Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Americas Best Complete Diabetes Cookbook or Cakes to Inspire and Desire

America's Best Complete Diabetes Cookbook

Author: Katherine E Younker


More than 6% of Americans need these healthy recipes to help control their diabetes.

Diabetes is rapidly becoming the largest health problem in the United States. As the population ages, and with so many overweight, there are more and more Americans at risk of developing diabetes. Careful meal planning is key to managing the disease.

In America's Complete Diabetes Cookbook, each of the 250 recipes has complete nutritional information as well as Exchange Lists for Meal Planning© Managing diabetes doesn't have to mean eating bland food forever.

Here's just a sampling of the outstanding recipes:


  • Appetizers, Dips and Spreads: Shrimp and Snow Pea Tidbits, Creamy Pesto Dip, Oriental Chicken-Wrapped Mushrooms

  • Soups, Chowders and Stews: Fresh Tomato Dill Soup, Wild Mushrom and Barley Soup, Potato Corn Chowder

  • Pasta and Grains: Singapore Noodles, Cajun Chicken over Fettuccine, Pasta Pizza with Goat Cheese and Caramelized Onions

  • Seafood and Poultry: Leek and Halibut Ragout, Chicken with Teriyaki Vegetables, White-Hot Chicken Chili

  • Meat: Steak Kabobs with Honey Garlic Marinade, Pork Vindaloo, Best-Ever Meat Loaf

  • Vegetables and Other Sides: Orange Broccoli with Red Pepper, Mushroom Barley Pilaf, Garden Paella

  • Just for Kids: Yummy Parmesan Chicken Fingers, Beef-Stuffed Spuds, Banana Peanut Butter Chip Muffins

  • Breads, Biscuits, Muffins and More: Scottish Oatmeal Scones, Lemon Poppy Seed Loaf, Orange Pumpkin Snacking Cake

  • Desserts:Chocolate Coffee Tiramisu, Strawberry-Rhubard Cobbler, Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies



Comprehensive diabetes management advice is provided on everything from risk factors to achieving balanced blood glucose levels to choosing suitable sweeteners



Table of Contents:

Preface


Introduction

  • On Managing Diabetes

  • Nutrition Guidelines for Americans with Diabetes

  • Healthy Eating and Balanced Blood Glucose (Sugars)

  • Reducing Sodium

  • Vitamins, Minerals, Fiber and Phytochemicals

  • Choosing to Sweeten

  • Reducing Fat

  • Exchange Lists for Meal Planning

  • Carbohydrate Counting

  • Glycemic Index

  • Recipe Analysis


Appetizers, Dips and Spreads

  • 16 recipes


Soups, Chowders and Stews

  • 29 recipes


Salads

  • 25 recipes


Dressings, Marinades and Sauces

  • 11 recipes


Pastas

  • 34 recipes


Fish and Seafood

  • 17 recipes


Poultry

  • 15 recipes


Meat

  • 21 recipes


Vegetarian Main Dishes

  • 6 recipes


Vegetables and Other Sides

  • 37 recipes


Sandwiches and Wraps

  • 8 recipes


Just for Kids

  • 14 recipes


Breads, Biscuits, Muffins and More

  • 25 recipes


Desserts

  • 27 recipes



Index

Interesting book: Make Gentle the Life of This World or Founding Fathers on Leadership

Cakes to Inspire and Desire

Author: Smith

*Written by a popular and experienced cake designer

*Range of techniques and skill levels ensures broad appeal

*Lindy's other best-selling titles include Celebrate with a Cake (28,000 copies sold) and Party Animal Cakes (20,000 copies sold)

Readers will discover a collection of 15 truly inspirational and deceptively simple celebratory cakes, each with a modern and distinctive finish. Lavish colour photographs display a unique variety of traditional and contemporary styles from florals and frills to stripes and beadwork. Each cake is accompanied by exquisite mini-cakes to put a creative twist on the main theme, or to make as an alternative when time is short. Chapters are divided by shape, showing how a simple square or round design can be the basis for the most desirable of cakes.



Vinegar Spilamberto or A Maize Ing Tailgating

Vinegar Spilamberto: And Other Italian Adventures with Food, Places, and People

Author: Doris Muscatin

In 1958, Doris Muscatine's husband was awarded a Fulbright that required them to live a year in Rome, and so began a love affair with Italy that would continue for the rest of their lives.

This is a memoir of a happy life, one spent devoted to family, friends, food, and a growing sense of international understanding filled with hope and respect. With the skill of a landscape painter and the ear of a poet, Doris Muscatine writes of the pleasures of the flesh and of the soul. She takes us along on her search for truffles and balsamic vinegar, her visits to Sicily and Venice, her stay with the nuns of Populonia, and her accidental meeting with members of the Slow Food movement. Her adventures are filled with the serendipity of someone in love with the world and willing to allow life to unfold at its own pace.



Look this: Management 9e or Start Run and Grow a Successful Small Business

A-Maize-Ing Tailgating: Wolverine Cuisine, Vol. 1

Author: Suzanne Wangler

This unique cookbook is a collector's item in the making. It's filled with the favorite tailgate recipes of famous University of Michigan players and coaches. Adding spice to the collection is a heaping helping of U of M trivia, and profiles of the people who helped make this renowned university a football powerhouse.



Table of Contents:
Prefacexiii
Acknowledgmentsxvii
Quarter 1Snacks, Dips, and Spreads
Cold Pizza3
Bean Dip4
Oyster Crackers5
Beef Puffs6
Cheese Onion Bread7
Tapenade Spread8
Crab Dip9
Shrimp Dip10
Spiced Pecans11
Braunschweiger Ball12
Hommus Dip13
Michigan Go Blue Dip14
Spicy Salsa15
Hot Wings and Dip16
Cheese and Olive Canapes17
Spinach Dip18
Hot Chili Dip19
Shrimp Log20
Pizza Fondue21
Zucchini Pancakes22
Stuffed Mushrooms23
Smoked Go Bluefish24
Dixon's Graham Stix25
Dutchess of Windsor Appetizer26
Mama Wang's Spinach Squares27
Spicy Dipping Sauce28
Stuffed Cherry Tomatoes29
Quarter 2Soups, Salads, and Side Dishes
Chicken Almond Pasta Salad33
Tangy Broccoli Salad34
Corn Chowder35
Hamburger Soup36
Macaroni and Cheese37
Kozmo's Coleslaw38
Escalloped Corn39
In-house Tailgate Party Cream of Wild Rice Soup40
Spinach Salad41
Pasta Salad42
Hamburgered Baked Beans43
Caponata44
Antipasto46
Spaghetti Salad47
Cold Pasta Salad48
Risotto a la Milanese49
Quick and Easy Baked Beans50
Tomatoes and Mozzarella with Basil51
Bruschetta of Mozzarella and Sun-Dried Tomato Pesto52
Baked Zucchini53
Onion Soup54
Cranberry Salad55
German Potato Salad56
Cheesy Ham and Rice57
Cheesy Potatoes58
Wolverine Salad59
True Blue Lobster Stew60
Green Bean and Mozzarella Salad61
P-Formation Salad62
Wild Rice Seafood Casserole63
Blow Out the Buckeyes Baked Beans64
Fred's Favorite Pasta65
Low-Fat Chicken Pasta Salad66
Ambrosia Fruit Salad67
Halftime Entertainment69
Quarter 3Main Dishes
Cold Marinaded Brisket113
Millie's Chicken Dumplings114
First and Ten Chili116
Sausage Kramervaro117
Meatball Sandwich118
Marinaded Steak120
A-Maize-ing Beef121
Creole Gumbo122
Turkey Loaf124
Keftedes125
Turkey Lasagna Rolls126
Poppy Seed Chicken128
Delmarva "Go Blue" (Crabs)129
Baked Ham Sandwiches130
Mishmash131
Salmon Burgers132
Matchless Meat Loaf133
Reuben Casserole134
Best Meatballs in the World135
Fourth Down Fajitas136
Salmon with Creamy Horseradish Sauce137
Bourbon-Basted Turkey138
Pizza Casserole139
Chili140
Sweet and Sour Meatballs141
Veggie Chicken Chili142
Flame's Hot 'n Spicy Chicken Barbecue143
Tzimmes144
Slightly Spicy! Original Spaghetti Sauce145
Polynesian Chicken146
Fusillo Pizzaiolo147
Chicken Enchiladas148
Elegant Chicken149
Chicken Parmesan150
Quarter 4Desserts and Beverages
My Mama's Apple Cake153
Chocolate Mound Cookies (Haystacks)154
Double Chocolate Chip Cookies155
Pineapple Squares156
Chocolate Chip Oatmeal Cookies158
Potato Chip Cookies159
Aunt Rozella's Sour Cream Coffee Cake160
Orange Slush Supreme161
Raspberry Pie162
Chocolate Puzzle Bars164
Fourth Down and Bundt Cake165
Banana Oatmeal Cookies166
Robbie's Coffee Cake167
Orange Cake168
Rhubarb Custard Pie170
Lemon Bars172
Caramel Layer Choc-squares173
Chocolate Delight174
Harvey Wallbanger Cake175
Chocolate Peanut Butter Cookie Bars176
Cannoli Cake177
Homemade Kahlua178
Cheese Cookies179
Brownies180
Pretzel Salad181
Sour Cream Pound Cake182
Caramel Cookies183
Cheese Strudel184
Mocha Cheesecake185
Index187

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Taste of Thailand or Modern Garde Manger

Taste of Thailand: The Definitive Guide to Regional Cooking

Author: Vatcharin Bhumichitr

A classic introduction to the history, preparation, and eating of Thai food.

This classic work was one of the first books to bring authentic Thai cuisine to a Western audience. First published in the 1980s, it set the standard to which all subsequent books followed. It first takes the reader through a brief history of Thailand before introducing the ten essential ingredients and the most common techniques. Clear, approachable recipes are split into regions--from the more basic fare of the countryside to special-occasion dishes and the more elaborate cooking of Bangkok. Here is the genuine food of the Thai people, presented with passion and authority. Vatcharin Bhumichitr, a widely respected chef and cookbook author, is also a well-known restaurateur; he recently opened Tamarind Thai in Miami.



See also: Institutional Investors or Microeconomics

Modern Garde Manger

Author: Robert B Garlough

Winner of the Prestigious IACP (International Association of Culinary Professionals) Award, The Modern Garde Manger is designed to meet the educational needs of novice culinary students and experienced chefs. Its carefully researched information and fully tested recipes span the broad international spectrum of the modern garde manger station. Five distinct sections covering seventeen chapters of text and recipes focus on the different aspects of the chef s required knowledge and responsibilities. Special features of the text include Chapter Goals; Professional Profiles featuring leading culinary personalities; Review Questions to spark classroom discussion and pique student interest; Activities and Applications that stress the importance of critical thinking skills, relative to the material presented in the chapter; and Key Words in Review. This is the most comprehensive text of its kind available for today s student and professional chef.



Table of Contents:

Chapter 1: Perspectives in Garde Manger

Chapter 2: Calculations and Controls for the Garde Manger

Chapter 3: Banquet Organization

Chapter 4: Amuse-Bouches, Appetizers, and Hors d'Oeuvers

Chapter 5: Salads with Vegetables, Fruits, and Grains

Chapter 6: Sandwiches

Chapter 7: Poultry and Game Birds

Chapter 8: Game Meats

Chapter 9: Meats

Chapter 10: Fish and Shellfish

Chapter 11: Specialty Meats

Chapter 12: Methods of Perserving Foods

Chapter 13: Curing, Sausage Making, and Smoking

Chapter 14: Pates, Terrines, and Mousselines

Chapter 15: Kitchen-Made Cheeses and Creams

Chapter 16: Sculpting, Carving and Modeling

Chapter 17: Food Decoration, Platter Presentation and Culinary Competition

365 Vegetarian Soups or Tra Vigne Cookbook

365 Vegetarian Soups

Author: Gregg R Gillespi

Hearty, nutritious, refreshing and delicious, soup has always been the original comfort food. From light consommés to creamy chowders, tangy curries to chilled fruit concoctions, you'll find the perfect dish to fit any occasion. Tasty meals-in-a-pot abound from recipes inspired by regions as far flung as Japan, Italy, Russia, and New Zealand and as close to home as New York, New England and the Southwest. Chase the cold away with Hot & Sour Tofu Soup, Acorn Squash and Apple, and Roquefort Soup with Cauliflower. Celebrate summer with an infinite variety of fresh fruit and vegetable delights: Chilled Curried Peach Soup, Cantaloupe Cooler, Gazpacho, and much more. For dessert, try Chocolate Mint Soup, Cherry Wine, or Chestnut and Amaretto. With tips on making vegetable stocks, hints on blending complimentary flavors, and suggestions on ways to substitute ingredients that may be hard to find, this is a practical and inspiring resource.



Books about: CCIE Professional Development Routing TCP IP or The Essential Guide to Dreamweaver CS4 with CSS Ajax and PHP

Tra Vigne Cookbook: Seasons in the California Wine Country with Michael Chiarello

Author: Michael Chiarello

People the world over come to California's wine country for a taste of the good life. They find it in abundance at Napa Valley's celebrated Tra Vigne restaurant (the name is Italian or "among the vines"), where an enchanting vineyard setting and chef Michael Chiarello's robust Italian dishes make for an unforgettable dining experience.

Now, Chiarello takes readers behind the scenes at the restaurant, sharing recipes and reminiscences inspired by his years at Tra Vigne and the good Italian cooking of his family. The Tra Vigne Cookbook: Seasons in the California Wine Country with Michael Chiarello celebrates the natural beauty and abundance of the Napa Valley with a passionate gastronomic journey through the changing seasons. In addition to seasonal delights like roasted asparagus, lemon-braised artichokes, and pumpkin polenta, home cooks will discover the secrets for Tra Vigne classics such as herb gnocchi with braised lamb shanks and wild mushrooms, crunchy fritto misto with tomato vinegar, rich and crumbly Italian holiday cookies, and a decadent chocolate tiramisщ. With lush photographs and a strikingly contemporary design, The Tra Vigne Cookbook is a must-have cookbook this fall.


About the Authors

Michael Chiarello is the chef-owner of the acclaimed Tra Vigne restaurant in the Napa Valley. He is the author of two best-selling cookbooks, Flavored Vinegars and Flavored Oils, and produces his own line of gourmet foods under the brand name Consorzio.
Penelope Wisner is a San Francisco writer specializing in food and wine. She worked with Michael Chiarello on Flavored Vinegars and Flavored Oils.
Karl Petzke is a San Francisco-based photographer and the coauthor, with Sara Slavin, of Espresso



Table of Contents:
Introduction

Monday, December 29, 2008

Bacchus Wine Notebook or Food and Cooking in Victorian England

Bacchus Wine Notebook

Author: Pierre Veronneau

This unique winetasting guide and notebook enables wine lovers to explore the fascinating world of wine in an organized way. Users can record wines they want to try or those they have enjoyed in the wine log. Tasting sheets help recall wines previously sampled, whether simply for pleasure or for future consultation. A glossary of wine terms assists users in accurately describing wines. Designed to lie flat when open and fit into a pocket or purse, it also includes wine web sites and useful facts about wine.

This is a perfect little host gift or, at Christmas, a stocking stuffer... Highly recommended for the price.—Wine and Food Books in Review-June 2003

A perfect little host gift or, at Christmas, a stocking stuffer . . . Highly recommended.



Interesting book: Eyewitness to Power or Liberal Fascism

Food and Cooking in Victorian England: A History

Author: Andrea Broomfield

Nine recipes serve as entry points for detailing the history of food production, cooking, and diet throughout Queen Victoria's reign in England. More than that, however, Broomfield offers an introduction to the world of everyday dining, food preparation, and nutrition during one of the most interesting periods of English history. Food procurement, kitchen duties, and dining conventions were almost always dictated by one's socioeconomic status and one's gender, but questions still remain. Who was most likely to dine out? Who was most likely to be in charge of the family flatware and fine china? Who washed the dishes? Who could afford a fine piece of meat once a week, once a month, or never? How much did one's profession dictate which meal times were observed and when? All these questions and more are answered in this illuminating history of food and cooking in Victorian England.

Lisa A. Ennis - Library Journal

A title in the "Victorian Life and Times" series, this is a well-written and well-researched examination of the role of food and food preparation in England at the cusp of the Industrial Revolution. Broomfield (English, Johnson Cty. Community Coll., KS) has drawn on a wealth of primary and secondary resources, including manuscripts and period cookbooks, to provide an in-depth, fascinating, and personal look into the Victorian kitchen. There are eight chapters covering all aspects of Victorian cooking and how they differed for the various classes. Of particular note are Chapter 2, which covers breakfast and explains the importance of toast to the Victorians, and Chapter 4, which explains the role of tea. The work also includes a chronology of important dates, an appendix of a few Victorian recipes, and endnotes, as well as a complete bibliography and an index. Highly recommended for all academic and large public libraries.



Food Wine The Italian Riviera Genoa or Calling All Cooks Four

Food Wine The Italian Riviera & Genoa

Author: David Downi

Most food guides for Italy suffer from the “too-much, too-little” syndrome. The territory is vast, yet for each city and village they rarely provide enough information. This guide focuses on a manageable territory–Liguria–and covers it in depth with an emphasis on understanding the local culture through its food. This is not an encyclopedic volume but a renowned food writer’s highly selective guide to Liguria’s authentic small eateries, culinary traditions, wine, wineries, food artisans, and gourmet shops. (The “big” restaurants are covered in a short and amusing sidebar that lists the places that everyone knows and can read about in any guide or on the Internet: a tip of the hat to the great toques, but many other suggestions are given so the reader can dine elsewhere. In Italy, the restaurants Michelin rewards with multiple stars have little to do with regional or local food.) Recommendations center on “where the locals eat.” The book is also lavishly photographed, perfect for the armchair traveler. There is a glossary of food items and unusual specialties, as well as a typical Ligurian menu, detailed indexes, many sidebars, and a map.

Learn all about the savory Ligurian flatbread called farinata (and where to buy farinata baking pans), garlic (raw in local dishes, braids, the pink heirloom variety from the village of Vessalico, and the village’s annual garlic festival), pesto mania (and a profile of the hothouses of the western Genoese suburb of Prà that produce what most Italians and 99.9 percent of Ligurians claim to be the world’s best commercially grown basil) and whichrestaurants serve authentic mortar-and-pestle-made pesto, as well as dozens of other regional topics.



Book review: Globality or If Democrats Had Any Brains Theyd Be Republicans

Calling All Cooks Four

Author: Bellsouth Pioneers AL Chapter

Again, we bring you the fourth in a series of great cookbooks. Published during our 75th Anniversary of Pioneering in Alabama and with over 730,000 copies of Volumes 1-3, we bring you another collection of new and different recipes. Every effort was made not to duplicate recipes in any of our books.



Texas Cowboy Cookbook or Tapas

Texas Cowboy Cookbook: A History in Recipes and Photos

Author: Robb Walsh

Texas cowboys are the stuff of legend - immortalized in ruggedly picturesque images from Madison Avenue to Hollywood. Cowboy cooking has the same romanticized mythology, with the same oversimplified reputation (think campfire coffee, cowboy steaks, and ranch dressing). In reality, the food of the Texas cattle raisers came from a wide variety of ethnicities and spans four centuries.
Robb Walsh digs deep into the culinary culture of the Texas cowpunchers, beginning with the Mexican vaqueros and their chile-based cuisine. Walsh gives overdue credit to the largely unsung black cowboys (one in four cowboys was black, and many of those were cooks). Cowgirls also played a role, and there is even a chapter on Urban Cowboys and an interview with the owner of Gilley's, setting for the John Travolta--Debra Winger film.
Here are a mouthwatering variety of recipes that include campfire and chuckwagon favorites as well as the sophisticated creations of the New Cowboy Cuisine:
• Meats and poultry: sirloin guisada, cinnamon chicken, coffee-rubbed tenderloin
• Stews and one-pot meals: chili, gumbo, fideo con carne
• Sides: scalloped potatoes, onion rings, pole beans, field peas
• Desserts and breads: peach cobbler, sourdough biscuits, old-fashioned preserves
Through over a hundred evocative photos and a hundred recipes, historical sources, and the words of the cowboys (and cowgirls) themselves, the food lore of the Lone Star cowboy is brought vividly to life.

Publishers Weekly

A Houston native with two James Beard awards, Walsh (Legends of Texas Barbecue Cookbook) carves Texas up into digestible sections, collecting its juices and leaving lots of contemplative fat. This 10-chapter history reaches as far back as the year 1540, when cattle first came to the area, and examines a multitude of geographic and demographic influences on the Lone Star State's cuisine. It is both a study of rich diversity and a collection of over 100 recipes, though only perhaps a quarter of the meals rise above the commonplace. The liveliest dishes turn up in the section on South Texas and are presented with a Hispanic flair, such as Conejo Colorado (Rabbit Stewed in Red Chile Sauce). There are two intriguing chapters that examine how black slaves transformed into black cowboys and were responsible for the introduction of Texas barbecue, but the accompanying recipes are disappointingly old hat. A fun chapter on Cowgirls in the Kitchen has some of the best of the book's 150 b&w photos as well as a swell Buttermilk-Lemon Pie. Moving into modern times, there is perhaps too much attention paid to the movie Urban Cowboyand the cultural and epicurean importance of Mickey Gilley, but Walsh wraps up his enterprise nicely with entrees such as a Poblano Mac & Cheese and a broiled tenderloin marinated in the black gold of Waco: Dr. Pepper. (Apr.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

Judith Sutton - Library Journal

Walsh is the author of The Tex-Mex Cookbook, among other titles, and a National Public Radio commentator. For his latest book, he explored the reality behind the enduring "cowboy myth" (i.e., the stuff of movies), which results in a highly readable history of the real Texas cowboys-and cowboy cooking-from the Mexican vaqueros and black cowboys up through the Gilley's era (Urban Cowboy) and chef Robert Del Grande's "new cowboy cuisine." There are 100 recipes, from Sourdough Biscuits and Picadillo to Bull's-Eye BBQ Pork Tenderloin, along with period photographs of chuckwagon cooks, working cowboys, and often desolate Texas landscapes. Walsh's text is thoroughly researched, and oral histories, minibiographies of memorable characters, and sidebars on such topics as "Chicken-Fried Insights" provide further context. Entertaining and informative, this is highly recommended.



Interesting book: Chef Tell Tells All or Wine from Sky to Earth

Tapas

Author: Richard Tapper

In taverns across Spain you'll find folks enjoying a variety of small snacks, also known as tapas. Perfect for entertaining and quick meals, this practical guide shows you how to make your own tapas at home. Full of delectable photographs and easy to follow step-by-step instructions, Tapas is a wonderful introduction for cooks interested in creating these fun snacks.



Sunday, December 28, 2008

American Cookery or Totally Eggplant

American Cookery

Author: Amelia Simmons

American Cookery was the first cookbook in America. Reproduced here is the rare second edition printed in 1796. We have added a new introduction by noted food historian Karen Hess.



Go to: New Vintage Type or Organizing and Editing Your Photos with Picasa

Totally Eggplant

Author: Helene Siegel

This is another die-cut cutie, this time tailor-made for cooking and dining in the great outdoors. The smoky, savory Eggplant does it all-grill it, fry it, stuff it, roll it, bake it, or roast it! A world traveler, the adventurous aborigine figures prominently in many ethnic cuisines including French, Italian, Greek, Middle Eastern, Indian, and Chinese. Don't miss this delicious edition to the Totally cookbook series.



Haute Chinese Cuisine from the Kitchen of Wakiya or Smoothies Bible

Haute Chinese Cuisine from the Kitchen of Wakiya

Author: Yuji Wakiya

Yuji Wakiyas impressive creative talent for serving authentic Chinese recipes and ingredients has revolutionized the perception of that nations cuisine. He has taken food that too often has been seen as a take-out staple steeped in artificial additives and given it layers of delicate, subtle flavor and an elegant touch, resulting in what can only be called haute Chinese.
Wakiyas unique stylecaptured in this book by the breathtaking photos of Masashi Kumacomes from the combination of his deep knowledge of Chinese food and culture and the Japanese aesthetic for an always-stylish, yet refined presentation.
In commentary and supplemental information accompanying each recipe, Wakiya enlightens readers on a wide variety of topics ranging from the medicinal properties of certain ingredients to making stocks and sauces from scratch, reconstituting dried Chinese ingredients, and the importance of using high heat in making tea.He discusses the origins of his signature dishes, based on Shanghai cuisineknown for its use of healthy ingredients such as black vinegaras well as the fascinating history, traditions and culture of the cuisine. Detailed instructions enable accomplished amateur chefs and professionals to prepare the dishes themselves.
Over 70 dishes are presented in the book, organized by coursefrom appetizer through the meat and vegetable dishes to the dessert. Each of the dishes also reflects Wakiyas creativity and originality through his selection of antique plates from all over Asia.
Like no other Chinese cookbook before it, Haute Chinese Cuisine from the Kitchen of Wakiya is a dramatic treat for sophisticated eyes and palates and the intellectuallycurious.

Publishers Weekly

Starred Review.

Chef Wakiya is a culinary artist well-known to globe-trotting gourmands for his Japanese television appearances as well as his restaurants (Americans were welcomed to the table in 2007, when he opened Wakiya at New York's Gramercy Park Hotel). His fans can now recreate (or at least read about) their favorite dishes with this stunning cookbook, a testament to Wakiya's skill, imagination and craftsmanship. Blending Chinese, Japanese and French techniques into a style all his own, Wakiya's innovative approach makes each page revelatory, with clear explanation of culinary show-stoppers like glistening Tofu with Black Sesame Sauce (surprisingly easy to prepare), artful Potato and Chicken Croquettes and classics like Peking Duck and Pan-Seared Jade Dumplings. Many ingredients will be difficult, if not impossible, to source in the West, but Wakiya's goal is stay as authentic and transparent as possible; though few readers will attempt the laborious, multi-day preparation for dried shark fin (in Shark's Fin Soup), they'll surely appreciate Wakiya's meticulous process. Other dishes are more straightforward, like Fresh Calamari with Mustard Sauce and Stir-Fried Chicken with Sansho Pepper; assuming they can locate shiso flowers and leaves, cooks can also easily recreate the gorgeous Fried Rice with Shiso Flowers. Still, it's Wakiya's storied skill, matched with eye-popping photographs of his luxurious dishes, that will draw in chefs, home cooks and culinary tourists.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.



See also: Business Objects XI or Applied Cryptography

Smoothies Bible

Author: Pat Crocker


One of the easiest and most delicious ways to consume the recommended 5 to 10 servings a day of fruits and vegetables is to drink them. Packed with nutrients and low in calories, smoothies are a fast, easy and great tasting way to achieve good health. The Smoothies Bible is the most comprehensive source of information to explore and detail the health benefits of these easy-to-make drinks.

Here are just some of the delicious smoothies featured: Watermelon Wave, Mega Melon Supreme, Strawberry Blush, Flu Fighter, C-Blitz, Green Goddess, Spa Special, Spring Celebration, Spiced Carrot, Blazing Beets, Sage Relief, Flaming Antibiotic, Cajun Cocktail, Mellow Yellow, Mango Madness.


  • More than 300 healing/healthy smoothie recipes
  • Over 100 fully illustrated profiles of various fruits, vegetables and herbs
  • 80 common health concerns matched with prescriptive smoothies
  • A wide range of recipes: fruit smoothies; vegetable smoothies; herb smoothies; dairy and dairy alternative smoothies; and hot, cold and frozen smoothies



Table of Contents:

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Guidelines to Good Health

The A to Z of Smoothies

  • What is a Smoothie?
  • Smoothies as Part of a Healthy Diet
  • Healthful Benefits of Smoothies
  • Smoothie Equipment


Health Conditions

  • Smoothies and Specific Health Conditions

    • AIDS & HIV
    • Aging
    • Allergies
    • Alopecia
    • Alzheimer's Disease & Dementia
    • Arthritis
    • ADD & ADHD
    • Breastfeeding
    • Bronchitis
    • Cancer Prevention
    • Candida
    • Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
    • Common Cold
    • Constipation
    • Depression
    • Diabetes
    • Diarrhea
    • Diverticular Disease
    • Endometriosis
    • Eye Problems
    • Fatigue
    • Fibromyalgia
    • Flatulence
    • Gallstones
    • Gout
    • Hangover
    • Headaches (Non-Migraine)
    • Heart Problems
    • Heartburn
    • Herpes Simplex
    • Hypoglycemia
    • Immune Deficiency
    • Impotence
    • Indigestion
    • Infertility
    • Female
    • Infertility
    • Male
    • Influenza
    • Insomnia
    • Irritable Bowel Syndrome
    • Kidney Stones
    • Laryngitis
    • Liver Problems
    • Low Libido
    • Lupus
    • Menopause
    • Menstrual Disorders
    • Migraines
    • Multiple Sclerosis
    • Osteoporosis
    • Overweight
    • Parkinson's Disease
    • Peptic Ulcers
    • Prostate Enlargement, Benign
    • Sinusitis
    • Skin Conditions
    • Smoking, Quitting
    • Urinary Tract Infections
    • Uterine Fibroids
    • Varicose Veins &Hemorrhoids
    • Water Retention


Ingredient Profiles

  • Herb Profiles
  • Fruit Profiles
  • Vegetable Profiles
  • Other Ingredient Profiles


The Recipes



Fruit Smoothies

Vegetable Smoothies

Herb Smoothies

Dairy and Dairy Alternative Smoothies

Hot and Frozen Smoothies



Endnotes

  • Glossary
  • Resources
  • Appendices


Index

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Paul Kirks Championship Barbecue or Moosewood Restaurant Cooks at Home

Paul Kirk's Championship Barbecue: Barbecue Your Way to Greatness with 575 Lip-Smackin' Recipes from the Baron of Barbecue

Author: Paul Kirk

A legend on the barbecue circuit, a master of the craft, a true son and practitioner of the art, Paul Kirk is also a teacher and mentor. At last he shares all his experience so that anyone can achieve barbecue glory in his or her own backyard. The Baron explains it all: the differences between barbecuing and grilling; how to build different kinds of fires and what kind of fuel to use; setting up the pit or grill (and what works best for what purposes); what tools are needed; how to prepare food for the grill or smoker; when and how to use bastes, glazes, sauces, and rubs; and how different cuts of meat work best. There are also handy charts of smoking and grilling times. The dishes range from everyday and down-home to exotic and special-occasion, but all are within easy reach of the backyard cook. Those kings of BBQ, beef and pork, get the royal treatment with recipes like Terrific T-Bone with Redeye Marinade, the Baron's Famous Barbecued Brisket, Apple-Smoked Pork Tenderloin, and Grilled Cuban Garlic and Lime Chops. And there are dozens of recipes for ribs. Other chapters focus on lamb, sausage, poultry, and fish and shellfish, with recipes including Lamb Fajitas with Sizzling Citrus Marinade, Onion Bratwurst, Honey Smoked Chicken, Barbecued Turkey with Sweet Black Pepper Rub, Cayenne Grilled Tuna, and Smoked Trout and Bacon. Plus there are extensive chapters on marinades, sauces, rubs, seasonings, and slathers. Side dishes offer dozens of variations on traditional trimmings: potato salads, coleslaw, beans, cornbread, and macaroni salads. It's all rounded out with plenty of stories about Paul Kirk's adventures in barbecue competitions. And if they sound like too muchfun to pass up, there are even tips on how to get involved in competition.



Table of Contents:
Acknowledgmentsvii
Introductionix
The Secrets of a Barbecue Champion1
Fire and the Art of Championship Barbecue15
The Basics, or The Baron's Condiment Cupboard36
Marinades, Mops, Sops, and Bastes54
Mustard Slathers86
Championship Barbecue Seasonings and Rubs102
Barbecue Sauces, Salsas, Relishes, and Dipping Sauces136
Hog Heaven162
Steer Crazy230
Lamb and Cabrito on the Baa-becue272
Putting on the Dog302
Plentiful Poultry328
Smokin' with the Fishes372
On the Side--Smoked, Grilled, and Otherwise426
Sources451
Index455

Book about: Herbert Hoover or Are We Rome

Moosewood Restaurant Cooks at Home: Creative Gardening for the Adventurous Cook

Author: Moosewood Collectiv

Winner of the 1995 James Beard Award for Best Vegetarian Cookbook Although many people think that cooking without meat means spending more time in the kitchen, the cooks at the world-renowned Moosewood Restaurant know this isn't so. Busy balancing home, work, and other commitments, they've been cooking for family and friends every day of the week for over twenty years. Moosewood Restaurant Cooks at Home is the result of that experience -- over 150 carefully honed and tested recipes calling for the best ingredients, accompanied by time-saving tips and planning suggestions, add up to a delicious whole-foods cuisine that is versatile and healthful and can be prepared with a minimum of effort.

This book contains dishes full of exciting flavors, sure to please every taste, from savory soups to substantial main-dish salads, from hearty stews to palate-teasing "small dishes." Sauces, salsas and dressings, and a collection of almost-instant desserts turn the simplest meal into an occasion.

Chapters on techniques and menu planning, lists of recipes for special needs, including nondairy and vegan fare and kid-pleasing food, as well as an in-depth guide to stocking the meatless pantry (including a list of recommended convenience foods), make Moosewood Restaurant Cooks at Home the essential companion to everyday cooking.

Publishers Weekly

Moosewood, the vegetarian culinary collective (``Eighteen heads are better than one for some tasks'') responsible for the restaurant of the same name in Ithaca, N.Y., offers an excellent third title to follow the popular Sundays at Moosewood Restaurant and New Recipes from Moosewood Restaurant . This one, unsurprisingly, concentrates on simple, healthful, easily prepared foods, though they are somewhat lighter in emphasis than were suggestions from the past; most dishes can be readied in half an hour or so, and organically grown ingredients are urged. Flavor is emphatically present, and so is an international bent. An Asian frittata, for instance, incorporates vegetables and adds a sauce including soy, rice wine, sesame oil and other Eastern staples, while baked peaches with Marsala is a dessert with an Italian tint. Broiled tofu may lead some diners to gag. However, the majority of the recipes will please non-purists, as well as the hard-core. An especially strong stew chapter offers entries with African, Caribbean, Hungarian, Greek, East Indian, Spanish, Italian and South American origins; chapters on pastas, salads and grains are similarly broad. Each recipe features menu suggestions and information on nutritional components. Author tour. (Apr.)



Still Smokin or Cellaring Wine

Still Smokin': More than 150 New Recipes for Savory Smoked-Cooked Dishes

Author: Cookshack

Here's another delectable compilation of original recipes from Cookshack, one of the biggest names in authentic pit-barbecue and natural wood-smoked foods. This comprehensive volume, featuring 180 recipes, offers such classics "Q" dishes as Cured Hickory-Smoked Baby Back Ribs, Jack Daniels Brisket, and Pork Tenderloin Deluxe, plus a panoply of savory sauces, rubs, salsas, and salads. Still Smokin' also includes Mesquite-Smoked Goat Cheese Shrimp, Savory Smoked Mozzarella and Tomato Cheese Cake, Charred Vegetable Gratin, and many other innovative recipes. With temperature charts, a guide to flavorful woods, and useful tips for effective food smoking, this is an essential book for any aficionado of live-fire cooking.



Interesting book: Secrets of Native American Herbal Remedies or American College of Physicians Complete Home Medical Guide

Cellaring Wine: Managing Your Wine Collection...to Perfection

Author: Jeff Cox

Beer is just a beverage, but wine is an experience. There's an aura of romance, a hint of the sublime, to bringing a bottle up from your own cellar, carefully drawing out the cork, pouring the wine into a goblet, and taking the first delectable sip.

Now Jeff Cox, author of From Vines to Wines (89,000 copies in print) and a connoisseur well respected in wine circles, shows you how easy it is to have a wine cellar of your own.

But Cellaring Wine is not a home-building project book. In some cases, the would-be wine collector doesn?t have to do much building at all. Rather, Cellaring Wine teaches anyone who loves wine how to create a working system of selecting wines that will age well, know how to lay them down properly, and recognize when they have matured to their full glory and are ready to be savored.

Cox pinpoints the optimum conditions of temperature, light, and humidity for a wine cellar. He walks you through possible locations for your wine cellar ? whether in the basement, an old root cellar, the back of your garage, or even a closet or room in your house ? and what each location requires. He explains when you?ll need a climate-control device (and how much they cost). And he discusses the pros and cons of buying a freestanding unit that is much like a refrigerator.

Then Cox tackles the question that most troubles wine lovers: Which wines will improve with age, and which won?t? This chapter alone is worth the price of the book, since nothing is more disappointing to a wine lover than waiting years to open a bottle of wine only to discover that it was at its peak when it was laid down.

Cox shows you how to keep accurate records so you know at a glance ? withouthaving to hunt through the wine racks ? what you have, where it's located, and how much to buy so the cellar doesn?t become depleted. And he gives you a crash course in appreciating the fragrance and flavor of a fine wine.Perhaps best of all, Cox gets readers excited about the possibilities of having their own wine cellar. After all, a cellar is not just a storage room, it's a university where good young wines become great.



Table of Contents:
Prefaceviii
Acknowledgmentsxii
Part 1Why Collect and Cellar Wine?1
1.Why Collect Wine?2
2.Selecting and Acquiring Wine23
3.How Wine Ages53
4.Cellar Size and Function99
Part 2Building and Using the Wine Cellar121
5.Constructing and Equipping a Wine Cellar122
6.Freestanding Units and Other Cellar Options158
7.Record Keeping186
8.Consuming and Evaluating Wine209
Bibliography231
Appendixes232
Wine Aroma Wheel233
Wine-Growing Regions of the World234
Wine-Growing Regions of Italy234
Wine-Growing Regions of France235
Wine-Growing Regions of Spain235
Wine-Growing Regions of California236
Resources237
Glossary244
Index249

Dim Sum or Crazy for Casseroles

Dim Sum

Author: Vicki Liley

Dim Sum is a contemporary collection of traditional Chinese appetizers. A variety of succulent and healthy recipes can be found here, including Steamed Pork Buns, Pot Sticker Dumplings, Vegetable Spring Rolls, and Mango Pudding. Also included is information about the culture surrounding Dim Sum, ingredients and utensils, and cooking methods. Full-color photos accompany every recipe, guaranteed to inspire you to discover the superb flavors of Chinese cuisine in your own home.



New interesting textbook: Innovation and Growth in the Global Economy or Contesting Global Governance

Crazy for Casseroles: 275 All-American Hot-Dish Classics

Author: James P Villas

This book illustrates perfectly what authentic, original, regional American cooking is all about. This is food at its most appealing: simple, delicious fare that leaves lots of room for variations and that the home cook can feel proud to serve anytime.

Publishers Weekly

In his newest book, Villas, the food and wine editor of Town & Country for 27 years and author of Between Bites, indulges his love of the traditional dishes that make up much of America's regional cuisine. After covering the "Essentials of Modern Casserole Cookery," including a guide to casserole dishes and their baking dish equivalents, he moves on to freezing and the basic pantry before throwing himself into the recipes. The recipes cover the gamut of courses and ingredients, from appetizers like the flavorful Crusty Wild Mushroom Bake to desserts such as Hot Brandied Fruit Casserole. In between he includes many classics such as the Yankee Hot Pot, All-American Chicken Pot Pie, Jambalaya, and Country Captain as well as many modern adaptations and innovations like the light yet robust California Tuna, Potato and Olive Casserole that uses fresh tuna rather than canned. In "Casserole Chat," Villas imparts helpful hints such as how to store dried mushrooms or how to reheat leftovers. The resulting volume highlights why Villas has maintained his position as one of America's foremost traditional cooks. (Feb.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Villas, who was food and wine editor of Town & Country for almost 30 years, has written eloquently about American regional cooking in many cookbooks, including Stews, Bogs, and Burgoos. His latest is something of a companion to that title, as he believes that casseroles "boast a versatility that is matched only by soups and stews." He also believes that they, more than any other dish, "illustrate what authentic regional cooking is all about," and he offers dozens of recipes from around the country to prove his point: Chicago Shrimp de Jonghe, Portland Oyster and Bacon Pie, Yankee Corned Beef and Vegetable Pot, and Ann Arbor Venison and Wild Mushroom Bake. Villas's text is informed, opinionated, witty, and a pleasure to read, and with its wide-ranging selection of recipes, it will interest culinary historians as well as home cooks. Highly recommended. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.



Friday, December 26, 2008

Low Carb Comfort Food Cookbook or DKs Sushi Chronicles from Hawaii

Low-Carb Comfort Food Cookbook

Author: Mary Dan Eades MD

The revolutionary cookbook that satisfies all your comfort food cravings–from the New York Times bestselling authors of Protein Power

When you think about low-carb diets, do you picture complicated meal plans and bland foods that leave you with cravings? Do the words comfort food make you long for scrumptious delights like pancakes, ice cream, chocolate chip cookies, or fettucine alfredo–foods you thought you could never have on a low-carb diet?

If your answers to the above were yes and yes, you’re in for a huge surprise! You can have these foods and many more, thanks to The Low-Carb Comfort Food Cookbook. Drs. Michael and Mary Dan Eades and chef Ursula Solom give you unique, easy cooking tips and more than 300 yummy low-carb recipes for foods that help you keep your weight down and fulfill your cravings. In no time at all, you’ll be on an easy-to-follow low-carb plan that will allow you to stay thin and healthy–and feel great!

Southern fried chicken with pan gravy • Elegant biscuits Melt-in-your-mouth pancakes • Deluxe low-carb macaroni and cheese • Beef and mushroom crepes • Spicy corn chips Soft crust pizza • Low-carb beef stroganoff • Raisin rolls Breaded sole • Fettucine alfredo • Low-carb lasagna • Super banana bread • Low-carb tacos • Bean and cheese burritos • Best garlic bread • Eggplant parmigiana • Rich low-carb pound cake • Scrumptious low-carb cheesecake • Apple brown betty • Cheddar cheese waffles • Chocolate ice cream • Key lime pie • Sublime truffles



Book about: Best Choices from the Peoples Pharmacy or Living the GI Diet

D.K.'s Sushi Chronicles from Hawaii: Recipes from Sansei Seafood Restaurant and Sushi Bar

Author: Dave D K Kodama

A native of O'ahu, Hawai'i, D.K. KODAMA spent more than a decade on the U.S. mainland and in Mexico and the Caribbean before returning to Hawai'i and eventually opening the first Sansei Seafood Restaurant & Sushi Bar in March 1996. Now executive chef/owner overseeing three Sansei restaurants, he lives in Honolulu with his wife, Lori, and daughter, Brie Ann.
BONNIE FRIEDMAN is the owner of Grapevine Productions, a Maui public relations firm established in 1988. She has worked with many of Hawai'i's best chefs and their restaurants; she has represented Sansei Seafood Restaurant & Sushi Bar since 1998. She is also a writer and journalist, having published numerous articles, most on food and beverage topics.



Super Smoothies Card Deck or 20 Minute Dinners

Super Smoothies Card Deck

Author: Amanda Cross

A mouthwatering collection of easy-to-make smoothies presented on 50 handy cards. Discover how to make a range of delicious smoothies, all bursting with healthy ingredients. This collection of recipes is guaranteed to give you a fresh dose of vitality!



Go to:

20-Minute Dinners

Author: Mary B Johnson

Cooking is all about making delicious dishes that give extra zest to mealtime. The recipes in this collection come from using wholesome ingredients, splendid sauces, and robust seasoning. And you need just 20 minutes to make any of the tasty dinners in this collection.

It's easy to stay organized using the fun theme menus - from Molto Presto Pasta Supper to Mardi Gras Dinner Party - that use three or more dishes. Each menu comes with a convenient game plan listing the necessary steps for preparing the meal from start to finish and every recipe is a winner.



Thursday, December 25, 2008

My Italian Garden or Pint Sized Ireland

My Italian Garden: More Than 125 Seasonal Recipes from a Garden Inspired by Italy

Author: Viana La Plac

Viana La Place was raised on stories of family gardens told by parents who brought their love of the Mediterranean landscape with them from Italy when they settled in California. Viana herself, after living on and off in Italy for several years, made an Italian garden of her own behind her San Francisco home filled with fragrant jasmine, olive trees, wild arugula, rampant zucchini, and bright-colored lemons. Ever since, like the best Italian cooks, she has delighted in creating meals that require only a few of the freshest ingredients.

In My Italian Garden, La Place brings the earth to the table for readers who want to cook delicious dishes with minimum work and maximum flavor, reminding us that the most satisfying food is the simplest. In 125 uncomplicated recipes, cooks will find four seasons of mouthwatering offerings, perfect for weeknight dinners or entertaining, such as New Fava Bean and Spring Greens Soup, Spaghetti Tossed with Whole Basil Leaves and Lemon Zest, Panini with Grilled Zucchini and Ricotta Salata, Pizza Verde with Artichokes and Herbs, and Meyer Lemon Gelato with Fresh Figs and Pistachios.

Illustrated with charming, evocative watercolors, and filled with lyrical passages, My Italian Garden lets readers experience the magic of the Italian garden without leaving their kitchens.

From the introduction:
"Cooking from the garden is uncomplicated cooking. Why add extraneous ingredients to flavorful produce? In fact, you will want to keep preparations pure and simple to enjoy what you've harvested in its pristine state....An Italian garden is really a state of mind. You do not need an elaborate villa to create your Italian garden.The essence of Italy can be captured in pots on a sunny terrace or a shaded balcony. An Italian garden can be herbs growing on a sunny windowsill or the back steps. You can grow your garden on a large parcel of land or on a tiny patch of earth. I hope you will be inspired by my Italian garden to grow one of your own, no matter what the size, and experience the joys of cooking directly from your Italian garden."
• Viana La Place

Publishers Weekly

Even home cooks who are unable to keep the hardiest of plants alive or who live in tiny, dark apartments will be enchanted by La Place's description of her bountiful garden. La Place (coauthor of Cucina Fresca) begins with a lyrical account of how she created the garden in her San Francisco home after observing some in Italy, and each seasonal section and recipe is accompanied by an inspiring meditation on the ingredients. The dishes are relatively simple: a Passato of Cannellini Beans and Cima di Rapa bursts with a heady flavor unusual for winter, while a fall pasta celebrates the flavor of just-picked artichokes highlighted with parsley and white wine. La Place's insistence on relying on her garden's bounty alone to supply dishes for each course and every season spurs her to great creativity, as exemplified by the "Caprese" salad that morphs through the year from the summer classic to a winter version with radicchio, orange zest and hazelnuts. Though cooks without a garden will not have quite the experience that La Place describes, just the idea of concentrating on a few fresh ingredients will remind them of just how extraordinary vegetables can be. Color illus. not seen by PW. (May 8)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information



Go to:

Pint-Sized Ireland: In Search of the Perfect Guinness

Author: Evan McHugh

One man’s tour of Ireland on tap; a rollicking travelogue in the tradition of Round Ireland with a Fridge and McCarthy’s Bar.
 
“Regret” is the word that best describes Evan McHugh’s first taste of Guinness. For an Australian raised on Vegemite, Ireland’s black brew is very much an acquired taste. But the travel-writer is committed to acquiring it. Determined to discover exactly what makes a pint of Guinness so legendary, he crosses the Emerald Isle in search of his answers.
But in sampling pints as he goes, McHugh soon realizes that in each town, and at every pub, someone always says that the best glass of Guinness is to be found . . . . somewhere else.
In his comedic and sentimental journey, McHugh and his companion, Twidkiwodm (the-woman-he-didn’t-know-he-would-one-day-marry), hitch around Ireland, meeting unforgettable characters. He goes rowing with a German bagpiper on the lakes of Killarney, windsurfing with a one-armed man in Dingle, survives an encounter with poteen and even finds his own bar . . . but keeps searching for the perfect pint.
As entertaining as it is informative, Pint-Sized Ireland is both a hilarious travelogue and thoughtful diary. McHugh’s comedic voice swiftly moves in and out of pubs, peering into froth-rimmed pints, and leading readers to question: So does he ever find the perfect pot of black gold? 
Those who have rested upon the barstools of Ireland, who have sought the famed “perfect pint of Guinness,” realize that perfection rests in more than just the taste. McHugh captures the visceral experience of Guinness and Ireland in a warmmemoir that’s perfect to savor.

International Praise for Pint-Sized Ireland
 
“McHugh’s idea of traveling is one continuous pub crawl . . . an entertaining homage to the black brew.”
---The Age (Australia)
 
“McHugh’s writing style is intelligent, quirky, and conversational. The result is a consummately easy to read book, amusing and engaging. It’ll make you want to go in search of your own perfect pint.”
---Adventure Travel
 
“This is a lovely book, well written, full of humorous anecdotes and works both as a travelogue and as a guide to drinking in Ireland. One of the real joys of this book is the way that the author captures the nuances and syntax of the way the people speak (‘“Rooit”, said the pub-landlord, ‘in ye coom”’). After a few pages you find yourself falling into this yourself and by the time you finish the book you will have developed a full-blown Irish accent.”---bootsnall.com

Publishers Weekly

An Australian, McHugh has his first pint of Guinness on the ferry from Wales to Ireland and is mighty unimpressed. But after he reaches the Emerald Isle, his opinion of Guinness changes and, along with Twidkiwodm ("the-woman-I-didn't-know-I-would-one-day-marry"), he circumnavigates the island in search of the best pint. McHugh certainly isn't the first backpacker to traverse Ireland's customary tourist spots—Yeats country, the Burren, the pubs of Dublin, the Giants' Causeway, Dingle Bay—with beer on the brain. But it is the unplanned events that make the travel special. While he inserts his share of Irish lore and legend into his travelogue, his descriptions of being in a rowboat with a German bagpiper or his recounting of leading a rag-tag bunch of Italians, Germans and Australians up the sacred mount Croagh Patrick are what brings his book to life. It also helps that McHugh, who continually professes his admiration for Irish writers, has a bit of the gift of gab himself. His prose flows like a friendly barstool chat and his frequent cheeky one-liners play the foil to his nostalgic nature. (Mar.)

Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Joel Jones - Library Journal

McHugh, an Australian travel writer, embarks on a quest for what some believe is the Emerald Isle's finest product, a perfectly poured pint of Guinness. McHugh and his travel partner seek out local pubs they hope will be devoid of tourists and staffed with a wizened bar keep who can serve a pint with a patient and steady hand. Carrying little more than a change of clothes, a toothbrush, and a Frisbee, McHugh travels from the depths of urban Dublin to the wide-open remoteness of rural western Ireland. Between pub visits, he tours some of Ireland's grandest sites (the Ring of Kerry) and regions (County Sligo, where William Butler Yeats lived). At the heart of this adventure, however, are the pubs, including Hartigan's and Gaffney's, both in Dublin, the Laurels in Killarney, and Fury's in Sligo. There are colorful locals, unpleasant tourists, quaint hostels, and a myriad of Irish pubs and restaurants along the way, all of which provide a nice snapshot of life in contemporary Ireland. However, you'll need a real travel guide for specific locations, hours, etc. Recommended for large travel collections.



In the Kitchen with Rosie or Hotel Bemelmans

In the Kitchen with Rosie: Oprah's Favorite Recipes

Author: Rosie Daley

With 50 recipes and 8 pages of full-color photographs by Micheal McLaughlin.

Publishers Weekly

This is a celebrity cookbook with a heart-healthy edge. Brief anecdotes by Oprah and recipe prefaces by Daley, her cook, may lure Oprah watchers--not only have they seen her weight loss, now they can taste the foods that presumably helped to make it possible. Others will find her style obvious: ``I have thrived on pasta,'' Oprah confides. ``I can eat it every day.'' Exclamation points abound: ``Forget iceberg!'' she exhorts in the introduction to salad recipes.``Experiment! . . . Delicious!'' Fortunately, Daley is a professional chef, trained at the Cal-A-Vie Spa, and her recipes are no mere fluff. Practical advice on preparations that add flavor while reducing fat reflect her spa experience, while suggestions for garnishes add visual interest. The numerous tips stretch the length of the book, too: just 50 recipes are featured in 134 pages. Typical of Daley's approach is the following paean to paella: ``In this beautiful dish jet-black mussels, pale gray clams, and vibrant red lobster tails lie on a bed of golden saffron rice, surrounded by chopped tomato and green peas, its flavor enhanced by the addition of squid rings and an assortment of peppers.'' Photos not seen by PW. 400,000 first printing; advertising. (May)

Library Journal

A cookbook from Oprah Winfrey's personal chef would no doubt be popular no matter what (proved here by the 200,000-copy first printing), but Daley in fact offers a number of zesty and creative recipes. Her professional background includes experience as a spa chef, and most of her dishes are sophisticated and elegant presentations-although there are also recipes for Un-Fried French Fries and Un-Fried Chicken. Many are highly spiced as well, substituting assertive flavor for fat. You'll probably need multiple copies.



Look this: Something to Talk About or Dishing Up Maine

Hotel Bemelmans

Author: Ludwig Bemelmans

"Ludwig Bemelmans was the original bad boy of the New York hotel/restaurant subculture" writes Anthony Bourdain, and with his reporter's eye for sensory detail and his keen wit, Bemelmans' humorous autobiographical tales of behind the scenes kitchen life at the Ritz in 1920s and 30s New York never fail to amuse and engage.

Proabaly Bemelmans' best work—and certainly his most famous essays—Hotel Bemelmans brilliantly evokes the kitchens, back passages, dining rooms, and banquet halls of Bemelmans' years at the Hotel Splendide—a thinly disguised stand-in for the Ritz. It's a strange, fabulous, and sometimes terrible universe populated by rogues, con-men, geniuses, craftsmen, lunatics, gypsies, tramps, and thieves—and it's all here in bitingly funny detail. Twenty-four of the tales are vintage Bemelmans, two have never before been published, and the lot is accompanied by 73 of Bemelmans' original, charming drawings.

Jonathan Yardley

Between 1938 and 1942 Bemelmans published four books about his life in hotels and restaurants -- Life Class, Small Beer, Hotel Splendide and I Love You, I Love You, I Love You -- all of which have been out of print for ages. Hotel Bemelmans is a greatest-hits selection of two dozen reminiscences culled from those books and previously uncollected material as well as a generous sample of his charming drawings … the best parts of the book are those in which Bemelmans writes about Mespoulets and the other mostly anonymous service people who are a lot more interesting than the Society they serve.— The Washington Post r

The New York Times - Paul Levy

In this elegantly illustrated new edition of Hotel Bemelmans, Bemelmans tells witty tales of a young Austrian immigrant's working life in the Hotel Splendide in Manhattan, a thinly disguised Ritz-Carlton.

Library Journal

Bemelmans's humorous sketches, released in 1946, offer a glimpse of upper-crust hotel and restaurant life in the 1920s through 1940s. This Overlook edition contains two recollections not included in the original. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.



Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Kitchenless Cookbook or Old Time Farmhouse Cooking

Kitchenless Cookbook

Author: Suanne Beverly

If you love to eat but don't like to cook, this book is for you. Kitchen tested by teen agers, college students and young professionals, this collection of easy recipes will make cooking easier than ordering pizza. Perfect for college students or individuals with small kitchens.

A follow-up to the popular Savoring the Southwest, the Roswell Symphony tunes up for another round of mouth watering recipes and exquisite artwork. Be sure to check out the regional interest section and of course, the UFO section!



Book review: The American Way of War or The Prize

Old-Time Farmhouse Cooking: Rural American Recipes and Farm Lore

Author: Barbara Swell

American recipes from a time when the food was wholesome and life was full of fresh air and sunlight. These recipes, stories, jokes, advice, farm lore, and illustrations were collected from a wide variety of American agricultural sources from the 1880s to the 1950s.



Miami Spice or Chef Paul Prudhommes Louisiana Tastes

Miami Spice: The New Florida Cuisine

Author: Steven Raichlen

The new star of the culinary galaxy is South Florida, declares The New York Times. And no wonder. Out of America's tropical melting pot comes an inventive cuisine bursting with flavor--and now Steven Raichlen, an award-winning food writer, shares the best of it in Miami Spice. With 200 recipes and firsthand reports from around the state, Miami Spice captures the irresistible convergence of Latin, Caribbean, and Cuban influences with Florida's cornucopia of stone crabs, snapper, plantains, star fruit, and other exotic native ingredients (most of which can be found today in supermarkets around the country).

Main selection of the Book-of-the-Month Club's HomeStyle Books. Winner of a 1993 IACP/Julia Child Cookbook Award.

Publishers Weekly

In 10 years' time, says Raichlen, ``I've watched Miami blossom from a gastronomic backwater to a culinary hot spot.'' Here, Cuban, Nicaraguan, French Caribbean, Iberian, Chinese, Deep South and Jewish cuisines meet but remain distinct, each taking advantage of abundant and inexpensive tropical produce (and 12 months of barbecue weather a year), while avoiding others; Cuban and Nicaraguan kitchens, for instance, still ignore the ubiquitous seafood. Raichlen's lively immersion in this confusion of ethnic food introduces the traditional Caribbean starchy roots, such as yucca, yam and boniato, as well as the typical tropical fruits and recent exotic introductions, like the lychee nut. Also present: several formulas for preparing alligator--savory and healthy, but often tough--and even an address from which to mail-order the frozen meat. Raichlen's style is amiable and chatty, and procedures are detailed and sensitive (``gently simmer for 10 minutes, or until the oil begins to bead on the surface of the sauce. This indicates that the water has evaporated, concentrating the flavor of the sauce''). The thick volume conveys a sense of authenticity throughout, although the author sometimes reveals an ignorance of the historical development of Caribbean cuisines (i.e., the discussion of tamales reveals a Mexican bias). (Nov.)

Library Journal

Cooking teacher and author Raichlen's most recent book is High-Flavor, Low-Fat Cooking ( LJ 11/15/92); now he turns to the zesty, eclectic, evolving cuisine of southern Florida. The large Cuban and Latin American populations in the area have changed the region's food, and Miami's restaurant scene is hopping. Floridians have always enjoyed plentiful fish and seafood, and a wide array of exotic produce is increasingly available as well. Raichlen's fresh, flavorful, and lively recipes range from Yuca Fritters to West Indian Pumpkin Soup to Conch Chile to Coconut Souffle. Fun and unusual, this is recommended for most collections.



Table of Contents:
Introduction: Hot! Hot! Hot!IX
Thirst Quenchers1
Starters, Snacks, and Fritters17
Sunshine Soups49
Salad Days67
Breads, Spreads, and Sandwiches87
Mojos, Sauces, and Salsas109
A Fisherman's Paradise135
From Conch to Stone Crabs155
Birds of Paradise191
The Meat of the Matter219
On the Side: an Exotic Array237
Happy Endings275
Basic Recipes327
Index339

New interesting book:

Chef Paul Prudhomme's Louisiana Tastes: Exciting Flavors from the State That Cooks

Author: Paul Prudhomm

The master of Louisiana cuisine invites everyone to taste the new flavors of Louisiana cooking

Chef Paul Prudhomme put Louisiana cooking on the map. Fifteen years have passed since the publication of his groundbreaking Chef Paul Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen. Now Chef Paul returns to his culinary roots to show us how Louisiana cooking has evolved.

Today, the culinary influences of Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, and many other cuisines are being integrated into "traditional" Louisiana cooking. Chef Paul explores how Louisiana cooks have incorporated such newly available ingredients as lemongrass, fresh tamarind, and papaya into their dishes. As Chef Paul says, any Louisiana cook worth his or her salt will work with what's available -- familiar or not -- and turn it into something delicious. Andouille Spicy Rice gets its zing! from chipotle and pasilla chile peppers, and Roasted Lamb with Fire-Roasted Pepper Sauce is flavored with jalapeno peppers and fennel. Classic jambalaya, etouffee, and gumbo are reinvented with such far-flung ingredients as star anise, cilantro, yuca, plantain, and mango.


Chef Paul Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen is an exciting exploration of the new flavors that have made Louisiana cooking even better.

Chef Paul Prudhomme put Louisiana cooking on the map. Fifteen years have passed since the publication of his groundbreaking Chef Paul Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen. Now Chef Paul returns to his culinary roots to show us how Louisiana cooking has evolved.

Today, the culinary influences of Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, and many other cuisines are being integrated into "traditional" Louisianacooking. Chef Paul explores how Louisiana cooks have incorporated such newly available ingredients as lemongrass, fresh tamarind, and papaya into their dishes. As Chef Paul says, any Louisiana cook worth his or her salt will work with what's available -- familiar or not -- and turn it into something delicious. Andouille Spicy Rice gets its zing! from chipotle and pasilla chile peppers, and Roasted Lamb with Fire-Roasted Pepper Sauce is flavored with jalapeno peppers and fennel. Classic jambalaya, etouffee, and gumbo are reinvented with such far-flung ingredients as star anise, cilantro, yuca, plantain, and mango.

Chef Paul Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen. is an exciting exploration of the new flavors that have made Louisiana cooking even better.Chef Paul Prudhomme put Louisiana cooking on the map. Fifteen years have passed since the publication of his groundbreaking Chef Paul Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen. Now Chef Paul returns to his culinary roots to show us how Louisiana cooking has evolved.

Today, the culinary influences of Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, and many other cuisines are being integrated into "traditional" Louisiana cooking. Chef Paul explores how Louisiana cooks have incorporated such newly available ingredients as lemongrass, fresh tamarind, and papaya into their dishes. As Chef Paul says, any Louisiana cook worth his or her salt will work with what's available--familiar or not--and turn it into something delicious. Andouille Spicy Rice gets its zing! from chipotle and pasilla chile peppers, and Roasted Lamb with Fire-Roasted Pepper Sauce is flavored with jalapeno peppers and fennel. Classic jambalaya, etouffee, and gumbo are reinvented with such far-flung ingredients as star anise, cilantro, yuca, plantain, and mango.

Chef Paul Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen. is an exciting exploration of the new flavors that have made Louisiana cooking even better.

Publishers Weekly

In the 15 years since Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen first appeared, even traditional Louisiana tastes and flavors have gracefully accepted international influences, as the recipes here attest. Now there are parsnips, banana peppers and poblano chiles in Chicken and Oyster Gumbo; a quarter-cup of sliced ginger adds a lively punch to Stuffed Sirloin Tip Roast; yuca is a key ingredient in Lamb Stew with Greens.Even so, just about every recipe here employs blends of garlic powder, cayenne, dried herbs and other flavors that preserve the ' Creole/Cajun heritage. Recipes are as simple and solid as Vegetables and Chicken Ole!, in which all ingredients are combined and baked in one pan, and as time-consuming as Stuffed Flounder, in which deboned fish are layered with smoked Cheddar cheese topped with pureed crawfish tails (or shrimp) and vegetables. Desserts include Sweet Potato Custard and Apple Pie with Chiles and Cheese, which is tailor-made for Prudhomme's spice-loving fans. Author tour. (Feb.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

It has been 15 years since Prudhomme's first cookbook was published (Paul Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen), and his Cajun-Creole style of cooking (and, specifically, his blackened redfish) has become widely known and imitated. The recipes in his latest book use his familiar seasoning mixes (many of which are now marketed commercially), but they also incorporate ingredients that would have been unheard of in a Louisiana kitchen even a decade ago: Shrimp Mango Bisque, Veal-Stuffed Poblano Chiles, Penne with Lemongrass-Basil Pesto. The recipe instructions are very clear, with taste "guidepoints" (e.g., "...the caramelization brings out the natural sweetness of the onions...") italicized for emphasis. Prudhomme, who has several television cooking shows running concurrently, has a large following, and his new book is recommended for most libraries. Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.



Tuesday, December 23, 2008

The Sweet Life or Perfect Light Desserts

The Sweet Life: Desserts from Chanterelle

Author: Kate Zuckerman

Chanterelle is a beloved, award-winning New York City restaurant that has been critically acclaimed since its founding 25 years ago. A great part of a perfect meal is one of the truly spectacular--yet comforting--desserts.

Kate Zuckerman, Chanterelle's pastry chef, creates exquisite treats that draw upon her culinary travels all over the world and her vast experience as a four-star pastry chef in Boston, San Francisco, and New York.

The Sweet Life offers not only detailed, delicious recipes for every kind of dessert from tarts and cakes to custards, soufflés, and frozen desserts, but also in-depth explanations of methods and of chemical changes that occur in baking, along with fascinating histories and descriptions of key ingredients.

Zuckerman possesses the remarkable ability to create gourmet desserts that home cooks can actually craft in their own kitchens. Her warm, accessible tone will appeal to both the beginner and the advanced pastry cook. So whether making the Crispy, Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies or the Cardamom and Honey Pistachio Nougat Glacé, readers will know they are in good, capable hands.

About the Author: Kate Zuckerman has been pastry chef at four-star restaurants such as Biba (Boston) and Firefly (San Francisco). Her desserts have been featured in the New York Times and Food & Wine. She lives in New York City.

Publishers Weekly

Zuckerman, pastry chef at New York's famed Chanterelle restaurant, combines aesthetics and science in this appetizing look at the hows and whys of baking. Providing detailed instruction throughout, she guides the cook through the process of creating the dessert while explaining the chemical reactions taking place when ingredients interact. Zuckerman details the intricacies of tart making, offering a variety of standard recipes such as hazelnut, sweet and flaky. Her selections of cakes are enticing, with her Goat Cheesecake Enrobed in Hazelnut Brittle bordering on the sublime. Throughout, she elucidates the basics-e.g., why some cookie recipes require additional baking soda and how an acid aids in the foaming of egg whites. Zuckerman also offers a wealth of cookie recipes and a mouth-watering array of custards, puddings, cr mes and mousses. Souffl -making techniques are explained so simply that even the baking novice will feel empowered to make an attempt. Zuckerman also devotes sections to ice creams and frozen desserts, roasted fruits and edible garnishes. Highly recommended for all skill levels, this collection is a must-have for anyone who cooks. 70 photos. (Sept.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Zuckerman, pastry chef of Chanterelle, the acclaimed restaurant in New York City's Tribeca, presents a lovely selection of recipes for desserts from Chocolate Caramel Tart (a favorite combination) to Green Apple and Muscat Sorbet. But the book is much more than a collection of recipes: Zuckerman says the chemistry of desserts is one of her sources of inspiration, and in the chapter introductions, she shares her knowledge of the subject. There are also sidebars on ingredients from chocolate to quinces, mini-essays on essential techniques, and serving suggestions and recipe variations. Professionals will want this book as both a reference and a source of ideas, but many of the recipes are not particularly complicated, and the extremely detailed instructions should make them accessible to anyone who loves to bake. Highly recommended. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.



Interesting textbook: Fundamentals of Advanced Accounting or Advertising Campaign Strategy

Perfect Light Desserts: Fabulous Cakes, Cookies, Pies, and More Made with Real Butter, Sugar, Flour, and Eggs, All under 300 Calories per Generous Serving

Author: Nick Malgieri

Everybody loves dessert, but nobody loves the calories. Perfect Light Desserts offers recipes for desserts rich enough to satisfy any sweet tooth -- but with sensible calorie counts.

Master baker Nick Malgieri and healthful food expert David Joachim have joined forces to create 125 exceptional desserts without the usual quantities of fats and sugars. The focus is on flavor and texture achieved through balanced ingredient combinations and superior baking techniques. Not a single recipe has more than 300 calories per serving.

The results are nothing short of spectacular, with desserts that range from devil's food cake (complete with fluffy icing) to a lemon custard highlighted with a colorful raspberry sauce. Old-fashioned American favorites such as hermits mingle with sophisticated treats like rum raisin semifreddo and white chocolate raspberry tartlets. Best of all, while these desserts are low-calorie, they are high in flavor. Moist coconut poppy seed coffee cake, juicy blueberry pie, and fudgy brownies don't taste like “diet desserts”; they simply taste great.

All of the recipes here achieve great flavor without resorting to artificial sweeteners or synthetic substitutes. The recipes use moderate amounts of real butter, sugar, flour, and eggs in perfect proportions. Every recipe includes a complete nutritional analysis as well as serving and storage notes. Everybody loves dessert, and now no one has to go without it.

Publishers Weekly

Readers who know Malgieri as the author of such drool-inducing books as Chocolate, Perfect Cakes and Cookies Unlimited may be surprised to find the phrase "all under 300 calories per generous serving" on the cover of his new cookbook. Has the renowned pastry chef gone healthy? Only a little bit-and with nary a sprinkle of Splenda or spoonful of "buttery spread" in sight, Malgieri and Joachim (A Man, a Can, a Grill) offer 125 simple recipes for chocolate desserts; cakes; pies and tarts; puddings, custards and souffl s; fruit desserts; iced and frozen desserts; and cookies that happen to be lower in calories than most. Some recipes are for traditional desserts that are naturally low in calories and fat (Blueberry Pie, Peaches in Red Wine, Biscotti), while others use lighter ingredients, e.g., a combination of whole eggs and egg whites (instead of egg yolks) or low-fat dairy products (Chocolate Cupcakes with Brown Sugar Icing, Ginger Lovers' Pound Cake). The authors only go so far with their "light" approach, though: real butter and even real heavy cream appear in several recipes-the result being a well-rounded recipe collection for delicious and fairly guiltless treats. Photos. (On sale Oct. 17) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Director of the baking program at New York's Institute of Culinary Education, Malgieri is also the author of more than half a dozen other cookbooks. Here, with food writer Joachim, he presents an array of delectable desserts that are all "under 300 calories per generous serving." He includes fruit and other desserts that are naturally low in fat, along with lighter versions of more indulgent sweets, ranging from Chocolate Buttermilk Tart to Updated Linzertorte to Fresh Strawberry Souffl . The instructions are clearly written, with many helpful tips, and there are line drawings of techniques as well as color photographs throughout. For all baking collections. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.



Party Nuts or The Great American Camping Cookbook

Party Nuts!: 50 Recipes for Spicy, Sweet, Savory and Simply Sensational Nuts That Will Be the Hit of Any Gathering

Author: Sally Sampson

In this book, veteran author Sally Sampson presents 50 recipes for all sorts of flavored nuts that will please every palate, along with easy, fun tips for serving them.

Library Journal

A few years ago, food writer Sampson started playing around with a recipe for sweet and spicy pecans and then with other combinations of nuts and flavorings. Now she and her husband have their own business, Sampson's Nuts. Here are the recipes for the pecans that started it all, along with other "Savory Nuts," "Hot Nuts," and "Sweet Nuts," any of which would make a great gift from the kitchen as well as a party nibble. With its narrow focus, this is not a necessary purchase for most libraries, but larger collections may want to add it. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.



Interesting book: Breaking the Food Seduction or Fat Smash Diet

The Great American Camping Cookbook

Author: Scott Cookman

Bad cooking ruins more camping trips—America’s most popular outdoor vacation activity—than anything else except rain. The Great American Camping Cookbook offers the delectable remedy: a camp cook’s guide to the fresh, natural “comfort foods” of the good old days. Whether your camp is a civilized weekend cottage, a rustic hunting or fishing cabin, or a primitive canoeing or backpacking bivouac, this book can help anyone make meals as vibrant as the outdoors itself.

Start the day with Wild Rice Pancakes or fresh-baked Cornmeal Blueberry Biscuits. Sit down to a classic shore lunch of Beer-Battered Smallmouth, Campfire Potatoes and Hush Puppies, or simple sorrel-stuffed trout. On rainy days, simmer up a pot of real Corn Chowder or Camp-Style Bean Soup. For memorable main courses, serve up a substantial Modernized Brunswick Stew, Blackened Yellow Perch, or Sautéed Walleye with wild rice and mushrooms. For side dishes, try fresh Camp-Baked Beans, spit-roasted Acorn Squash, or Sand-Baked Potatoes. Then savor a legendary Hot Buttered Rum or Camp Old-Fashioned as a nightcap.

In addition to recipes, The Great American Camping Cookbook offers a wealth of easy-to-follow advice on making perfect camp coffee and camp breads, calculating food portions, and composing provisions lists to assure variety and avoid forgotten essentials. The colorful history of American camp food and cooking—from the Jamestown settlement, Lewis and Clark, and Daniel Boone to Ernest Hemingway and John McPhee—adds fascinating lore to this essential guide to eating well in the great outdoors.