Saturday, January 31, 2009

Master Dictionary of Food and Wine or Catering Handbook

Master Dictionary of Food and Wine

Author: Joyce Rubash

The completely revised and updated edition contains more than 8,000 terms relating to food ingredients, cooking styles, preparation techniques, utensils, and types of culinary service. Clear and concise definitions, word origins, and simple phonetic pronunciations make this an invaluable resource for food and beverage professionals.

Booknews

A carefully prepared dictionary--with pronunciation--giving brief definitions of some 8,000 terms relevant to food ingredients, cooking styles, preparation techniques, and types of culinary service. The vocabulary is international and includes wine-related terms. Useful for both amateur and professional cooks and all who work in food service. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)



Table of Contents:
What Exactly Is the Internet?

What Functions are Driving an Enterprise's Adoption of the Internet?

The High Performance Business Team.

Taking New Measures.

Internet Policy for the Enterprise.

Additional Implementation Topics.

Summary and Analysis: Internet and the Enabling Technologies.

Appendices.

References.

Index.

Interesting book: Very Special Agents or Child of War Woman of Peace

Catering Handbook

Author: Edith Weiss

This fully documented guide helps readers grasp the essentials of planning and successfully managing three major types of catering operations: on-premise, off-premise, and mobile unit. The authors evaluate each type of operation according to operating needs, advantages, and disadvantages.



Friday, January 30, 2009

Greens Beans Roots and Shoots or Moms Best Crowd Pleasers

Greens, Beans, Roots and Shoots

Author: Christine Ingram

This comprehensive guide includes a wealth of information on both familiar and exotic vegetables.



Interesting book: Principi di economia

Mom's Best Crowd-Pleasers: 101 No-fuss Recipes for Family Gatherings, Casual Get-togethers & Surprise Company

Author: Andrea Chesman

Forget the stressful dinner party for twelve. How many home cooks really drag out the china, silver, and linen more than a few times a year these days? Mom’s very best crowd-cuisine is fun, relaxed, and informal. From a hungry group of the kids’ friends looking for afternoon munchies to a potluck office farewell party to a 4th of July barbecue for the neighborhood, today’s typical gatherings are casual occasions to share hearty, homemade food.

Mom’s Best Crowd-Pleasers is full of recipes that reflect the way Mom really cooks today, simply tailored to feed eight or more people. Cucumber Sandwiches, Quesadillas, and Sweet and Sour Meatballs are all simple finger foods perfect for after-work get-togethers, book club meetings, and informal baby showers. Muffalettas, All-American Hamburgers, and deep bowls of Summer Fruit Salad and Broccoli-Rice Salad are delicious at backyard cookouts, tailgate parties, and summer pool parties. And Three-Cheese Noodle Bake, Cuban Black Beans, and Baked Barbecued Chicken will attract happy fans whenever the potluck gathering calls for a hearty hot dish.

Most recipes are designed to feed eight hungry people, but author (and home cook) Andrea Chesman provides advice throughout on expanding recipes, stretching dishes when the dinner seating unexpectedly grows from eight to eleven people, using clever shortcuts that make cooking for a crowd no more difficult than cooking for four, and generally maintaining a degree of sanity as more people come flooding through the front door.

As always, Chesman’s primary accomplishment is to provide homey, hearty tastes that satisfy modern palates, yet still bear the unmistakablestamp of Mom’s Best.



Thursday, January 29, 2009

Olive Oil or Cocina italiana

Olive Oil

Author: Jacques Chibois

World Cookbook Fair Awards Best Book of 1999

Other Details: 160 pages, 80 illustrations 8 x 8" Published 2000

Author Biography: Jacques Chibois now runs the restaurant Bastide St. Antoine at Grasse, which has been awarded two Michelin stars.

Oliver Baussan is a native of Provence and the founder of Occitane and O and Co., a company devoted to the distribution of fine olive oil.



Look this: Development Studies or Mergers and Acquisitions

Cocina italiana

Author: Ursula Ferrigno

The 125 recipes collected in this volume include antipasti; pasta and risottos; pizzas and breads; fish, poultry, and meat dishes; and desserts. Advice is given on essential Italian ingredients to keep stocked in the kitchen, and special excerpts discuss foods of special interest including panini, fast pasta sauces, and Italian cheeses. Superb photographs show off the dishes, making this a delicious entry into the world of Italian cooking.


Las 125 recetas contenidas en este volumen incluyen antipasti; pastas y risottos; pizzas y panes; magníficos platos de pescado, aves, y carne; y postres. Se ofrecen útiles consejos sobre elementos indispensables para la cocina italiana y se incluyen alimentos de especial interés como los panini, salsas rápidas de pasta, y quesos italianos. Extraordinarias fotografías complementan las recetas irresistibles, haciendo este libro una entrada ideal al mundo de la cocina italiana.



Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Design Mix or The Baby Cookbook

Design Mix: Bars, Cocktails and Style

Author: Howard Watson

Cocktails evoke glamour – whether it is James Bond ordering a Martini ‘shaken not stirred’ or Sarah Jessica Parker and her friends in ‘Sex in the City’ sensuously sipping Cosmopolitans. The Design Mix – Bars, Cocktails & Style brilliantly captures the sophisticated, alluring world of today’s international bar scene. As well as profiling over 25 of the top bar and restaurant interiors, this lavishly illustrated book sheds light on the inspiration behind their cutting-edge designs. Alluding to the cocktail’s wider cultural connotations with the inclusion of film stills and posters, it also features many classic recipes as well as new creations by renowned mixologist Jamie Walker. With over 200 photos, this richly atmospheric book offers readers fascinating insights into the exclusive world of cocktail culture.



New interesting textbook: Back Pain Remedies For Dummies or Spa Bliss

The Baby Cookbook: Tasty And Nutritious Meals For The Whole Family That Babies And Toddlers Will Also Love, Vol. 1

Author: Jeannie Lumley

Newly revised for the 1990s, The Baby Cookbook is the final word on infant nutrition. In addition to hundreds of wonderful recipes, it includes vital new information on vitamin requirements, allergies, childhood obesity, nursing, introducing solids, and balancing meals. It also features all the facts on the health benefits and risks of milk, eggs, salt, fluoride, and complete and incomplete proteins.

The Baby Cookbook also includes the author's personal journal of experiences feeding and raising her own baby. Knight's journal takes some of the fear out of raising a baby by showing parents what to expect (and beware of) in feeding their own infants and toddlers.

And, of course, there are the recipes. All of the more than 250 recipesnearly 100 of them new for this edition -- have been designed to be low in sodium, contain almost no sugar, and generally encourage good eating habits.

Best of all, most of the meals in this book can be shared by the whole family. There's Chicken Fricassee, Seafood Chowder, Cheese Enchiladas, Baked Potatoes with Salmon Sauce, Barbecued Ribs, and much, much more, including Homemade Apple Pie. We are not talking strained peas.

The Baby Cookbook is a complete guide to cooking for your family -- from ovens and stove tops to microwaves and crockpots. Finally, it's possible for working parents to prepare quick and easy meals for their children without sacrificing taste, variety, or nutrition.

Library Journal

This revised edition (Morrow, 1985) includes a discussion of nutrition and nutrient requirements, and provides information on feeding children, nursing, introducing solids, childhood obesity, and food allergies. It also contains Knight's personal journal of her daughter's food experiences during infancy and toddlerhood. Knight, who is a registered pediatric nurse, states in the preface that her aim is to ``provide a complete feeding guide in the context of family life.'' The second part of the book contains 200 healthy ``family recipes,'' which a baby of 12 months or older can share with family members. The recipes are low in sodium, contain almost no sugar, and emphasize complex carbohydrates. Microwave cookery is included as are menus. More of a cookbook than Louise Lambert-Lagace's equally useful Feeding Your Baby: From Conception to Two Years ( LJ 9/1/91), Knight's book is recommended for public libraries.-- Angela Washington-Blair, Brookhaven Coll. Learning Resource Ctr., Farmers Branch, Tex.



Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Great Wines of France or Burgundy and Its Wines

Great Wines of France: France's Top Domaines and Their Wines

Author: Clive Coates

This lavish guide to France's most respected estates and sought-after wines will delight any lover of French wine. Internationally recognized wine expert Clive Coates begins by profiling over forty of France's top domaines from eight regions, exploring each producer—from Latour to Romanée Conti to Trimbach—and serving up illuminating stories behind some of France's most reputable châteaux and most famous wine families. A range of beautiful photographs showcase each winery. Coates then offers a personal collection of his own tasting notes for each of the estates—all quoted from specific tasting events that he attended, with details of dates and location—and provides information on all the key vintages.

A compulsory buy for anyone who appreciates fine French wine.



Look this: Total Quality Management for Hospital Nutrition Services or Electronic Commerce

Burgundy and Its Wines

Author: Faith

Burgundy is a unique mix of historic towns and vineyards, great wines, and thousands of stubbornly individualistic wine makers, brokers, and merchants. The spirit of the region comes alive here, through text by award-winning wine writer Nicholas Faith and Andy Katz’s incomparable photographs. Through this perfect marriage of words and images, oenophiles can travel to the Côte d’Or, which produces outstanding Chardonnay and Pinot Noir; the Domaine de la Romanée-Conti, home of the world’s most expensive red wine; the three outlying regions of Chablis; as well as the Mâconnais, Beaujolais, and many other lovely sites. A selective guide to the best merchants and producers, as well as a directory of appellations and Grands Crus, help wine-lovers in their purchases and on visits to the area.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Griswold Muffin Pans or Finding Betty Crocker

Griswold Muffin Pans

Author: Jon B Haussler

The startling range of muffin pans produced by the Griswold Manufacturing Company from the late nineteenth century through the 1950s is covered in detail in this fascinating guide. The author provides more than 235 photographs of muffin pan designs and computer graphics depicting 226 pan variations. All the pertinent details necessary to identify Griswold pans are provided, in addition to the names, numbers, pattern numbers, dates of production, and comparative rarity of each pan. Also included is a brief history of the company, the evolution of Griswold's muffin pans, and details from Griswold sales catalogs. Prices are provided in the text for every pan and variation listed. "Collecting Griswold muffin pans is enjoyable, affordable, challenging, somewhat mysterious, and addictive," says the author, who has been seeking out cast-iron for more than half a decade.



New interesting textbook: Adventures with Ed or Diplomats Dictionary

Finding Betty Crocker: The Secret Life of America's First Lady of Food

Author: Susan Marks

IN 1945, FORTUNE MAGAZINE named Betty Crocker the second most popular American woman, right behind Eleanor Roosevelt, and dubbed Betty America's First Lady of Food. Not bad for a gal who never actually existed.

"Born" in 1921 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, to proud corporate parents, Betty Crocker has grown, over eight decades, into one of the most successful branding campaigns the world has ever known. Now, at long last, she has her own biography. Finding Betty Crocker draws on six years of research plus an unprecedented look into the General Mills archives to reveal how a fictitious spokesperson was enthusiastically welcomed into kitchens and shopping carts across the nation.

The Washburn Crosby Company (one of the forerunners to General Mills) chose the cheery all-American "Betty" as a first name and paired it with Crocker, after William Crocker, a well-loved company director. Betty was to be the newest member of the Home Service Department, where she would be a "friend" to consumers in search of advice on baking—and, in an unexpected twist, their personal lives.

Soon Betty Crocker had her own national radio show, which, during the Great Depression and World War II, broadcast money-saving recipes, rationing tips, and messages of hope. Over 700,000 women joined Betty's wartime Home Legion program, while more than one million women—and men—registered for the Betty Crocker Cooking School of the Air during its twenty-seven-year run.

At the height of Betty Crocker's popularity in the 1940s, she received as many as four to five thousand letters daily, care of General Mills. When her first full-scale cookbook, Betty Crocker's Picture CookBook, or "Big Red," as it is affectionately known, was released in 1950, first-year sales rivaled those of the Bible. Today, over two hundred products bear her name, along with thousands of recipe booklets and cookbooks, an interactive website, and a newspaper column.

What is it about Betty? In answering the question of why everyone was buying what she was selling, author Susan Marks offers an entertaining, charming, and utterly unique look—through words and images—at an American icon situated between profound symbolism and classic kitchen kitsch.

Publishers Weekly

"Your talks... have given me hope," wrote one listener to the Betty Crocker radio program during the Depression, and according to Marks's largely chronological "biography" (there was no real Betty Crocker), it was human connections like this one that made Crocker one of the most successful marketing tools ever. Filled with treasures from the General Mills archive-including letters sent to Crocker during WWII, reprints of famous recipes and advertisements, and portraits updated through the years-Marks's book introduces readers to the people who breathed life into Crocker's image as the happiest of homemakers. There's Samuel Gale, her inventor, and Florence Lindeberg, who provided her trademark signature in 1921. Other important figures include Neysa McMein, who painted the first Crocker portrait in 1936, and Adelaide Hawley, who played Crocker on television in the 1950s. Marks, who created a documentary film on Crocker, devotes a chapter to the Betty Crocker Kitchens and chronicles the products that Crocker's folksy persona sold to the world, like Bisquick and various cake mixes. In another section, she touches upon-albeit too briefly-Crocker's role in "the fundamental shift in American diets toward... factory-processed convenience foods." Light on analysis but abundant with anecdotes, this is a solid basic history for casual culinary, marketing and American historians. Photos, illus. Agent, Dawn Frederick. (Apr.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

She hosted a radio show that reached millions and at the height of her popularity received more than 4000 letters a day. Her "Big Red" cookbook sold more than 30 million copies. She not only helped get America through a depression but boosted morale on the home front during World War II. And she became America's foremost cooking authority. Yet Betty Crocker was never a real person but instead one of the most successful brands in history. This deliciously fun "biography" begins with Betty's "birth" in 1921 in Minneapolis-the result of a wildly successful promotional effort by Gold Medal Flour executives, who needed a woman to respond to letters from customers. Marks, whose interest was stimulated by a Betty Crocker letter her grandmother received and who spent six years researching the General Mills archives, traces Betty's evolution as a corporate spokesperson and brand, offering a fascinating look at American culinary history. Spiced with a small selection of recipes from Betty's files and graced with some wonderful illustrations, this is popular history at its best: both informative and entertaining. A natural complement to Anne Mendelson's Stand Facing the Stove: The Story of the Woman Who Gave America The Joy of Cooking; highly recommended.-John Charles, Scottsdale P.L., AZ Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Cheerful social history follows the career of General Mills's long-lived celebrity spokeswoman. First things first: Betty Crocker isn't a real person. She was created, in an unwittingly brilliant move, by the publicity department of Washburn Crosby, makers of Gold Medal Flour, after a magazine contest brought in a flood of cooking questions to the company. The letters were answered, but the male publicity director certainly couldn't sign his own name to the responses; thus was Betty created. Her last name was given in honor of then-recently retired company director William G. Crocker, but her first name was chosen simply for its "wholesome" sound. From these simple origins, an empire grew-one supported by a large staff of cooks and home economists who were constantly testing recipes and looking for kitchen innovations. Betty was a radio pioneer, with a first show debuting in 1924 and, later, with her Betty Crocker Cooking School of the Air. She went to Hollywood in the '30s to interview the stars, Marjorie Child Husted being the public face of Betty Crocker on these occasions. Betty assisted homemakers in stretching their budgets during the Great Depression and offered innovative ways to cook with rations during WWII. And while Betty Crocker was always firmly in the woman-as-homemaker camp, she advocated greater recognition for what was often thankless work, creating the Betty Crocker Home Legion. In the 1950s, Betty Crocker offered convenience foods-Bisquick, cake mixes-that matched the shiny new postwar prosperity. Though her popularity hit its high-water mark in the middle of the 20th century, she remains a force even in the General Mills of today. Marks excels in putting her subjectin context, and alongside her historical account, she places numerous letters from women who wrote to Betty to ask questions or inform her about their lives. Like a Betty Crocker recipe: goes down easy.



Table of Contents:
Introduction1
1The Making of an American Myth5
2Betty Goes Hollywood45
3On Betty's Watch83
4Bake Someone Happy127
5Just Add Water!149
6Kitchens of the World177
7Strangely Familiar207
Notes247
Acknowledgments273

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Year of Beer or Award Winning Dottie Rambo Cookbook with Celebrity Friends

Year of Beer: 260 Seasonal Homebrew Recipes

Author: Amahl Turczyn

Each chapter begins with a description of a beer style, with recipes for every level of brewer--from extract to all-grain.



Book review: Educação de Ronald Reagan:os Anos Elétricos Gerais e a História Não contada da Sua Conversão a Conservatismo

Award Winning Dottie Rambo Cookbook with Celebrity Friends

Author: Dottie Rambo

To her extraordinary accomplishments in the field of gospel music, Dottie Rambo now adds a memorable literary achievement, The Award-Winning Dottie Rambo Cookbook With Celebrity Friends.

The book features recipes for over 270 taste-tested dishes, from the healthy low-fat variety to the richest of gourmet splurges, all designed in an easy-to-read layout with simple directions and numerous helpful hints. The book can be used with ease by students and amateur chefs, but it is also a perfect source of information for the most sophisticated cook.

A valuable guide to entertaining, this treasure will help you serve Dottie's favorite dishes along with those of many of her internationally-known friends, each selected to make every cook a success with family and friends alike. Heavily illustrated with photos of Dottie and over 95 celebrities, this book is an invaluable memorabilia and the perfect gift for all occasions.



Table of Contents:
Forewardvii
Prefaceviii
Introductionxi
Appetizers1
Beverages25
Juicing37
Breads43
Brunch61
Salads67
Soup87
Sauces, Gravies & Dressings99
Meats107
Vegetables135
Desserts159
Jams, Jellies & Preserves211
Pickles & Relishes217
Things My Mama Taught Me227
Index247

Friday, January 23, 2009

An Alphabet for Gourmets or Candlelight and Wisteria

An Alphabet for Gourmets

Author: MFK Fisher

In Alphabet for Gourmets, M.F.K. Fisher arranges a selection of her essays in a whimsical way that reveals the breadth and depth of her passion. From A for (dining) alone to Z for Zakuski, "a Russian hors d'oeuvre," Fisher alights on both longtime obsessions and idiosyncratic digressions. As usual, she liberates her readers from caution and slavish adherence to culinary tradition-- and salts her writings with a healthy dose of humor.

James Beard

She writes about fleeting tastes and feasts vividly, excitingly, sensuously, exquisitely. There is almost a wicked thrill in following her uninhibited track through the glories of the good life.

Shana Alexander

M.F.K. Fisher is our greatest food writer because she puts food in the mount, the mind and the imagination all at the same time. Beyond the gastronomical bravura, she is a passionate woman; food is her metaphor.

What People Are Saying

John Updike
"Poet of the appetites."— John Updike


W.H. Auden
"I do not know of any one in the United States who writes better prose."— W.H. Auden




Books about: Manic Depression and Creativity or The Fast Food Craze

Candlelight and Wisteria: Recipes and Romance from the Deep South

Author: Lee Scott Academy

In the South, food is woven intricately into the fabric of our lives. This magnificent cookbook, like no other, transports you to a table laden with savory southern fare, and most assuredly candlelight and wisteria.



Thursday, January 22, 2009

Under the Texan Sun or Totally Coffee Cookbook

Under the Texan Sun: The Best Recipes from Lone Star Wineries

Author: Rhonda Cloos

In this delightful book Rhonda Cloos explores connections between the wine, food, and people of the Lone Star state. With recipes from wineries, Texas chefs, plus pairing guides, we get a lesson on what to serve with Texas wines.



Interesting book: AutoCAD2008 3D Modeling Workbook For Dummies or VB and VBA in a Nutshell

Totally Coffee Cookbook

Author: Helene Siegel

Totally Coffee is a delightful addition to the Totally cookbook library. So snuggle up with a comforting hot cup of coffee and this die-cut delight of coffee recipes. Enjoy!

World of Cookbooks

This is a buy you can't beat.Wonderfully inventive recipes---easy to make, very flavorful, and innovatively original, rather than a mere rehash.



Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Boudreauxs Cajun Party Guide or Food Wine Cocktails 2006

Boudreaux's Cajun Party Guide

Author: Larry Boudreaux

Is Larry Boudreaux's third book. It is a fun book designed to help anyone plan a cajun party.

No matter if you are from Louisiana, Maine, or California, this book will help you with 15 different types of Cajun parties, with suggested music, games, jokes, recipes, contest, and even directions to play Bouree, Cajun Scrabble, or to make a Cajun microwave. This guide helps the host by providing authentic Cajun party recipes. The instructions for Cochon de Lait party not only include directions for roasting a suckling pig, but includes frying the gratons. There are two joke-telling sections. First to warm up the party with over a hundred reasons to tell if dat someone is from Louisiana eef...



See also: Marketing de Menu et Direction

Food & Wine Cocktails 2006

Author: Dana Cowin

Raise a glass to Food & Wine's updated tribute to the cocktail, a slim, softcover companion to the magazine's popular Official Wine Guide. In addition to offering 150 signature drinks from the country's most exciting restaurants, bars, and lounges, it contains definitive recipes for the classics.

 As a scene-scoping, style-setting, modern magazine, Food & Wine always keeps tabs on the trendiest nightlife. These cocktails are the ones making a sensation in the newest, hippest eateries and bars throughout the nation, the drinks bartenders get asked for again and again. And that's not all: mix-masters won't find better recipes for such traditional favorites as Manhattans, martinis, and mojitos. Each of the chapters focuses on a particular spirit type—vodka, rum, whiskey—and every page highlights one special cocktail, along with a short description of the establishment that provided the recipe, its address and phone number, and an interesting behind-the-scenes anecdote. There's also useful information on simple recipes for the best bar food, a list of the hottest bartenders around the country, and tips on stocking the bar and buying glassware. For those who want to visit the showcased restaurants and bars, an index lists them all geographically—making this a guide-within-a-guide to America's bestnightlife.



Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Truly Kentucky or Mediterranean Grilling

Truly Kentucky: A Culinary Gift from the Bluegrass

Author: Cookbook Ladies

Simple, traditional recipes presented in a pretty package. This perfect little cookbook features those "most often requested" dishes from the Bluegrass state. This book is truly a culinary gift from Kentucky.



Interesting textbook: Liderança do Vinte e um século

Mediterranean Grilling: More Than 100 Recipes from Across the Mediterranean

Author: Diane Kochilas

Mediterranean Grilling presents a collection of classic and new recipes for flame-kissed dishes from the regions surrounding the Mediterranean Sea, where the great grilling tradition dates back to ancient times, but the flavors are always fresh.

Diane Kochilas takes the familiar and much-loved cooking method of grilling and pairs it with the cuisines of the Mediterranean, introducing home cooks to a whole new world of flavors that can be created in their own backyards. From Turkish kebabs and Spanish-style grilled artichokes to French grillades and Greek vegetable kebabs, Mediterranean Grilling offers an irresistible array of contemporary and traditional grilled specialties.

Enjoy Grilled Tomato Soup with Spicy Yogurt, Greek Lamb Biftekia Stuffed with Spiced Feta, and Swordfish Souvlaki with Lemon-Olive Oil Marinade. Many dishes are simple and served right from the grill, while others are the basis for more complex soups, salads, and pastas. With recipes as varied as goat cheese appetizers and charred pita breads, fresh fish and marinated lamb, garden vegetables and juicy peaches drizzled with honey syrup, as well as dazzling full-color photographs, Mediterranean Grilling lets home cooks turn on the flame and turn up the flavor as never before.



Sunday, January 18, 2009

Simple Thai Cookery or Food Wine Magazines Wine Guide 2006

Simple Thai Cookery

Author: Ken Hom

In Simple Thai Cookery, Ken Hom takes you step by step through 40 of the most popular Thai dishes—from Spicy Noodle Salad and comforting Coconut Chicken Soup to pungent Red Pork Curry. The tried-and-true recipes include appetizing soups and starters, quick and easy fish, meat, and vegetarian main courses, and a variety of savory accompaniments. Step-by-step instructions and color photos accompany each stage of the preparations, and with a menu-planner and guide to essential ingredients, this is a book that will inspire cooks of every ability.

Library Journal

The latest additions to this attractive series (following Raymond Blanc's Simple French Cookery) are devoted to two of America's favorite cuisines. Hom, well known for his Chinese cookbooks, worked as a chef in Thailand for years, and he provides an excellent guide to Thai cooking. Roden is an authority on the foods of the Mediterranean (as well as of the Middle East), and she offers an eclectic selection of her favorite dishes from that region. Each book opens with an illustrated glossary, and each recipe includes step-by-step technique photographs in color. Despite its popularity, there are relatively few books on Thai food, and Hom's accessible introduction should appeal to many home cooks. And though there are dozens of titles on the cooking of the Mediterranean, larger collections will want to consider Roden's latest book. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.



Read also Estándares de Reportaje Financieros Internacionales (IFRS) Cuaderno de ejercicios:Contornos Estándares, Preguntas de Selección múltiple y Estudios del caso con Soluciones

Food & Wine Magazine's Wine Guide 2006

Author: Jamal A Rayyis

Food & Wine's bestselling guide, which sells more than 60,000 copies per year to delighted oenophiles, is back with new features and even more invaluable advice.


Food & Wine magazine, the most trusted and popular publication of the pleasures of the table, brings you everything you need to choose wine like a pro, and enjoy the best wines at the best prices. And this year's version is loaded with new and great features: a guide to buying wine online; an updated Wine Value Finder; expanded coverage of South American wines; a Wine Pronunciation Guide; and information on fabulous winery tours. As always, there are expert, at-a-glance ratings for nearly 1,500 of the most drinkable wines from all of the world's major wine-producing regions--not just the traditional giants (California, France, and Italy), but from Australia, Portugal, and Eastern Europe. Best of all, it's written in layman's language--not wine-speak.

"An accessible and current guide to the most glorious nectar ever made."--Jacques Pépin

"Consider this book your pocket sommelier: comprehensive, accessible, and incredibly useful."--Mario Batali

"Makes the selection and enjoyment of great wine easy and affordable for any budget."--Rachael Ray





Saturday, January 17, 2009

Thai Cooking Made Easy or Complete Book Of Asian Stir fries

Thai Cooking Made Easy: Delectable Thai Meals in Minutes (Learn to Cook Series)

Author: Staff of Periplus

Thai Cooking Made Easy brings over 60 magnificent Thai treats into your kitchen. From fiery hot soups to tangy seafood dishes, this book captures the savory tastes and heavenly flavors of Thai cuisine. Step-by-step recipes show you how to make evergreen Thai dishes such as tom yam soup, pineapple fried rice, and jub chai (mixed vegetables stew). More than 60 full-color photographs bring each dish to life on the page, with flavorful sauces, delicious salads, tempting main dishes and sinful deserts making this the perfect introduction to Thai cuisine. The important elements of this book-the straightforward recipes, careful ingredient listings, and step-by-step instructions-will have you cooking up a Thai culinary storm in no time at all!



Book review: Special Edition Using Microsoft Office Home and Student 2007 Using Series or Inside Microsoft SQL Server 2005

Complete Book Of Asian Stir-fries

Author: Periplus Editions

Fresh and tasty, stir-fries are one of the healthiest ways to prepare food because they are low in fat and high in essential vitamins and minerals. The Complete Book of Asian Stir-Friesis the definitive collection of traditional, contemporary and innovative recipes for lovers of this healthy, delicious method of cooking.

Stir-fries are quick and easy to prepare, and deliver tasty meals with little effort in next to no time. Using fresh, seasonal vegetables and tender meats or simply making the most of leftovers, stir-fries provide healthy and delicious meals the whole family can enjoy. From Stir-fried Ginger Chicken to Soba Noodles with Bell Peppers, this beautifully photographed book will show you how to prepare, step-by-step, the ultimate satisfying stir-fry.



Italy in Small Bites or Winners Circle

Italy in Small Bites

Author: Carol Field

Breakfast, lunch, and dinner may mark the beginning, middle, and end of the day, but for centuries Italians have eaten two small informal meals that come in between. Italy in Small Bites is the first-ever collection of recipes for these bite-size treats, known as spuntini and merende, the soul food of Italy.

Spuntini, the midmorning snack, can be as simple as a sublime walnut-and-raisin-studded coffee cake, while merende, which are enjoyed midafternoon, might be a wedge of onion frittata or artichoke tart, a crunchy pillow of fried dough served with figs or prosciutto, a purée of fava beans, or sweet peppers mounded on a slice of rustic country bread.

The best-known merende in America are pizza and focaccia, but there's an entire universe of appealing food revealed in this book. Though the recipes are tied to centuries of tradition that go back to a time when merende reinvigorated laborers in the fields, they're singularly perfect for contemporary eating in America and are as versatile as they are delicious.

Merende make perfect impromptu meals because they are stunningly simple foods meant to make life easy. Some -- bruschetta with various toppings, frittate, vegetable tarts, polenta crostini -- may be familiar, while others are welcome new discoveries. Served individually or in combination, they can become a meal -- any meal -- and they are healthy, inexpensive, and casual, perfect for the way we live.

Library Journal

Field is the well-known author of several books on Italy and its cuisine, including Celebrating Italy ( LJ 11/15/90) and the widely praised The Italian Baker ( LJ 11/15/85). Now she turns to merende , traditional Italian snack food, a category that includes both the American favorite, pizza, and a wide range of more unusual regional ``little dishes.'' Many merende are based on bread or bread dough, Field's own specialty, and she has collected lots of mouth-watering recipes for bruschetta, crostini, and focaccia in all its incarnations, as well as various sweet and savory breads. There are also salads, bocconcini (``little bites,'' or finger food), and more. Recipes are simple, rustic, and uncomplicated, although some do involve a certain amount of preparation. Considering our current obsession with Italian food and the popularity of snack food, this is sure to be in demand.

BookList

"Tapas" in Spanish and "mezes" in Greek. Now Field explores "merende", midmorning or afternoon snacks enjoyed in the boot-shaped country. There's a scholarly yet friendly tone; we learn about Virgil, Cato, and Cicero wolfing down appetizers while Field explains how she convinced a certain baker to part with the recipe for lemony sweet buns. Many of the more than 150 foodstuffs will have familiar names to those who frequent Italian restaurants in the U.S.: pesto and black olive paste, bruschetta, crostini, polenta, fava bean salad, and biscotti. Others might soon become kitchen favorites, including frico (crisp lacy cheese chips), leftover pasta and eggs, vegetable soup with pesto, sgabei (cheese-filled fried dough wands), and chocolate salame. Suggested variations and combinations are frequently offered; many of the snacks, however, do require some facility with the vagaries of bread dough.



Books about: Sur l'Apprentissage D'organisation

Winners Circle: 10 Years of Award-Winning Homebrew Recipes

Author: American Homebrewers Association

Brew like a winner! This fun collection of 126 original, award-winning homebrew recipes was selected from winners of the American Homebrewers Association National Homebrew Competition.



Friday, January 16, 2009

Happy Birthday or Tequila

Happy Birthday: 22 Spectacularly Easy Birthday Cakes, Amazing to Look at and Quick to Make

Author: Anna Von Marburg

Birthday cakes generally come in two varieties: the basic, straight-from-the-box version, and the labor-intensive, time-consuming specialty cake. Happy Birthday offers an alternative: birthday cakes that are fabulously creative and fun as well as incredibly easy to make. Cake designs for potted sunflowers, football fields, aquariums, and teapots involve recipes that make use of kid-fri<%END%>ly ingredients such as lollipops, candy, and ice cream. Step-by-step instructions and tips for making perfect creations the first time around are included. Designed for times when style is important but convenience is paramount, each cake can be baked and decorated within a few hours.

Author Biography: Anna von Marburg is the author of Cakes in Bloom and is the owner of Anna von Marburg Cakes, which makes elegant and inspired creations for hundreds of clients.

Georgia Family

Offers the most creative and beautiful birthday cakes for boys and girls.

Washington Families Magazine

Sure to stimulate your imagination and become a sensation at any party.



New interesting book: Cocinar con patatas or Entertaining Planner

Tequila

Author: Santiago Melazzini

Santiago Melazzini's short moving pictures--flip books--of literally black-and-white and figuratively colorful Mexican life are as low-tech as it gets: watch the masked luchadores bounce off the wrestling-ring ropes and then fall to the mat, watch the boxer punch, the Mariachi band play, or the tequila have its way, and then watch it all again backwards. An elemental pleasure and an ideal gift.



Potato Book or Food in World History

Potato Book

Author: Romans

This book both traces the history and development of the potato from its beginnings in South America to its current dominance of the food chain in the western world.



Look this: Doing It All Isnt Everything or Your Best Face

Food in World History

Author: J Pilcher

Providing a comparative and comprehensive study of culinary cultures and consumption throughout the world from ancient times to present day, this book examines the globalization of food and explores the political, social and environmental implications of our changing relationship with food.
Including numerous case studies from diverse societies and periods, Food in World History examines and focuses on:
* how food was used to forge national identities in Latin America
* the influence of Italian and Chinese Diaspora on the US and Latin America food culture
* how food was fractured along class lines in the French bourgeois restaurant culture and working class cafes
* the results of state intervention in food production
* how the impact of genetic modification and food crises has affected the relationship between consumer and product.
This concise and readable survey not only presents a simple history of food and its consumption, but also provides a unique examination of world historyitself.



Table of Contents:
1The first world cuisine8
2The Columbian exchange19
3Sugar, spice, and blood27
4Nouvelle cuisines34
5Moral and political economies42
6The industrial kitchen55
7Cuisine and nation-building63
8Empires of food71
9Migrant cuisines79
10Guns and butter91
11The green revolution100
12McDonaldization and its discontents108
13Culinary pluralism113

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Coffee or Cocktail Jungle

Coffee: The Bean of My Existence

Author: Rosanne D Thomas

The ultimate coffee table book: a humorous book for coffee addicts everywhere, with cartoons.



Go to: Fundamentals of Cheese Science or Cookies Year Round

Cocktail Jungle: A Girl's Field Guide to Shaking and Stirring

Author: Nicole Beland

It's a fact, proven by the sea of hot-pink Cosmopolitans ordered at bars from coast to coast: women are now bona-fide drink trendsetters, and they drink differently than men. This lively look at female cocktail culture, packed with dozens of recipes for all manner of mixed drinks, can easily become a girl's best friend-especially if she's got a cocktail shaker and a handful of pals nearby to sip her snazzy libations while dishing some juicy dirt. But The Cocktail Jungle has so much more to offer. In fact, it's a veritable primer of different bar situations and styles, with humorous guides to the features, behaviors, and drinks one can expect to find in each. From the Singapore Slings and Zombies typical of karaoke bars, to classics like sidecars and gimlets, best ordered in sophisticated hotel lounges, this is an essential guide to modern cocktail culture. Nicole Beland, a former senior editor at Cosmopolitan and Mademoiselle magazines, lives in Brooklyn, New York.



In My Kitchen or Tea

In My Kitchen: Food for Family and Friends

Author: Annie Bell

This very personal collection of recipes by acclaimed food writer Annie Bell—the Guild of Food Writers Cookery Journalist of the Year—perfectly reflects the way we cook and live today. Featuring dishes that anyone can make swiftly, easily, and infallibly, it offers something for both quiet family nights and special occasions. Bell organizes her recipes into such categories as Grazing, Weekday Suppers, The Sunday Lunch, Summer Eating, and The Big Event: more than 150 luscious photographs (many taken at Annie’s homes) accompany recipes for delicacies like Cocktail Puffs, Macaroni Shepherd’s Pie, Maryland Crab Cakes, Roast Turkey, and a creamy White Chocolate Mousse Cake. 
Plus, Bell goes beyond the recipes, discussing intelligently designed kitchenware that looks good and make makes cooking simpler.



Book about: Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl Written by Herself or And His Lovely Wife

Tea

Author: Hattie Ellis

In Tea award-winning food writer. Hattie Ellis, leads you through the many different tastes, from the aromatic delicacy of single-estate Darjeelings to the brisk vigor of Assams, from the scented beauty of Chinese crafted varieties to the health-giving properties of green teas. Hattie also explains the finer points in making and serving the perfect cup, and essentials of buying, storing, and selecting the right equipment. Tempting recipes are included, from favorites like iced tea to exotic blends such as chai masala. And Hattie shows how to match tea with food and to use it as a flavoring in dishes, including Tea-smoked Chicken and Jasmine Tea Sorbet.



Food around the World or Butterflies of the Night

Food Around the World: A Cultural Perspective

Author: Margaret McWilliams

Appreciation and understanding of cultures around the world is one of the challenging goals of this brand new book. Food is featured prominently because of its universal appeal and the meaningful ways that geography, climate, economics, and religion have combined with history and culture to define the ingredients and food patterns unique to countries and regions around the world. In addition, the book provides readers with a sound fundamental knowledge of the world's nations and the uniqueness of today's rich cultural patterns. Offers readers recipes, maps, and photographs from such regions of the world as the British Isles, Scandinavia, Italy, Greece, Turkey, India, Southeast Asia, China, South America, and the Caribbean. For clinical dieticians and administrative dieticians in hospitals.



Table of Contents:

I. INFLUENCES ON FOOD AROUND THE WORLD.

1. Food Origins and History.
2. Cultural Landscapes.
3. Religions and Food.

II. EUROPE—ROOTS OF OUR AMERICAN CUISINE.

4. British Isles.
5. Scandinavia.
6. Central Europe.
7. Eastern Europe.
8. Italy.
9. France.

III. ENRICHED BY THE MEDITERRANEAN SPHERE.

10. The Iberian Peninsula.
11. Greece, Turkey, and the Levant.
12. North Africa.

IV. HERITAGE FROM SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA.

13. West Africa.
14. East and South Africa.

V. FOOD TREASURES FROM THE ORIENT AND PACIFIC.

15. India and Its Neighbors.
16. Southeast Asia and Its Islands.
17. China.
18. Korea.
19. Japan.

VI. LATIN AMERICAN FLAVORS.

20. South America.
21. The Caribbean.
22. Central America and Mexico.

VII. AMERICA'S FOOD SCENE TODAY.

23. Who is Eating What?
24. Diet Counseling in Our Cultural Milieu.
Glossary.
Index.

Read also Great Breads or In Your Own Kitchen

Butterflies of the Night: Mama-sans, Geisha, Strippers, and the Japanese Men They Serve

Author: Lisa Louis

Examines the high-class world of exclusive bar hostesses & their traditional counterparts, the Geisha. Exposes the special kind of sleaze of what is known in Japan as the ejaculation industry & discusses the experiences & special problems of foreign women in Japan, both white Europeans & Southeast Asian — who increasingly play a large role in Japans world of night time entertainment. The interviews allow the denizens of the mizu shobai to speak eloquently for themselves. Provides an intimate & vivid picture of a part of Japan few foreigners ever see, but which they must confront to understand Japanese culture & the Japanese as they really are.



Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Everything Cheese Book or Weddings by Martha Stewart

Everything Cheese Book: From Cheddar to Chevre, All You Need to Select and Serve the Finest Fromage

Author: Laura Martinez

Époisses, Explorateur, Emmental—just naming cheeses can be a tongue-twisting game! Learn how to pronounce the names more than 100 types of cheeses and pair them with wine and food with The Everything Cheese Book. Written by a certified "cheese specialist," this book offers you a chance to learn about the history of cheese, while giving you insider tips and more than 100 recipes for preparing cheese-related or cheese-based plates, platters, and hors d'oeuvres.

This mouth-watering resource shows everyone—from the cheese amateur to the connoisseur:

  • Where and how to buy quality cheese
  • How to organize and host cheese parties
  • The art of cheesemaking
  • How to pair cheese with wine
  • How to distinguish several types of cheese by taste, texture, and smell

With The Everything Cheese Book, you will be well on your way to becoming a seasoned affineur.



Read also House of War or Ethical Realism

Weddings by Martha Stewart

Author: Martha Stewart

Nothing is more thrilling and romantic than a beautiful wedding. Here, in a simply spectacular book, Martha Stewart takes us behind the scenes of some of the most lovely weddings ever. Over 40 weddings and receptions, from small, intimate celebrations for 18 to lavish parties for 400, are documented in more than 700 full-color photographs. The settings are as varied as an idyllic country farm in New Jersey, a gracious mansion on eastern Long Island, an elegant townhouse in New York City, a private island in New Hampshire, a ranch in Texas, and the oldest and most beautiful cathedral in Montreal. We see the choices the brides, grooms, and their families made and how they planned every detail of their special day.

All the essential elements of a wedding are discussed in depth in chapters filled with information and ideas: Style, Organization, Invitations, Wedding Dresses, Bridal Bouquets, Ceremony, Music, Decoration, and, of course, Wedding Menus and Cakes. More than 120 recipes are included for varied wedding receptions, from cocktails and hors d'oeuvres to buffets, sit-down lunches and dinners, and even barbecues. Twelve different recipes for traditional as well as nontraditional wedding cakes (including carrot, lemon, and even a cheesecake) are included along with step-by-step instructions for assembling and decorating them.

Weddings are back in style, and anyone who is getting married or is involved in some way with a wedding will want to read and use this wonderfully inspiring book.

Publishers Weekly

This is a lavish, oversize album bursting with intelligent nuptial advice and spectacular color photos, although it is unclear whether the book is intended for the bridal couple or wedding professionals. Caterer Stewart (Entertaining, etc.) documents a rich sampling of weddings at home and club, in farmhouse and on yacht, for first and second marriages, and offers tips on organization, invitations, wedding dresses, ceremonies, music and decoration that will inspire prospective brides and grooms. But a professional readership is suggested by the inclusion of instructions (step-by-step and illustrated) for constructing bridal bouquets and wedding cakes, as well as some 120 eclectic, festive recipesfor example, smoked turkey on currant scones, French bread with strawberry butter, wild-rice pancakes with red-pepper jelly and roast loin of pork with prunes. 100,000 ad/promo; Better Homes and Gardens Book Clubs selection; author tour. (April 1)



The Diabetes Holiday Cookbook or Cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean

The Diabetes Holiday Cookbook: Year-Round Cooking for People with Diabetes

Author: Carolyn Leontos

Delicious, healthy holiday dishes that everyone can enjoy

The Diabetes Holiday Cookbook takes the worry out of holiday menu planning and food preparation for people with diabetes and those who love them. Bursting with flavorful recipes for every occasion, this month-by-month guide to healthy holiday cuisine features new and improved fat and sugar substitutes that were not available even a few years ago.

Now you can celebrate New Year’s Day with chocolate "bread" pudding, make Mother’s Day even more special with a delectable seafood frittata, and conjure up a frightening Halloween concoction of tomato soup with black olive eyeballs for your child. Each complete holiday menu includes fully tested recipes and listings of calorie, fat, and sugar content as well as other important nutritional information. In this comprehensive holiday resource, you’ll find:



• More than 100 appetizing recipes for festive holiday dishes

• Complete, easy-to-put-together menus for 21 holiday celebrations

• Creative suggestions for enhancing flavor without adding calories

• Alternative ingredient suggestions for low-sodium and alcohol-free diets

• Helpful notes on holiday traditions and activities




Look this: Fondues Made Easy or Eating Right in the Renaissance

Cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean: 300 Healthy, Vibrant, and Inspired Recipes

Author: Paula Wolfert

The Cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean refers both Paula Wolfert's love of great food and the pioneering spirit that has inspired her to travel across the globe many times over in search of the world's best recipes. In all of her remarkable books, she delves with tireless enthusiasm into her research and writing, ensuring each recipe's authenticity and accessibility. In The Cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean, she brings readers and cooks into the kitchens that produce the healthy home cooking that is the trademark of such lands as Macedonian, Turkey, Syria, and the countries on the Black Sea.

Wolfert's food dazzles the palate. Her book begins with recipes for sauces and dips, including two walnut and pomegranate sauces; soups include Anatolian Sour Soup and Macedonian "Green Cream." Meat, poultry, and fish dishes include eleven varities of kibbeh, Duck with Quinces, and Skewered Swordfish. Her sumptuous recipes for vegetables and grains--stuffed eggplants, pilafs, and pomegranate-flavored vegetables, to name a few--reflect the bounty and healthful eating patterns of the Eastern Mediterranean.

Wolfert's Middle Eastern grain salads are healthy and rich with flavor. Paula travels into the kitchens of native cooks to ensure that her recipes are as genuine as they are delicious. She takes us into the home of a friend in the Republic of Georgia, whose mother teaches Wolfert how to prepare Chicken Tabaka; to a mountain village in northern Greece where, with a sister food writer, she searches for fine cheese to complete a savory pie; and to a farm in Turkey, where the country's best bread baker tells her secrets of baking unleavened flatgriddle bread.

These delicious, authentic recipes focus on the healthy eating patterns for which the Eastern Mediterranean is increasingly being recognized. Wolfert's recipes are as delightful to read as they are to use. Armchair cooks and travelers will be moved by the descriptive geography and resonate personal stories Paula Wolfert relates along with her fabulous dishes. Wolfert's expertise is renowned among food lovers, amateur and professional, and her joy of discovering new ways to prepare food is infectious to her many devoted readers.

Craig Claiborne

I think she's one of the finest and most influential food writers in this country. Her recipes are done with incredible accuracy. She brings a sense of wonder to matters of taste. She also has an uncommonly fine palate. In sum, Paula is one of the leading lights in contemporary gastronomy.

Trish Hall

Ms. Wolfert does not just writer recipes; she writes about the recipes, and about the food, and about the people who make the food. —New York Times

Anthony Dias Blue

A cookbook by Paula Wolfert is cause for celebration. Ms. Wolfert may be America's most knowledgeable food person and her books are full of insight, passion and brilliance.

Publishers Weekly

Food fads may come and go, but meanwhile Wolfert ( Couscous and Other Good Food From Morocco ) runs off to some little-documented area of the world and puts it on the (American) culinary map. One of the first food writers to recognize the importance of Mediterranean cuisines, she turns now to the Eastern Mediterranean. Encompassing portions of the Balkans, Turkey, Syria and Greece, the diet of the region depends on grains, legumes, vegetables and nuts, while avoiding meat or using it in small portions. True, this style of cooking is ideal for Americans obsessed with the Food Pyramid dietary guidelines, but Wolfert does not belabor the point. Not only does she offer wholesome recipes easily adaptable to American homes, but she also includes some of the more unusual preparations. A Macedonian nettle and cheese pie is so delicious, she claims, that Wolfert began growing the prickly greens herself. The traditional meaty kibbeh, usually a lump of ground lamb, she reinterprets as a pumpkin kibbeh, stuffed with spinach, chick peas and walnuts. Voices from native cooks, visited over a span of five years, add color, humor and realism to the melting pots of Macedonia, Turkey, the Levant and the Republic of Georgia. Wolfert is careful to add acknowledgements and extra tidbits of advice to help preparations go smoothly. Moreover, the general tone of the book is cheerful and encouraging. No matter how stinging the nettles, one is tempted to grab them firmly, rub them with kosher salt to remove the stings and blanch them for a pie. (June)

Library Journal

Wolfert is widely recognized as an authority on Mediterranean cuisines; her Couscous and Other Good Food from Morocco (1973) is a classic, and her more recent Paula Wolfert's World of Food (LJ 10/15/88) offers a cook's tour of the region. Here, however, she focuses on four lesser-known areas: Macedonia and northern Greece, Turkey, the Republic of Georgia, and the countries of the Levant, particularly Syria. Wolfert spent five years traveling throughout these diverse regions to write this book, visiting dozens of home cooks in their kitchens and tracking down obscure recipes and culinary traditions. As always, the book is impressively researched and beautifully written. The recipes are intriguing and painstakingly detailed, among them Macedonian Nettle and Cheese Pie, Three Caucasian Soups, and Gaziantep-Style Chopped Salad. Several recent titles have touched upon some of these areas, but Wolfert's is unique. An essential purchase. [BOMC HomeStyle main selection.]



Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Fondue or Girls Guide to Wine

Fondue: Cheese, Vegetable, or All Kinds of Meat, Cook Them All Right at the Table

Author: Marlisa Szwillus

Vegetable, cheese, meat, poultry, and dessert fondues -- perfect for parties or cozy gatherings.



Look this: God of War or Linux Iptables Pocket Reference

Girl's Guide to Wine

Author: Susy Atkins

Choosing from a diverse selection of wines can be a daunting prospect for even the most fearless of girls. Not anymore! Here comes the very first handbag-sized, hilarious, and informative solution to the tricky process of picking the perfect wine for every occasion. It offers sound, savvy advice for women who want to select a wine with ease and style. It even helps identify the perfect man to go with that glass! Lively and easy-reading, Girls' Guide to Wine is ideal for females who love the fruit of the vine. . .and want to learn more about the art of drinking and enjoying it.



Hands Off Cooking or Behind Bars

Hands-Off Cooking: Low-Supervision, High-Flavor Meals for Busy People

Author: Ann Martin Rolk

Perfect for today's hectic lifestyles, this quick-and-easy cookbook will help home cooks free up extra time without sacrificing great homemade meals. Distinctively different, this cookbook features dishes that can be prepared fast and left unattended while the cook answers an e-mail, spends time with the kids (or the guests), or simply relaxes. More than 100 delicious recipes include everything from main dishes and sides to breads and desserts. There are recipes for the crock-pot, stovetop, and oven. Unlike typical "quick" dishes, these emphasize freshness and flavor and avoid highly processed foods. With Hands-Off Techniques, Stress Savers, Eye Appeal ideas, useful tips on ingredients and equipment, plus timesaving recipes, Hands-Off Cooking is the cookbook busy people can't wait to get their hands on.



See also: The New Art of Running or Running past 50

Behind Bars: The Straight-Up Tales of a Big-City Bartender

Author: Ty Wenzel

After reading Behind Bars, a no-holds-barred tell-all in the spirit of Kitchen Confidential, you'll never look at your favorite bartender the same way again.

Ty Wenzel offers a raw and clever account of slinging drinks in New York City on the Bowery before and during its renaissance. Wenzel, now thirty-six, has just thrown in the towel after a decade at the swank Marion's Continental Restaurant and Lounge--a gig that was supposed to be a temporary escape after corporate burnout, but instead, like with most bartenders, took over her life.

Honest, clever, and often scathingly funny, this memoir at once offers outrageous tales, the dirty little secrets of the trade, and inspired commentary on bar culture and the human condition. Wenzel's candid stories of life behind the bar covers everything: sex, money, celebrities, the tricks mixers play on you to get you to stay on that stool, how to jumpstart your own bartender fantasy, that all-important tip . . . and how "pink drinks" like the Cosmopolitan are ruining civilization.

Behind Bars is also a riveting narrative of Wenzel's life outside the bar, which is complicated by her Islamic background, her drive to save enough money and get out of "the life," and the ultimate realization that the grueling lifestyle that is driving her crazy is also something she has grown to love.

Publishers Weekly

In this self-absorbed, mildly amusing, but ultimately uninspired memoir, Wenzel offers her bona fides-a Muslim born in Turkey who moves to New York, attends fashion school, rejects the "shallow and harsh world" of working at Cosmopolitan magazine and spends a decade tending bar in a fashionable Lower East Side club. She then spends the next 250 pages recounting what she learned there, which isn't much: bartenders use sex and flirting to get more tips; a good sexy bartender in New York City can make a lot of money from tips; many movie stars and rock stars (she lists about 30 by name) are good tippers; bartenders are usually pursuing "creative endeavors"; people who drink a lot often throw up. When she isn't recounting details of her nightlife, she often mentions her novelist husband, Kurt Wenzel, but she never really says what her own creative endeavor is outside of making "enough money to stop agonizing about bills every month." And her occasional attempts at sociological insight-"The age of Starbucks has given birth to a generation of people who can't see past their own, self-magnified needs"-are inevitably and hilariously undercut by the author's staggering self-centeredness and blissfully unaware cliches ("Alcohol is a great way to soften the blows of life") deployed throughout the book. (Aug.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

A former "spineless, frustrated Islamic New Jersey girl" chronicles her decade-long bartending stint at Marion's, a "kitschy fifties knockoff" in Manhattan. Wenzel was in it for the money, like most bartenders. That woman behind the counter batting her eyelashes isn't in love with you, the author explains; she's in love with your tip, and it better be decent or your night is going to be a thirsty one. Bars are the stomping ground of outrageous behavior, and Wenzel has plenty of stories about mean and stupid drunks, about men who simply urinate where they stand or sit ("You ever hear of Depends diapers?" she asks), about sex ("Dry humping and heavy necking are de rigueur at the bar, but outright fornication does transpire on occasion. . . . Ah, if restaurant bathrooms could talk!"), about squirting Visine into drinks of the truly loathed, about managers stealing bartenders' tips. "Girly drinks" are undermining the nation's foundations, she tells us, and "taking tobacco out of the environs of a bar is like taking the bubbles out of champagne." Now and again as she lays out the dos and don'ts of bar behavior, Wenzel's vibe gets a little thick: "My wet dream is serving other bartenders. . . . I know they are going to take care of me and I am certainly going to do anything they want short of bending over." But the vibe in most bars is also thick, she reminds us: "Let's face it, God invented bars so people could get laid." For those with a serious bar fixation, here's a look into the barkeep's not-always-enviable world. For those who never seem to be able to get the mixer's attention at a packed bar, here's a helpful hint: you pay for it. Enough jaundice to turn the paper yellow, but alsoenough pep and advice on bar etiquette to get you on the barstool for a test drive. Agent: Douglas Stewart/Curtis Brown



Table of Contents:
Shaken but Not Stirred1
Sex with a Twist17
The Rules: How to Date the Bartender61
To Tip or Die in Manhattan73
Pink Drinks and the Downfall of Culture99
The Orphans119
At the Kahiki Lounge151
There's a Fly in My Martini175
Still Want to Mix?223
Last Call257

Monday, January 12, 2009

Organic Kitchen Garden or Caribbean Cocktails

Organic Kitchen Garden

Author: Juliet Roberts

This gardening guide makes going organic--and enjoying the unmatched taste of fresh, pure produce--easy! Beautifully photographed in the 18th century walled kitchen of Audley End in Essex, and written by expert journalist Juliet Roberts, it explains all a newcomer needs to know about setting up a vegetable patch, preparing the soil, choosing and caring for crops, and staggering the harvest throughout the season. Learn how to grow everything from tomatoes to potatoes, salad greens to cabbages. Helpful monthly lists provide reminders of what jobs need doing when, and there are tips on composting, pest and weed control, plant health care, and even watering.



New interesting book: Eating Alive Prevention Thru Good Digestion or Awakening Your Sexuality

Caribbean Cocktails

Author: Jennifer Trainer Thompson

JENNIFER TRAINER THOMPSON is an accomplished cook, a James Beard Award nominee, and author or coauthor of eight cookbooks, two nonfiction books, and numerous articles. The owner and chef of the Jump Up & Kiss Me brand of food products and hot sauces, Thompson lives with her family in rural Massachusetts.



Cocina sana or Elegant Olive

Cocina sana (Cocina tendencias Series)

Author: Blum

A new concept in cookbooks, this series is designed for those who want to replicate at home the trendy international cuisine they typically enjoy at restaurants. Simple and nutritious recipes put elegant dishes within the reach of the novice cook. Each book in the series contains 50 recipes.


Un concepto nuevo de libros de cocina, diseñada pensando en los que quieren replicar los platos culinarios internacionales que normalmente disfrutan en los restaurantes. Recetas sencillas y saludable para hacer platos elegantes para los principiantes.



Interesting book: An Economic Analysis of the Family or Intermediate Accounting

Elegant Olive (Cook West)

Author: Teresa Kennedy

Long a staple of world cuisine, olives are beloved by good cooks everywhere.

From the open markets of the Mediterranean to New York City's trendy corner delis, the olive's popularity only continues to soar. Enjoy more than 50 recipes for olive lovers everywhere, including Olives Baked in Red Wine, Muffalatta Olive Salad, Pork Tenderloin with Olive and Corn Salsa, and even a Southwest Vodka Martini. 24 color photos.

About the Cook West Series: Savor the flavors of the West. Each book in the Cook West Series celebrates the tastes, colors, aromas, and ingredients that create the food of the American West. Home cooks and industry professionals alike will welcome these single-ingredient cookbooks into their kitchens. Each title in the Cook West Series offers 50 original recipes and helpful tips to impress, inspire, and invigorate. Western cuisine is gaining in popularity, and rightly so! Where, but in the West, can one experience the marital bliss of chile and chocolate? Or a refreshing glass of prickly pear lemonade on a hot summer day? Soothe your soul with the creaminess of avocado or allow your taste buds to dance around a tantalizing olive. Enjoy the pleasantly stimulating aroma of roasting garlic or the zesty tang of cilantro. From rubs and sauces to delightful desserts, Western cooks have laid claim to a culinary art as original and distinct as the landscape itself. Conveniently sized and affordably priced, each book in the Cook West Series is the perfect addition for every cookbook library.



Recipes from Historic America or Mustard Seed Market and Cafe Natural Foods Cookbook

Recipes from Historic America: Cooking and Traveling with America's Finest Hotels

Author: Linda Bauer

Fed up with fast food? Tired of the boring chain restaurant scene? Why not please your palate, nourish your mind and enjoy a bit of unique American history? From a wind-swept beach experience, to a magnificent mansion on a wooded hillside, to a serene lake setting, the rich fabric of America has been preserved and is available to diners in some of the best restaurants in the country. Recipes from Historic America combines stories from the past with enticing recipes and information for visiting or contacting the establishments.

This volume is an effort to help visitors, locals, and gourmands enjoy some of the finest food and the most interesting restaurants in our country. Simply choose an area in one of the seven regions and decide which historic restaurant to visit. Pictures of the properties are included along with a page or more of history for each. The locations and methods of contact are also offered and several of the chef's favorite recipes, which are on the menu, are included.

Deborah Ebster Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information - Library Journal

The Bauers (with more than 20 years of experience writing international food and travel columns) beckon readers to visit—with or without leaving home—family-owned inns, secluded resorts, spas, and landmark hotels with historic restaurants. Their well-presented, easy-reading book is a pleasing combination of mouth-watering recipes, stunning color photos, and irresistible stories that showcase 45 fascinating yet diverse lodging and dining venues across the United States. The text is also peppered with occasional well-chosen quotations and witticisms about food, restaurants, cooking, and eating. With foreign travel becoming increasingly problematic, the authors achieve their goal of inviting readers "to please your palate, nourish your mind, and enjoy a bit of unique American history at the same time." Though this work is probably not an essential purchase for most libraries, those that do choose to add it to their travel or culinary collections will undoubtedly receive appreciative kudos from grateful readers, cooks, and travelers—armchair and otherwise.



Book review: Ultimate Book of Beer Trivia or Everybody Loves Pizza

Mustard Seed Market and Cafe Natural Foods Cookbook

Author: Bev Shaffer

Based on the popular market, café, and cooking school founded in Ohio in 1981, this cookbook provides more than 240 natural brunch, soup, salad, fish, meat, vegetable, grain, pasta, drink, and sweets recipes. It includes indexes for gluten-free and vegetarian recipes.



Sunday, January 11, 2009

Real Life Entertaining or Complete Slow Cooker Cookbook

Real Life Entertaining: Easy Recipes and Unconventional Wisdom

Author: Jennifer Rubell

Forget the perfectly pressed linen. Forget the name cards at every guest's place. Forget the full bar, the four-course meal, and all the fussy little details that supposedly make parties divine. Who has the house, the money, or the time to throw that kind of party, anyway?

In Real Life Entertaining, Jennifer Rubell offers break-the-rules entertaining ideas and quick, easy, stylish recipes for last-minute drop-in dinners, sit-down meals, brunches, buffets, and one-pot meals. Conventional wisdom says it's rude to invite someone to dinner on the same day. Jennifer's real life wisdom says it's never rude to invite guests to your home. The worst that will happen is that they'll be busy and say no. Conventional wisdom says never serve the same meal that you offered guests the last time. Jennifer says if you've got a signature dish, flaunt it!

Jennifer incorporates her relaxed, lively style into a variety of festive themes, from an evening of red wine and bruschetta, to a New York-style brunch, to a one-pot meal of the easiest -- and tastiest! -- meatballs you'll ever make. The recipes are simple and the ingredients lists are short, so you can whip up party-friendly fare such as Thai Chicken Wings, Sesame-Mint Pita Chips, and Grilled Shrimp with Garlic and Citrus in mere minutes.

With Jennifer's expert party tricks, plus full-color photographs throughout, Real Life Entertaining is the ultimate go-to party guide. Jennifer will show you how to get your guests to pitch in and how to make sure that you have as much fun as the people you've invited. Never again will you panic at the prospect of a party.

Publishers Weekly

Entertainment columnist for the Miami Herald's Home & Design magazine and a boutique hotel owner, Rubell presents her unfussy approach to entertaining in this fun, energetic book. She arranges the recipes into seven sections, each focusing on a different type of gathering (e.g., "Dinner for a Crowd"; "Lunch Buffets"). At the start of each chapter, Rubell discusses how many people to invite, how to set the mood and what drinks to serve. As she promises, the recipes are easy, even for inexperienced cooks, yet are tasteful and delicious, often relying on staples like vinegars and mustard. Fresh herbs also find their way into most recipes, such as Grilled Shrimp with Garlic and Citrus, and Grilled Skirt Steak with Orange-Mint Chimichurri. "Party Tricks" are useful, suggesting, for instance, that the host bring the toaster into the dining room during brunch, so everyone can toast their own bagel without disrupting the conversation. "Real Life Wisdom" sidebars remind hosts to keep stress levels low when entertaining by doing whatever feels right to them, regardless of traditional rules. The book's only weak link is its dessert chapter, with just a handful of recipes, all of them sauces for ice cream. Still, this is a strong entry in the crowded entertaining field. (May) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Owner of several boutique hotels in Miami and in Washington, DC, Rubell writes about entertaining for such magazines as Domino and Food & Wine. In her first book, she offers suggestions and guidelines for a variety of casual occasions, from "Drop-in Dinners" to "Lunch Buffets" to "Dinner for a Crowd." Each section opens with "Essentials," from the basic concept to how to set the mood to "the ultimate sign of success." She includes helpful tips throughout, along with sidebars on real life versus conventional wisdom on entertaining. Rubell writes with enthusiasm, but some of the recipes seem problematic (e.g., garlic-roasted chicken breasts would surely be overcooked after one hour in a 400-degree oven, while the garlic in Chicken with Garlic and Rosemary-the cloves from four heads cooked in a hot pan for just ten minutes-is likely to be undercooked). Nevertheless, this is an engaging book that will no doubt be in demand. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.



Books about: Funding Evil or On the Fireline

Complete Slow Cooker Cookbook: Essential Recipes for Hearty and Delicious One-Pot Meals

Author: Wendy Louis

Slow cooking is bringing thousands of families back to the dinner table for hearty, homey dinners that are delicious, nutritious, and easy to prepare. The Complete Slow Cooker Cookbook is filled with more than 180 of the best slow cooker recipes that the entire family will love, including appetizers, beverages, side dishes, soups, stews, main courses, holiday foods, and desserts.

Author and crockery connoisseur Wendy Louise also shows you how to unveil recipes long buried in your recipe box and bring back memories of grandma's cooking, with instructions for converting heirloom "from scratch" recipes into delicious creations of your own.

Families love coming home to the aromas of these hearty, slow cooked meals that are a breeze to prepare, with no mess and no stress. For experienced cooks and newcomers alike, The Complete Slow Cooker Cookbook is the perfect guide to the delicious world of family style, slow cooked crockery meals.



Polish and Russian or Artful Cookie

Polish and Russian: 70 Traditional Step-by-Step Dishes from Eastern Europe

Author: Lesely Chamberlian

This book is a comprehensive and fascinating collection of recipes that have been gathered from this region, which stretches from the Baltic Sea in the north to the Black SEa in the south.



See also: Microsoft Log Parser Toolkit or Tales of Symphonia

Artful Cookie: Baking and Decorating Delectable Confections

Author: Aaron Morgan

Thanks to the careful guidance and boundless creativity of Aaron Morgan, an experienced and talented pastry chef, even the most intimidated cook can achieve spectacular results. Most of these 34 cookies use a simple sugar, shortbread, or gingerbread base, so they’re easy to make. Magnificent color photographs and easy-to-follow instructions will have you piping, dipping, and painting these delicacies in no time at all. For pure indulgence, imagine this: luscious chocolate crowns sitting upon a crunch cookie base, covered in a thin layer of mouthwatering white chocolate. Kids will keep on begging for more of the peanut butter and jelly cookie rolls. With so many wonderful treats to make, the cookie jar will never go empty again.



Saturday, January 10, 2009

Cocktail or Diabetic Living Cookbook

Cocktail: Over 200 of the Best

Author: Hamlyn

From classics like the Manhattan and Dry Martini to contemporary cocktails like the Godfather Sour and the Rattlesnake, here are 200 of the all-time best mixed drinks. But this is no mere recipe collection: with instructions for creating stunning layered effects in the glass, making novelty garnishes, and adding cocktail ingredients in the correct order, learn to present your cocktail right. Plus, novice bartenders will find tips for matching spirits with their ideal partner, such as gin with citrus and berry flavors, and tequila with tomato and ginger, or tart fruit. In addition to a concise history of each drink, advice for choosing the right glass, using shakers, blenders, and other tools of the trade will ensure both a pleasurable and perfect cocktail every time.



Table of Contents:
Introduction     6
Tools of the trade     10
The drinks and their glasses     14
The spirits and their partners     18
Mastering the art of garnishing     23
Perfecting the craft     28
Vodka     34
Rum     66
Gin     86
Whisky     104
Tequila     118
Brandy     132
Other wines and spirits     140
Glossary     154
Index     158
Acknowledgements     160

Book about: The Ultimate Body Rolling Workout or Making Kind Choices

Diabetic Living Cookbook

Author: Better Homes Gardens

More than 160 great-tasting recipes designed for people living with (or at risk of developing) diabetes, but flavorful enough to satisfy everyone at the table-no need to cook separate meals!

Healthful choices for snacks, breakfast, appetizers, main dishes, breads, sides, beverages, and even desserts.

Savor Rosemary Potato Frittata, Salmon Penne Salad, Mocha Cake with Berries, and much more.

Every recipe includes exchanges and complete nutritional information.

Sidebars throughout the book spotlight helpful tips on healthy cooking techniques, smart ways to dine out, and lifestyle ideas that make living with diabetes easier.

Advice from professionals on how to get the best results when cooking with sugar substitutes.

Information and advice on living with diabetes, avoiding complications and successfully coping with its challenges.

A special section for parents of children with diabetes provides age-appropriate advice on helping them maximize control.

BONUS: Menus and advice from The Diabetic Chef.



Russian Heritage Cookbook or Pierre Franey Cooks With His Friends

Russian Heritage Cookbook

Author: Lynn Visson

Alongside the splendors of tsarist Russia-its art, architecture, and literature-sits its cuisine, a marvelous, little-known part of Russian heritage. Based on favorite family recipes, collected by the author from the private collections of the old Russian йmigrй community of New York City, The Complete Russian Cookbook represents the restoration of an entire culinary heritage, which previously existed only in memory.

Most Americans have experienced little of Russian cuisine: Beef Stroganoff, Pirozhki, Borscht, and a few others. The Complete Russian Cookbook brings together the best of these classic dishes, along with hundreds of recipes for the sumptuous meals that have delighted generations, each tested by both Russian and American cooks and adapted for the modern kitchen. More than 360 recipes are included, covering everything from hors d'oeuvres to main dishes to desserts and beverages. Potato Pirozhki with Mushroom Filling, Carp а la Russe, and Almond Cake with Apricot Wine Filling are just a few of the delicious dishes to be found here, accompanied by useful introductions that provide a history of Russian cuisine.

Library Journal

In this revised and expanded edition of The Complete Russian Cookbook (originally published in 1988), Visson, a writer and interpreter whose parents emigrated from Russia, was able to incorporate new recipes from young and old cooks in Russia, all eager to preserve the traditional recipes of their homeland. (The first edition contained recipes primarily from members of New York City's emigre community.) Included here are dozens of recipes, many hearty, homey dishes along with those reserved for special occasions. Although Visson provides a general introduction to Russian food, and individual chapters open with more specific detail, few recipes include headnotes. Visson's ambitious book also lacks the charm of Catherine Cheremeteff Jones's recent memoir with recipes, A Year of Russian Feasts, but most collections will still want it for the sheer number of recipes it contains. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.



Read also El Guía de Supervivencia del Gerente de Caso:Ganancia de Estrategias para Práctica Clínica

Pierre Franey Cooks With His Friends

Author: Pierre Franey

For this book, the late Pierre Franey---originator of the popular "60-minute Gourmet" column for The New York Times, author of thirteen books, and star of the popular PBS cooking shows "Cuisine Rapid," "Cooking in America," and "Cooking in France"--traveled throughout Europe, cooking with seventeen friends. All are top chefs or restaurateurs who have recognized the need to cook in a lighter, healthier way, both for their costumers and for themselves. In France, Spain, Italy, Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands, these chefs combine moderate amounts of butter, cheese, and oil with fresh local produce and masterful combinations of herbs to create healthy, satisfying, and delicious food.

Among Franey's friends were Paul Bocuse, Michel Guerard, and Marc Meneau in France; Fredy Girardet in Switzerland; Pierrs Wynants of Comme Chez Soi in Belgium; and Antonio Belles of the tapas bar in the Hotel Arts in Barcelona. These world-famous chefs provide both classic and innovative recipes, such as Bocuse's Black Bass with a Potato Crust, and Guerard's Pan con Tomate, a staple of Catalonian cuisine. Franey contributed some one hundred of his own health-conscious recipes, inspired by watching his friends cook and visiting their local markets. These include such tempting dishes as Spicy Shrimp and Squid Salad, Penne with Baby Spinach and Fresh Peas, and Sauteed Apples in Calvados.

The result of Franey's journey is an international sampling of delicious health-conscious cooking from great European chefs and from Graney himself, who was one of America's most loved culinary figures.

Library Journal

Sadly, Franey, perhaps best known as the "60-Minute Gourmet," died shortly before this book was finished. His daughter Claudia, who'd been working as his collaborator, completed the book, which now stands as a tribute to the popular and personable chef. Filled with stunning color photographs, this volume is the companion to the upcoming PBS series Pierre Franey's Cooking in Europe. Franey visited and cooked with some of Europe's best chefs-e.g., Fredy Girardet in Switzerland and Michelin stars Marc Meneau and Michel Guerard in France-in search of low-fat dishes. There are several recipes from each chef, along with those Franey developed for the series and other favorites, 125 in all. A pleasure to read and to cook from, this is highly recommended. [BOMC selection.]



Table of Contents:
INTRODUCTION

PIERRE FRANEY WITH PAUL BOCUSE

MICHEL GUERARD

JUAN-MARI & ELENA ARZAK

FERRAN ADRIA, ANTONIO BELLES, & GARY DANKO

BRUNA & NADIA SANTINI

PAOLA & MAURIZIO CAVAZZINI

FREDY GIRARDET

HARALD WOHLFAHRT, CLAUS-PETER LUMPP & PETER MULLER

ROGER SOUVEREYNS

PIERRE WYNANATS

MAARTJE BOUDELING

MARC MENEAU

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

CONVERSION CHARTS

INDEX

Friday, January 9, 2009

Wraps And Roll Ups Revised Edition or Vegetarian Nutrition

Wraps And Roll Ups, Revised Edition

Author: Dona Z Meilach

Sandwiches beware! Wraps and roll-ups are taking the country by storm. Look for recipes for tortillas and other wrappers; rice, beans and other stuffings; salads, slaw, salsa and other accompaniments; and meat, poultry, fish and other fillings. Use one of dozens of recipes, or mix and match the components for endless variety.



Go to: Survey of Accounting or Just a Click Away

Vegetarian Nutrition

Author: Joan Sabat

Approximately 12 million U.S. citizens consider themselves vegetarians and 13.5 percent of all U.S. households claim to have at least one family member practicing some form of vegetarianism. Vegetarian Nutrition provides data to help explain the preventive role of vegetarian diets for many chronic diseases such as heart disease and some types of cancer. As a professional reference, this book is an invaluable resource for those interested in vegetarianism and/or public nutrition.

Booknews

Sabat<'e> (nutrition, epidemiology, preventive medicine, Loma Linda U.) selects articles that address major research on semi-vegetarians, LOV's (lacto-ovo vegetarians), vegans, macrobiotics, fruitarians. First, there are descriptions of vegetarianism, trends toward it, and the risk-to-benefit ratio of the diet. A section on chronic disease prevention addresses coronary disease, cancer, obesity, osteoporosis, diabetes, neurological disorders, and longevity. A more recent and refined argument against vegetarianism is taken up in a section on the human life-cycle: the benefits or dangers of vegetarianism to children, women in the childbirth years, the elderly, and athletes. Recommendations for a healthy vegetarian diet focus on nutrients, phytochemicals, vegetarian diets for chronic disease prevention, and developing a vegetarian food guide. Finally, there is the environmental impact of meat production, vegetarian morality, the historical context of vegetarianism, and the confluence of vegetarianism with religion and spirituality. And yes, there is much discussion of Vitamin B 12, that major small thorn in most vegetarian rationales. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)



Table of Contents:
Sect. IBackground
1Vegetarian Diets: Descriptions and Trends3
2The Public Health Risk-to-Benefit Ratio of Vegetarian Diets - Changing Paradigms19
Sect. IIVegetarian Diets and Chronic Disease Prevention
3Vegetarianism, Coronary Risk Factors and Coronary Heart Disease33
4Vegetarian Diets and Cancer Risk55
5Vegetarian Diets and Obesity Prevention91
6Vegetarian Diets in the Prevention of Osteoporosis, Diabetes, and Neurological Disorders109
7Does Low Meat Consumption Contribute to Greater Longevity?135
Sect. IIIAdequacy of Vegetarian Diets through the Life Cycle and in Special Groups
8Physical Growth and Development of Vegetarian Children and Adolescents173
9Vegetarian Diets in Pregnancy and Lactation195
10Women's Reproductive Function221
11A Vegetarian Diet: Health Advantages for the Elderly251
12Implications of the Vegetarian Diet for Athletes277
Sect. IVRecommendations for Healthy Vegetarian Diets
13Nutrients of Concern in Vegetarian Diets299
14Health-Promoting Phytochemicals: Beyond the Traditional Nutrients333
15Vegetarian Diets and Dietary Guidelines for Chronic Disease Prevention: How Meatless Diets Conform to Current Recommendations for Health Eating371
16Developing a Vegetarian Food Guide411
Sect. VGlobal Issues and Non-nutritional Perspectives of Vegetarian Diets
17Environmental Impacts of Meat Production and Vegetarianism441
18Meatless Diets, a Moral Imperative?463
19The Historical Context of Vegetarianism483
20Religion, Spirituality, and a Vegetarian Dietary507
Index533

In Bad Taste or Food Safety

In Bad Taste?: The Adventures and Science Behind Food Delicacies

Author: Massimo Francesco Marcon

Part travelogue, part scientific investigation, Dr. Marcone describes his journeys into remote regions of the world, often risking life and limb at the hands of rebel warlords, corrupt police, international smugglers, and hungry crocodiles. He does this all in the search for the hidden secrets and science behind the world's most expensive and bizarre foods. The stories and information in this eclectic collection of food delicacies will certainly satisfy the curiosity of food aficionados and adventure travelers alike but is also sure to whet the appetites of the just curious.



Table of Contents:
Foreword   Jay Ingram     9
Introduction     13
Introducing Dr. Massimo Marcone     15
Indonesia     23
Ethiopia     49
Morocco     73
Malaysia, Indonesia, and Hong Kong     97
Italy (Sardinia and Abruzzi)     129
Canada and the United States     149
Thailand and Mexico     167
Inside the "CSI Laboratory"     183
Taste Development     193

New interesting book: Cocina Rapida y Fresca or Recipe Hall of Fame Cookbook

Food Safety: Old Habits, New Perspectives

Author: Phyllis Entis

Food Safety offers an intriguing, anecdotal assessment of food- and waterborne illnesses "from farm to fork." It examines how modern technology and traditional views about food safety and food handling can affect consumer safety and it concludes that the responsibility for a safe food supply lies with a variety of people, including regulators, food producers, food handlers, and consumers. Readers will become familiar with the history and causes behind many well-known outbreaks from cholera to E. coli O157:H7 to mad cow disease.

What People Are Saying

Chris Thoms
I found it an informative and enjoyable read that should appeal to a wide readership. The author reminds us of the importance of a co-ordinated approach to food safety by providing the reader with key examples of food-borne disease outbreaks associated with breaches of biosecurity, food processing and handling along the food chain to the consumer.