Posted on 15 January 2008 by Shannon
For Christmas, I received a wonderful cooking reference book: The Essentials of Cooking by James Peterson. The contents of the book are exactly as advertised in the title. This book provides all the essentials you’ll need to start cooking, with step-by-step instructions and many, many helpful tips, all illustrated by gorgeous color photographs. Armed with [...]
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Posted on 14 November 2007 by Shannon
I love cookbooks. In fact, some (like my husband) might say that I’m obsessed with them. When I get a new cookbook, I like to go through it several times, noting which recipes I want to try, getting a feel for the style of cooking that’s presented, figuring out whether there is anything new to [...]
Filed under: Books | Tagged: Cookbooks, Sara Foster | 11 Comments »
Posted on 15 July 2007 by Shannon
An Omelette and a Glass of Wine, Elizabeth David (1952)
Elizabeth David is one of the pioneers of food writing, and even 50 years later, her ascerbic, witty style still holds up, as do, surprisingly, some of her pet subjects. She rails against processed foods, decries the commercialization and dumbing down of great traditional recipes, and [...]
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Posted on 27 May 2007 by Shannon
Thanks to Lydia at the Perfect Pantry for featuring my food-related book selections as this week’s Bookworm in the Pantry. If you browse through this blog, you’ll quickly learn that another one of my passions is reading. (And if you want to see what I’m reading that is not food-related, go here.)
The Bookworm in the [...]
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Posted on 20 April 2007 by Shannon
Garlic and Sapphires by Ruth Reichl (2005)
This memoir covers Reichl’s tenure as restaurant critic for the New York Times and includes some of her favorite retaurant reviews and recipes. But what I found even more fascinating were Reichl’s accounts of a critic’s life. To avoid being recognized, she donned a variety of disguises and found [...]
Filed under: Books | Tagged: Reading, Reviews, Ruth Reichl | 1 Comment »
Posted on 25 March 2007 by Shannon
It was my second wedding anniversary this week. My husband, who does many things right, remembered to send me irises, my wedding flower. We took the day off from work to spend together, finishing with a memorable dinner and a fantabulous crème brulée at what has been dubbed, even in its first year, the [...]
Filed under: Accompaniments, Books, Techniques | Tagged: Comfort food, Cookbooks, Eggs, French, Gardening, Hollandaise, Home-style, Photos, Poaching, Sauces, Southern | 1 Comment »
Posted on 23 February 2007 by Shannon
Pot on the Fire: Further Confessions of a Renegade Cook, John Thorne (2000)
Pot on the Fire is a collection of essays about food and cooking, each one exploring a particular dish or ingredient or meal, with recipes. It is all fascinating and eminently readable, and reading it I learned quite a lot about such diverse [...]
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Posted on 17 February 2007 by Shannon
How I Learned to Cook, edited by Kimberly Witherspoon and Peter Meehan (2006)
How I Learned to Cook is a collection of 40 essays by well-known chefs and food writers, describing early pivotal incidents in their culinary careers. The title might be a bit misleading; the stories aren’t generally about learning how to cook, but [...]
Filed under: Books | Tagged: Reading, Reviews | 1 Comment »
Posted on 13 February 2007 by Shannon
Mark Bittman’s How to Cook Everything taught me how to cook. I don’t mean the type of cooking where you slavishly follow a recipe step-by-step without much thought to what you’re doing or why you’re doing it. I mean the type of cooking where you look at what’s in the fridge or in the market [...]
Filed under: Books | Tagged: Cookbooks, Mark Bittman, Reviews | 3 Comments »
Posted on 31 December 2006 by Shannon
The Soul of a Chef, Michael Ruhlman (2001)
This book contains three “backstage” views on cooking in contemporary America. My favorite two pieces were the opener, describing the excruciating Certified Master Chef exam at the Culinary Institute of America, and the closer, spent in the kitchen of French Laundry — reportedly America’s best restaurant. Both [...]
Filed under: Books | Tagged: Michael Ruhlman, Reading, Reviews | 2 Comments »