Amazon.com The magic of Christmas in the world of Anne and her friends--whose
worldwide popularity has made a tourist attraction of her fictional home
of Avonlea, on Prince Edward Island--is brought vividly to life with this
fascinating selection of Christmas lore, crafts, cooking, and decorating
ideas. Adults and children alike can make bygone customs a part of their
own Christmas tradition as they create a Green Gables gingerbread house
and make roseberry wreaths and sleigh-bell door-chimes. Share in the joy
of an unforgettable Green Gables Christmas by re-creating holiday finery
like Anne's beaded slippers and a velvet muff for chilly winter nights,
and enjoy festive delicacies such as Four Winds Roast Goose.
Easy-to-follow instructions, step-by-step drawings, and glorious color
paintings make this an irresistible gift that will be treasured for many
Christmases to come.
Amazon.com It's tea-time! Every child has imaginary tea parties with their dolls
and stuffed animals, but what could be better than hosting a real tea
party for your friends? Raggedy Ann knows all about tea parties, and in
this charming book she shares valuable tips for making them fun and easy.
You'll learn how to create your own colorful invitations, to prepare
goodies like Raggedy Ann's famous candy-heart cookies, and to set the
table in an extra special way. When all the work is done, it's time to sip
tea and enjoy the party games! Chock-full of recipes and games, here is a
book that celebrates the simple pleasures of an old-fashioned tea party.
Fast and Festive Meals for the Jewish Holidays: Complete Menus,
Rituals, and Party Planning Ideas for every Holiday of the Year by Marlene
Sorosky, Joanne
Neuman, Debbie
Shahvar
Amazon.com There's more than just recipes here: in addition to great menus for
every Jewish holiday, Sorosky includes a short history of the occasion,
the appropriate blessings, decorations and centerpieces, and essential
religious items and foods--in short, everything you need to know and
have to make your holiday meal a success. What's more, she provides a game
plan for organizing your time in the kitchen and getting everything on the
table at the right time and temperature. As an added bonus, Sorosky
includes "Extra Points": special projects for children,
invitation ideas, or special decorations to lift your celebration above
the ordinary.
365 Ways To Cook Pasta, Marie Simmons, HarperCollins publishers, 1985
hardcover, 1995 hardcover
This is the single most useful pasta book that I have encountered. It
contains a broad variety of pasta recipes organized into useful chapter
categories – (Not all inclusively) Italian Classics, Savory Summer Salads,
Seafood and Pasta Combinations, the Asian Connection, Quick Cook Sauces, Light
and Easy. Among the recipes are clear tips and guidelines on cooking and
ingredients such "Olive Oil" or "Perfectly Cooked Pasta every
time". If you follow the directions, you will get perfect pasta every time.
The author covers pasta shapes and sizes and the appropriate pairings of
ingredients.
The Barbecue Bible
, Steven Raichlen, Workman Publishing Company, June,
1998.
The title says it all. It is a compendium of recipes, personally garnered
from all over the world by Steve Raichlen. He interestingly interweaves recipes
with his adventures as he traveled around the world to get them. In the book are
a vast array of ethnic barbecue cuisines, American region by region,
Argentinean, Japanese, Korean, Thai, Uruguay, Brazilian, Mexican, the list goes
on and on. The variety of things you can grill will surprise you, steaks, fish,
vegetables, burgers, ribs, ka-bobs, shellfish, accompanied by a variety of fresh
herbs, spices, sauces, and salsas. The recipes are clearly and thoroughly
written and Raichlen details, equipment, ingredients, cooking times,
temperatures and grilling, smoking, and barbecuing techniques.
A Taste of India
, Madhur Jaffrey, Pavilion Books Ltd, 1985
India is a vast country with over a billion people, multiple major
languages, many, many minor languages, and five major religions. Madhur Jaffrey
is a well known cook, author, and personality, who has made many appearances
since this book was published. The book is an exploration of Indian culture and
its rich cuisines in a beautifully written and illustrated book. It is organized
by chapters associated with its capital, Delhi, and all of its major regions.
Because of India’s size and age, the variance in cuisine is almost impossible
to describe, encompassing barbecued meats, cuisines that are entirely
vegetarian, cuisines that emphasize pilafs, Persian influences, as well as
Oriental influences. All of these are seasoned with an incredible variety of
fresh spices. The recipes are well written and detailed. This book would make a
wonderful gift to a person who enjoys the pleasures (and work) of making exotic
dishes from scratch.
Simple French Food
, Richard Olney, Collier Books, MacMillan Publishing
Company, 1992
I can highly recommend Simple French Food. I have made multiple
recipes from this book and value the recipes as well as the cooking advice,
whether it is admonition to eliminate extraneous water from dishes or
recommendation of a "robot" cutter that allows vegetables to be cut in
regular and attractive pieces (unlike a food processor). French cooking can be
fairly involved. My comment about this book is that the recipes are simpler than
some French recipes without taking any shortcuts. I have had particular success
with a delicious vegetable terrine and various vegetable dishes, although the
book includes recipes for lamb, beef, fish, omelets, and some things that don’t
normally appear on American tables, frog-legs and rabbit being examples.
The Escoffier Cookbook, A guide to the Fine Art of French Cuisine
,
Auguste Escoffier, first published in the French as Guide Culinaire, 1903
This is the classic work by a Chef, who among other things, created Peach
Melba. This book is organized in two parts, the first being a section dedicated
to the principles of French cooking, things like how to make Roux, Glazes, and Veloutes, the foundations for Sauces and Stocks, Soups, Braising, Poaching, Poeling, Sautéing, Roasting, Grilling, Frying, Gratins, Glazing, Treatment of
Vegetables and Garnishes. The second part of the book contains over 2,000 actual
recipes, which are delicious, but can be a fair amount of work, as great cooking
can be. This book is of great value to have if for no other reason than it
contains the basics for almost any kind of cooking. Even if you are not making
the particular recipes here, it provides knowledge on basic techniques that can
be used for any recipe. This book is approximately one quarter of the cost of The
Complete guide to Fine Cooking by the same author.
A Taste of the Orient, The complete Book of Eastern Cooking
, Edited and
adapted by Alison Granger, Gallery Books, 1987
This is an encyclopedia of Oriental cooking. It contains techniques and
recipes from all of the major Oriental cuisines of the world – Chinese,
Indonesian, Malaysian, Philippine, Thai, Vietnamese, Korean, Singaporean, Sri Lankan, Burmese, Indian and Pakistani, and Japanese. The book is organized along
these regional lines, but also includes a very complete, nicely illustrated
section on tools and techniques of Oriental cooking. Each regional section
contains (also nicely illustrated) recipes that detail ingredients and
instructions and also give the time in preparation and cooking and rate the
recipe for relative difficulty – easy, more difficult, for experienced chefs.
The Green Chile Bible, Award-Winning New Mexico Recipes
, Compiled and
Edited by the Albuquerque Tribune, Clear Light Publishers, Santa Fe, New Mexico,
1994
This book is a compendium of recipes contributed by readers of the Tribune.
It is not haute cuisine, but rather a collection of everyday recipes with the
flavor of the Southwest. The book lives up to its title – almost every recipe,
including breakfast rolls and macaroni and cheese, includes canned or fresh
green chilies. Most of the recipes have a too high fat content for my taste,
either too much ground beef, or an ingredient list that includes sour cream.
That said, the recipes are interesting and they can be adapted to remedy, what
is for me a defect, but might not be one for other people.
Beer Lovers Rating Guide
, Bob Klein, Workman Publishing Company, 1995
This is not a recipe book, but since the recipes in CookenPro contain beer
and wine recommendations, review of this book seems a natural. Beers come in a
variety of styles (lagers, ales, bitters, etc) from an even larger number of
countries and microbreweries. This guide is alphabetically arranged so you can
look up a review of your favorite brew (see what someone else thinks) or look up
a beer before you purchase. You can also just look at an easy chart in the back,
arranged by country, in which is present a name, a country of origin, a style,
and a rating. I like to drink different beers so it is fun to compare what I
taste and experience with a beer versus a stranger’s written description of
what they have tasted and experienced.
The Encyclopedia of Creative Cooking
, Compiled by Jane Solmson and
Edited by Charlotte Turgeon, Weathervane Books, 1984.
This book contains 2000 recipes and 800 full-color photographs. It contains
basic recipes that are organized by food classification – Appetizer, Bread,
Chicken, Crepes, Eggs, Soups, Seafood, Fish, Pasta, Vegetable, Soups, Salads,
etc. There is no instructional or techniques section. This is a very complete
book in the sense of having a recipe for anything I am likely to cook. I am glad
I have it, however, sometimes the instructions can leave you guessing as exactly
how to do something. Given this drawback and the fact that I sometimes like
other versions of recipes better than the ones I find here, I can say there is
no more complete book to have, to know that there will be a recipe for almost
anything that you will ever want to make.
The New York Times International Cook Book, Craig Claiborne, Harper
and Row, 1971
Boy do I feel funny reviewing a New York Times cookbook. This book is
organized by country with a few recipes from each of a good list of countries.
It is nicely illustrated with full-color plates of selected dishes. It contains
a good number of interesting recipes for each country. The recipes are
completely detailed, step by step in a fashion that does not leave a reader in
doubt as to how or when to do something. This book is currently out of print but
is available through amazon.com, along with many more cook books by Craig
Claiborne. This book was reviewed because it is the one that I have.
Kwanzaa, An African-American Celebration of Culture and Cooking
, Eric V. Copage, William Morrow and Company, New York, 1991
Kwanzaa is a cultural observance created for African-Americans 32 years ago.
It was not and is not intended to take the place of Christmas, but rather
separately is a celebration of Africa-inspired culture, spreading across a
variety of national cuisines, Jamaican, the American South, Senegal, Brazil among
others. This is an interesting cookbook for persons of any culture. You can open
this book to almost any page and find something you want to try, Bahian Shrimp
Ragout with Toasted Manioc and Hot Peppers Sauce, Passion Fruit Mouse with
Tropical Fruits, or Red Snapper En Pappillote (in paper) Caribbean. Recipes more
familiar to most Americans are included as well, Hoppin’ John, Cornbread,
Greens. This book was a gift from my sister and I’m glad that I have it.
Included is a list of suppliers for hard to get supplies.
Justin Wilson Looking Back, A Cajun Cookbook
, Justin Wilson, Pelican
Publishing Company, 1997
This book is a look back ("casting mah eye back") on Justin Wilson’s
career that includes updated recipes from two earlier publications The Justin
Wilson #2 Cookbook: Cookin’ Cajun and The Justin Wilson Cookbook. It is
updated to reflect more modern tastes that use lower fat content. Earlier Cajun
recipes might have included copious quantities of lard or olive oil. Most of
these utilize wine and/or moderate quantities of olive oil. These recipes are in
the hearty, country style that we know as Cajun. Recipes include the Cajun
classics – Gumbos, etouffees, Jambalaya, but also recipes for meat, poultry,
seafood, game, rice, and pastries. Interspersed with the recipes are black and
white photos of Mr. Wilson throughout his career with little captions that just
make you want to laugh at their uniqueness – "Me, I got a frien’. Pete
his front name, Fountain his behin’ name."
Cajun – Creole Cooking
, Terry Thompson, Hpbooks, 1986
This is a good cookbook. Terry is a food writer and instructor who has
taught over 10,000 students in cooking classes and seminars. This book gives a
brief history and explanation of Cajun Cooking as well as detailing techniques
used in this style of cooking. Terry’s recipes combine the heartiness of Cajun
Country cooking with a finished French reliance on broth and sauces. Recipe
chapters include "Soups, Gumbos, Bisques & Breads, "Salads &
Salad Dressings", "Poultry & Meat", "Fish &
Shellfish", and "Vegetables & Rice", "Desserts",
"Cajun Country", and "Brunch" among others.