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5. "great thread"
In response to Reply # 0


          

I only have two meager contributions:

Gordon Ramsay Makes It Easy
- Really simple everyday recipes here. Risottos, roasts, quick soups, etc. The preparation depends a lot on having super fresh ingredients, but I learned some nice basics from this book. Came with a DVD of Gordon cooking five of the recipes.

Top Chef Cookbook:
- I think I've actually cooked about two of the recipes. Mostly for fans of the show; there's a lot of behind the scenes information and contestant interviews.

I am *EAGERLY* waiting for Marco Pierre White's reprint of White Heat this June...supposedly there's a picture of Gordon crying during service (!!!)

--------

  

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blkbetty
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Sun Feb-08-09 08:27 AM

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6. "RE: great thread"
In response to Reply # 5


  

          

Ramsay is a good chef, but this sometimes gets lost in the persona of the foul mouthed chef. But hey, it's a living.

If I can get off topic, Marc Thuet is a chef that I wish would write a cookbook. What he does with food is magnificent. If he wrote a book I would be all over it.


  

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zero
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12. "have you read bill buford's heat?"
In response to Reply # 5


          

its mostly about mario batali and babbo, but it also includes a chapter about batali's time spent cooking with MPW and some present day stuff with Marco. really really interesting fellow

  

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will_5198
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15. "will check on it"
In response to Reply # 12
Mon Feb-09-09 02:34 PM by will_5198

          

I found an old BBC documentary about Marco on Youtube...very interesting guy, as you said

I just think it's hilarious how scared Gordon was of him (and I like Gordon)

--------

  

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zero
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17. "worth a read"
In response to Reply # 15


          

most of the book is about buford working on the line at babbo and learning what it takes to be a cook at a top-tier restaurant

but he goes and visits batali's old haunts in italy and then hangs out with MPW and they go hunting and shit. pretty funny stuff

  

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Sponge
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23. "Have you read Ruhlman's trilogy? That's great stuff, too. n/m"
In response to Reply # 15


          

  

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zero
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25. "read the second two"
In response to Reply # 23


          

haven't gotten around to "making of a chef" yet but the two keller chapters in "soul..." and "reach of a chef" and especially the masa chapter are really great reading

  

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Sponge
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31. "RE: read the second two"
In response to Reply # 25


          

>haven't gotten around to "making of a chef" yet

It's great. A page turner for me.

> but the two
>keller chapters in "soul..." and "reach of a chef" and
>especially the masa chapter are really great reading

Absolutely. I really liked the Symon stuff, too.

  

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kurlyswirl
Member since Jul 13th 2002
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Fri Mar-27-09 12:41 PM

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38. "Yup, that was a really good book."
In response to Reply # 12


  

          

I especially like the parts when he was in Italy.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~


<------ Serena Williams: Bench pressing dump trucks since 1993.

I be Scrobblin': http://www.last.fm/user/TasteeTreat/

kurly's Super-Duper Awesome DVD Collection:
http://kurlyswirl.dvdaf.com/owned

  

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magilla vanilla
Member since Sep 13th 2002
18769 posts
Sun Feb-08-09 10:29 AM

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7. "Andrew Carmellini- Urban Italian"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Carmellini founded A Voce, which is one of the best-kept secrets in NYC (he's no longer the chef there, but the kitchen still kicks out the motherfucking jams- I had the best duck breast ever there last summer). The recipes are simple yet inventive, and gives a ton of good ideas to work with. A sampling: Shrimp meatballs, Squash Tortelloni, Marinated Beets with grapfruit, pistachios and goat cheese, Fettucine with summer corn, bacon and shiitakes.

---------------------------------
Photo zine(some images NSFW): http://bit.ly/USaSPhoto

"This (and every, actually) conversation needs more Chesterton and less Mike Francesa." - Walleye

  

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natural
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13. "Marcella Hazan's The Classic Italian Cookbook (1973)"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

i wan't this book but it's only available second hand and for a pretty penny.

I refuse the new edition because the Italian names have been removed.

  

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JRennolds
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Mon Feb-09-09 02:31 PM

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14. "Best.Post.Ever."
In response to Reply # 0
Mon Feb-09-09 02:32 PM by JRennolds

  

          

I am a self-styled chef and I am absolutely enamored with food and it's many applications, as well as its chemical breakdowns due to specific cooking processes. I watched FOOD NETWORK religiously (we do not have a television....poverty sucks!), I am always sampling the craziest dishes at the most off-the-wall restaurants and I make the best food I can on the tightest budget. Food critics are my spiritual advisers!

Cooking is a science.

Also, my father is a partner in a restaurant group in Denver. They own the best high-end establishments in the west. I am very, very, very lucky.

I have heard so much about French Laundry and am way too intimidated to even approach it. This post is very welcome.

My current craze? Curry Cooking. I forget the title and the author but this cookbook offers up recipes from all corners of the globe. The recipes are simple, the food exquisite and the prep work is minimal. But yeah, curries.....MMMM!

GOMD

  

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chief1284
Member since Nov 08th 2004
3003 posts
Mon Feb-09-09 02:57 PM

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18. "Appreciated"
In response to Reply # 14


  

          

It sounds like we are somewhat kindred spirits. I spend waaay too much of my time thinking about, reading about or cooking food. The problem is, being a chef just looks too stressful to me, I don't think I can handle it. So I just make it a big hobby.

As for the French Laundry, yes it is intimidating, but being as excited by food as it sounds you are, you really have to get it just to be inspired. If ever I'm bored or not excited about cooking dinner (rarely), I'll just have a flick through it and it'll be like discovering cooking all over again. I can't recommend it enough. To be fair, I've only cooked from it in the past year, and I have an equally food-crazed housemate who used to work as a chef, so together it becomes more manageable. By yourself it would be hard hard work. I mean a lot of the recipes require veal stock, which took us 3 days to make (3 x 6 hours or so), taking shifts to skim it! The freezer's running out of it too, and I'm already dreading the idea of doing it all again. Thomas Keller has little minions to do all this for him. Bastard.

Try and find out what that curry book is. I love curries to a massive extent. My mother grew up in India so my childhood is full of them. What she does, she does well, but her repetoire is limited. So it's become one of my biggest passions and also a real black holes in my cooking abilities. Very frustrating. I need a really good curry book.

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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Uatu The Watcher
Member since Jul 15th 2006
324 posts
Mon Feb-09-09 03:29 PM

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19. "RE: Appreciated"
In response to Reply # 18


  

          

>It sounds like we are somewhat kindred spirits. I spend waaay
>too much of my time thinking about, reading about or cooking
>food. The problem is, being a chef just looks too stressful to
>me, I don't think I can handle it. So I just make it a big
>hobby.

It is a very stressful job and I don't think that I would cut it as a professional. There is no job security, the amount of financial debt that could be racked up is staggering and I am also not one who takes criticism lightly.

It is definitely a hobby and a very fun one. I enjoy cooking because of the self-gratification I get when I make something delicious. It is also frustrating at times because if I make something horrible, I feel like I wasted my money (on ingredients) and I did not have a good "plan" going in.

I spent 45 minutes yesterday making and perfecting something as simple (yet complex tasting as) Thai Chile-encrusted homefries with a shallot/garlic infused oil. A healthy addiction!

>As for the French Laundry, yes it is intimidating, but being
>as excited by food as it sounds you are, you really have to
>get it just to be inspired. If ever I'm bored or not excited
>about cooking dinner (rarely), I'll just have a flick through
>it and it'll be like discovering cooking all over again. I
>can't recommend it enough. To be fair, I've only cooked from
>it in the past year, and I have an equally food-crazed
>housemate who used to work as a chef, so together it becomes
>more manageable. By yourself it would be hard hard work. I
>mean a lot of the recipes require veal stock, which took us 3
>days to make (3 x 6 hours or so), taking shifts to skim it!
>The freezer's running out of it too, and I'm already dreading
>the idea of doing it all again. Thomas Keller has little
>minions to do all this for him. Bastard.

Veal stock? Damn, that sounds delish! I definitely feel like I need to pick it up. At the very least, I can skim through it and learn some new methods. Consider it copped. Again, thanks for the motivation.

>Try and find out what that curry book is. I love curries to a
>massive extent. My mother grew up in India so my childhood is
>full of them. What she does, she does well, but her repetoire
>is limited. So it's become one of my biggest passions and also
>a real black holes in my cooking abilities. Very frustrating.
>I need a really good curry book.


I will get that title to you tomorrow. The book is at home (I'm at work). It is amazing though.

HERE. WATCHING YOU. STOP LOOKING AT ME. I SEE YOU THOUGH.

  

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kurlyswirl
Member since Jul 13th 2002
16693 posts
Fri Mar-27-09 12:47 PM

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39. "Is it Nancie McDermott?"
In response to Reply # 14


  

          

This one has been in my wish list for a little while. http://www.amazon.com/Curry-Book-Memorable-Flavors-Irresistible/dp/0618002022/ref=wl_it_dp?ie=UTF8&coliid=I3NARNBO3YOTC4&colid=QZ22PYI5VXYF

I have her Real Thai cookbook, which I highly recommend.



>My current craze? Curry Cooking. I forget the title and the
>author but this cookbook offers up recipes from all corners of
>the globe. The recipes are simple, the food exquisite and the
>prep work is minimal. But yeah, curries.....MMMM!
>
>


~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~


<------ Serena Williams: Bench pressing dump trucks since 1993.

I be Scrobblin': http://www.last.fm/user/TasteeTreat/

kurly's Super-Duper Awesome DVD Collection:
http://kurlyswirl.dvdaf.com/owned

  

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chief1284
Member since Nov 08th 2004
3003 posts
Mon Feb-09-09 02:47 PM

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16. "Some good stuff in here already - I'm gonna continue on with a few more"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Fergus Henderson - Nose to Tail Eating: A Kind of British Cooking

This made Anthony Bourdain say: "If I’m ever sentenced to death, I want Fergus Henderson to cook my last meal. The Whole Beast: Nose to Tail Eating is a cult classic from my favorite chef and favorite restaurant in the world." And calls it "a historic document," which demonstrates "what is good about food, about the essential, nearly forgotten elements of a great meal…a refutation only of waste and disregard." This book is really famous for making offal and unusual cuts of meat fashionable again. I actually disagree a little with Bourdain, some recipes (like the tripe) haven't turned out well for me, but essentially 95% of it is brilliant. A really really fun book that'll ge you cooking stuff you might never have considered.


Mai Pham - Pleasures of the Vietnamese Table

I've browsed quite a few Vietnamese books without finding any which have blown me away. This is the best I've come across though, so I bought it. It's not a spectacular book, but it'll tell you in a straightforward way how to cook good simple Vietnamese food. I've been making the plain poached chicken out of it loads of times now. Boil 4 quarts of water, add a whole chicken, bring to a boil and simmer for 10 mins, then leave covered and off the heat for 1 hour. That's it. Then eat with any number of dipping sauces. A lime and ginger sauce in the book works a treat. It's not food to show off with, but it literally couldn't be any more healthy, and it is tasty.


Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall - The River Cottage Meat Book

This will cover anything you could ever know (or want to know) about meat. It really has it all. From choosing, buying, killing, cooking, describing all the cuts, for game, poultry, beef, lamb, pork. It's really a great reference book. It's probably one of the most used books in my collection as I use it even when not cooking dishes from it just to read around what I'm buying. I don't think it could possibly do harm to anybody's collection (unless you're a vegetarian). My only slight criticism is when he gets a bit above his station with asian recipes. He does traditional western/British cooking to a tee, but sometimes he goes on strange and fairly average asian wanderings. Not often though.

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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Sponge
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Tue Feb-10-09 10:16 PM

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24. "RE: The cookbook post"
In response to Reply # 0


          

I really like these two recipe/essay books with anthropological info:

Memories of Philippine Kitchens:
http://www.amazon.com/Memories-Philippine-Kitchens-Amy-Besa/dp/1584794518/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1234321785&sr=1-1

Hot Sour Salty Sweet: A Culinary Journey Through Southeast Asia:
http://www.amazon.com/Hot-Sour-Salty-Sweet-Southeast/dp/1579651143/ref=pd_bbs_sr_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1234321735&sr=8-2


I also like:

On the Line:
http://www.amazon.com/Line-Eric-Ripert/dp/1579653693/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1234321947&sr=1-1

Spain...A Culinary Road Trip:
http://www.amazon.com/Spain-Culinary-Road-Mario-Batali/dp/0061560936/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1234322009&sr=1-3

Seductions of Rice:
http://www.amazon.com/Seductions-Rice-Jeffrey-Alford/dp/1579652344/ref=sr_1_6?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1234322317&sr=1-6

Roy's Fish & Seafood: Recipes From The Pacific Rim:
http://www.amazon.com/Roys-Fish-Seafood-Recipes-Pacific/dp/1580084826/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1234322074&sr=1-3


And more Hawaii Regional Cuisine stuff:

http://www.amazon.com/Alan-Wongs-Wave-Luau-Award-Winning/dp/1580085342/ref=pd_sim_b_njs_2

http://www.amazon.com/Hawaii-Cooks-Flavors-Pacific-Kitchen/dp/1580084540/ref=pd_bxgy_b_text_c

http://www.amazon.com/Great-Chefs-Hawaii-Kaui-Philpotts/dp/1566475953/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1234322132&sr=1-1

http://www.amazon.com/HaliImaile-General-Store-Cookbook-Homecooking/dp/1580081703/ref=pd_sim_b_njs_1



And 2 older ones:

http://www.amazon.com/New-Cuisine-Hawaii-Janice-Henderson/dp/0679425292/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1234322286&sr=1-1

http://www.amazon.com/Rise-New-Traditions-Cooking-Russell/dp/0965444309/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1234322182&sr=1-1

  

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will_5198
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62. "picked up On the Line with my Borders gift card remains last week"
In response to Reply # 24


          

great read. it's more of a book about Le Bernardin than actual cookbook (cmon...nobody is making those recipes listed in the back).

also kind of neat to see Jennifer from TC in various photos.

--------

  

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k_orr
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Wed Feb-11-09 11:33 AM

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26. "great post. anyone get those cook's illustrated annuals?"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

I like their stuff generally.

  

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janey
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27. "about a year ago I started buying Fine Cooking"
In response to Reply # 26


  

          

I really, really like this magazine.

They have a really good mix of recipes from simple to complicated and featuring all kinds of ingredients, they give nutrition information for all of them, and they have a feature in each magazine that's either a cooking class (last month was cooking with chocolate, a few months back they did real croissants, which is a three day project LOL so I was happy to read about it but I'm sure not going to do it) or make your own recipe (examples: soups, roasted vegetables, bread pudding) where they give you the basic outline of the recipe and then tell you where you can vary it and what flavors work together & so forth.

Back in the 90s, I swore by Bon Appetit but I really dislike what it evolved into.

And I admit I'm not a huge fan of Cooks' because I feel like I don't want to know all the recipes they tried, I'm not going to make fried chicken that often, you know. I just want to know one GOOD one.

~ ~ ~

Grrrrrr © Tatiana

  

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lonesome_d
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28. "forgive me for plugging my brother's"
In response to Reply # 0
Wed Feb-11-09 11:58 AM by lonesome_d

          

http://www.winherwithdinner.com/page/page/2849154.htm

I recall talking Janey into ordering it a few years back, and while she liked the music picks I don't know if she's used any of the recipes.... at any rate, the basic idea is providing suggestions and recipes for entire (nice) meals phrased in basic guy language.

My brother did most of the writing but the woman who provided the recipes is a personal chef for a few Hollywood types.


*edit* huh, I hadn't done a search for the book in a long time... looks like Rachel Ray put up a few of their recipes online: http://www.rachaelraymag.com/party-planning/date-night/article.html

-------
so I'm in a band now:
album ---> http://greenwoodburns.bandcamp.com/releases
Soundcloud ---> http://soundcloud.com/greenwood-burns

my own stuff -->http://soundcloud.com/lonesomedstringband

avy by buckshot_defunct

  

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janey
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29. "I LOVE this book"
In response to Reply # 28


  

          

it's true I haven't actually cooked out of it, but I was just re-reading it a couple of weeks ago and I was reminded again how great it is.

It's perfect -- step by step instructions for *everything* you need to know, even how much toilet paper to have on hand when she comes over and what fancy name to call the meal

~ ~ ~

Grrrrrr © Tatiana

  

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lonesome_d
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30. "very glad to hear that."
In response to Reply # 29


          

I've only cooked/had one or two of the recipes, myself - and they snubbed my bluefish recipe for inclusion, arrrgh. It was a fun process as they were putting it together though - the chef would send them recipes and they would try them out or forward them to friends to try.

-------
so I'm in a band now:
album ---> http://greenwoodburns.bandcamp.com/releases
Soundcloud ---> http://soundcloud.com/greenwood-burns

my own stuff -->http://soundcloud.com/lonesomedstringband

avy by buckshot_defunct

  

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tahneeu
Member since Feb 09th 2007
3096 posts
Fri Mar-27-09 12:36 PM

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37. "that is such a great idea"
In response to Reply # 28


  

          

for a book. i am adding this to my favorites so i can remember it for future guy gifts.

it's so appropriate for my brother, boss, and a few guy friends.


i would like it better if they would have included a recipe from you though. i can always use a seafood recipe. damn them.

  

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spades
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60. "I love to cook, and I'll be picking this up - thanks!"
In response to Reply # 28


  

          

********************************

Get Out The Room!
http://getouttheroom.podomatic.com
@fakewilliamkatt

"You probably wouldn't worry about what people think of you if you could know how seldom they do!" - Olin Miller

  

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chief1284
Member since Nov 08th 2004
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Wed Mar-25-09 06:13 PM

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34. "Right I wanna revive this thread..."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

This isn't actually anything to do with cookbooks, but a series just finished in England in which Heston Blumenthal (of The Fat Duck fame) created a Roman, Tudor, Medieval and Victorian inspired feast for random mixes of minor British celebrities. Suffice to say, in true Blumenthal fashion, it's some of the craziest shit you'll ever see done in a kitchen. I mean ejaculating cakes, an edible garden, bone marrow rice pudding, giant luminous jelly wobbling over dildos, gold leaf wrapped watch teabag stock for mock turtle soup. It's all insane insane stuff. Anyway I have them all recorded and am converting them to avi files to upload so you'll have to bear with me. But it'll be worth it. The Victorian one especially is out of this world.

Oh and the christmas before last he did his perfect christmas dinner, which was equally insane. I'm converting that too.

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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chief1284
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35. "Sorry for delay"
In response to Reply # 34


  

          

I'm back on it. Later today or tmrw.

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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chief1284
Member since Nov 08th 2004
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41. "Right here's one"
In response to Reply # 35
Tue Mar-31-09 02:41 AM by chief1284

  

          

I've had all sorts of trouble trying to upload a massive rar file of all of them, and just gave up. So I'm doing one at a time. Here's the Vicotrian Feast (the best episode in my opinion):

http://www.zshare.net/video/579551755508ee0f/

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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chief1284
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42. "Tudor Feast"
In response to Reply # 35


  

          

http://www.zshare.net/video/579733289959e759/

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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chief1284
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50. "Roman Feast"
In response to Reply # 35


  

          

http://www.zshare.net/video/58027268ecab8bb2/

From the lack of replies I'm getting the feeling nobody's watching these. Do.

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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chief1284
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53. "Medieval Feast"
In response to Reply # 35


  

          

http://www.zshare.net/download/58059111358e80bc/

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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chief1284
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54. "Heston's Perfect Christmas"
In response to Reply # 35


  

          

http://www.zshare.net/video/580768408d8bbcd6/

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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kurlyswirl
Member since Jul 13th 2002
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Fri Mar-27-09 09:43 AM

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36. "Wow, I've been away from OKP too long."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

As it so happens, I recently bought the "Land of Plenty" cookbook. Haven't made anything from it yet, but I skimmed it and I can tell this is the real deal. Thankfully, I live in a city with a ton of Asian markets.


~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~


<------ Serena Williams: Bench pressing dump trucks since 1993.

I be Scrobblin': http://www.last.fm/user/TasteeTreat/

kurly's Super-Duper Awesome DVD Collection:
http://kurlyswirl.dvdaf.com/owned

  

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kurlyswirl
Member since Jul 13th 2002
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40. "I have a lot of cookbooks, but I don't use them much..."
In response to Reply # 0
Fri Mar-27-09 01:08 PM by kurlyswirl

  

          

I'm lazy and find it easier to print recipes off the net. Plus, I rarely follow a recipe to the letter (I use them more as guides for proportions and oven temps), so I'd rather write notes on a piece of paper than deface a book. (Yes, I know I could use post-its.)

Seriously...I have 7 binders full of (formerly) loose recipes. One is entirely Italian, and I have so many Asian recipes, they span two binders. D'oh!

The cookbooks I do use the most are:

The Betty Crocker Cookbook - good, basic cookbook

Pressure Perfect by Lorna Sass - the pressure cooking bible

All About Braising - yummy stuff to make with your fab Le Creuset French oven

The Frugal Gourmet (especially the original one) - Yes, I know he was an alleged perv, but I grew up watching his shows and my mom cooked a ton of his stuff, so it's a nostalgia thing. I just got rid of the dust jackets with his face on them. lol

Cook's Illustrated: The Best Light Recipe - Not a diet cookbook by any means. CI just takes recipes and does a bunch of testing in their kitchens to find the best way to lower the fat (and therefore calories) without sacrificing flavor.




~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~


<------ Serena Williams: Bench pressing dump trucks since 1993.

I be Scrobblin': http://www.last.fm/user/TasteeTreat/

kurly's Super-Duper Awesome DVD Collection:
http://kurlyswirl.dvdaf.com/owned

  

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tahneeu
Member since Feb 09th 2007
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Tue Mar-31-09 12:26 PM

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43. "i have cookbooks i love but find myself using the internet more"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

lately.

like allrecipes.com because then i can check reviews

if anyone has any recommendations on sites like that please let me know

i love my better homes & gardens cookbook to look up stuff like types of grains & pastas or cooking times for meats and prep info, etc.

i use it more for technical stuff than actual recipes.

  

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kurlyswirl
Member since Jul 13th 2002
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Tue Mar-31-09 01:22 PM

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44. "Yep, I really like allrecipes, too."
In response to Reply # 43


  

          

>lately.
>
>like allrecipes.com because then i can check reviews
>
>if anyone has any recommendations on sites like that please
>let me know

Recipezaar.com is very similar to All Recipes in that the recipes are member-submitted, and then receive lots of reviews. There is also epicurious.com, which is mostly recipes from Bon Appetit and Gourmet, but also some from members. Lots of reviews for those recipes, too.

I would use Food Network's site a lot more if it wasn't so cumbersome. I find that it loads slower than molasses, and there are too many steps to finding a recipe. Also, the search function sucks - pulls up recipes that have nothing to do with what I'm looking for. I really only use FN when I've seen a show and want a recipe from it, never just to browse.

  

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tahneeu
Member since Feb 09th 2007
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Tue Mar-31-09 01:36 PM

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46. "thanks."
In response to Reply # 44


  

          

>Recipezaar.com is very similar to All Recipes in that the
>recipes are member-submitted, and then receive lots of
>reviews. There is also epicurious.com, which is mostly recipes
>from Bon Appetit and Gourmet, but also some from members. Lots
>of reviews for those recipes, too.

i'll check these out. i think it's funny how a lot of people that review recipes online in general give a recipe four or five stars but then changed all sorts of shit. they basically gave themselves four or five stars lol.

>I would use Food Network's site a lot more if it wasn't so
>cumbersome. I find that it loads slower than molasses, and
>there are too many steps to finding a recipe. Also, the search
>function sucks - pulls up recipes that have nothing to do with
>what I'm looking for. I really only use FN when I've seen a
>show and want a recipe from it, never just to browse.

exactly how i feel. only when i have seen something on one of their shows will i check the website for it.

most of the stuff on there has gobs of ingredients which i don't care for when doing weekday cooking. on the weekends maybe but it's unrealistic for me for doing after work dinners.

  

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kurlyswirl
Member since Jul 13th 2002
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48. "Yes!!"
In response to Reply # 46
Tue Mar-31-09 02:52 PM by kurlyswirl

  

          

>i'll check these out. i think it's funny how a lot of people
>that review recipes online in general give a recipe four or
>five stars but then changed all sorts of shit. they basically
>gave themselves four or five stars lol.

I see that ALL the time and it drives me nuts! I'm all for changing a recipe to suit one's taste, which I do ALL the time. But if you need to significantly change a recipe for it to even remotely taste good or because the cooking time/temps are way off, it ain't a 4-5 star recipe! lol

  

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jest
Member since Jun 18th 2006
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Tue Mar-31-09 08:45 PM

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49. "The Silver Spoon & The Doubleday Cookbook"
In response to Reply # 0


          

The Silver Spoon

http://www.phaidon.com/silverspoon/

One of the best Italian cookbooks ever written. It's got everything in it. Very comprehensive, and the recipes are short and to the point (the way the should be). It is legendary in Italy, and was only available in English a few years ago.


The Doubleday Cookbook

Without a doubt, my favorite. A 2 volume edition that teaches you *everything*. Everything from rack of lamb, candy, soda, souffle, crepes. It even shows how to pluck a chicken, among other things (they don't mess around). The recipes are also very short, to the point, and simple. I prefer the out-of-print 1975 edition; the new book replaced many of the ingredients with canned goods & the like, rather than fresh ingredients. Here's a link to the newer edition:

http://www.amazon.com/New-Doubleday-Cookbook-Jean-Anderson/dp/038519577X

  

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chief1284
Member since Nov 08th 2004
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52. "I forgot to do The Silver Spoon"
In response to Reply # 49


  

          

My housemate has that. Brilliant brilliant book - I really have to buy it for myself.

Apparently it's the most popular wedding gift in Italy.

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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After_Words
Member since Aug 04th 2007
591 posts
Wed Apr-01-09 01:17 PM

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51. "The Splendid Table's How to Eat Supper"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

I don't cook very much, but this book has got everything covered (breakfast, pasta, salads, dinner, dessert, tips and advice).

--------------------------------
"I'm sick of following my dreams, man. I'm just going to ask where they're going and hook up with 'em later." -- Mitch Hedberg

  

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chief1284
Member since Nov 08th 2004
3003 posts
Sat Jun-06-09 09:58 AM

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55. "I'm shameless"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

And I'm gonna up my own thread and plug my blog simultaneously!

I just set up the blog and its in its infancy (I haven't publicised it at all yet), but I'm quite proud of some of the stuff so far. Check it out:

http://trottersandtales.blogspot.com/

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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kurlyswirl
Member since Jul 13th 2002
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58. "Er, the Pigman picture doesn't exactly put me in the mood for food. "
In response to Reply # 55


  

          

I like the name of your blog, though. Just need to find another pig pic, IMHO. :-)


~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

"I predict...................Nadal will embarrass dudes" - Deebot

http://www.facebook.com/kurlyswirl

I be Scrobblin': http://www.last.fm/user/TasteeTreat/

  

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chief1284
Member since Nov 08th 2004
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Thu Jun-25-09 09:31 AM

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59. "Haha - cheers!"
In response to Reply # 58


  

          

Yeah the pigman has divided opinion from people I've shown this to. I do like it, but I admit i makes it look a little bit teenage kid myspace page rather than a professional blog. I'm sticking to my guns for now, but I may change it or make it less prominent in time.

By the way I am right now doing a crazy pot-au-feu recipe from the French Laundry Cookbook. Intense stuff. I should be putting it up on the blog in 2 or three days.

------------------------------------------------------------

Check my man Lao at www.myspace.com/lazzriel

  

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Tony Sparks
Member since Nov 20th 2007
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Sat Jun-06-09 01:00 PM

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56. "recently bought"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

http://books.google.com/books?id=LktlXASBLTUC

http://media-center.knopfdoubleday.com/2009/05/07/down-home-with-the-neelys-a-southern-family-cookbook/

  

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will_5198
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Wed Jun-24-09 11:07 PM

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57. "huge, "new release four weeks early" type props"
In response to Reply # 0


          

on Bouchon. I picked it up two days ago and am enthralled.

--------

  

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Oakley
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61. "Got 'The Best Bread Ever' by Charles Van Over"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

for a belated fathers day gift.
have made Pita and round french loaves so far.
both came out great.
his method for making bread in the food processor seems odd but has worked well so far.

___________________________________
"WASP of the year: even if he isn�t a WASP, Oakley. Sailing? Check. In a yacht club? Check. Used the term �summer� as a verb instead of a noun? You betcha!" -thejerseytornado

  

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will_5198
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Wed Oct-14-09 10:54 PM

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63. "finally got White Heat"
In response to Reply # 0


          

it's Marco being Marco (a lot of quotes are the same he used in the BBC series) -- which is fantastic. the food seems very retro now but it's a great look back in time at what a flippant, anti-star chef and his Michelin restaurant looked like in the '80s.

--------

  

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DawgEatah
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Thu Oct-15-09 10:14 AM

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64. "THE FLAVOR BIBLE by Karen Page and Andrew Dornenburg"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          


http://twitter.com/Balisong
http://www.myspace.com/insightclopediabrown
http://www.myspace.com/dumhi
http://www.youtube.com/group/okayplayer
http://www.last.fm/user/Dawgeatah

  

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