Wednesday, December 31, 2008

New McDougall Cookbook or Busy Peoples Fun Fast Festive Christmas Cookbook

New McDougall Cookbook: 300 Delicious Ultra-Low-Fat Recipes

Author: John A McDougall

Three hundred meatless, dairyless, high-carbohydrate, and virtually fat-free recipes comprise this excellent new cookbook by the creators of the McDougall Program. Created and tested by Mary McDougall, these delicious dishes are adapted from a variety of ethnic traditions and offer sensational meals for any time of day.

Publishers Weekly

The McDougall diet is unlike most medically based diet plans in that it doesn't limit the amount eaten, but radically changes what is eaten and how it is prepared. These recipes eliminate fats, meats and dairy products. The McDougalls ( The McDougall Program ) run an in-patient program at St. Helena Hospital in Santa Rosa, Calif., for people who want to drastically change their eating habits. The recipes substitute water for cooking oil and soy-based products for dairy ingredients. The McDougalls write that their diet plan is less extreme than the Kempner Diet developed at Duke University Medical School, and that it would seem to be a good choice for athletes or people who must change their eating habits either because of health problems or severe food allergies. For the rest of the eating public, however, the McDougalls's claims are bound to raise eyebrows; to wit, ``The incidence of human leukemia worldwide is in direct proportion to the amount of dairy products consumed,'' and ``I realized early in my career that the diseases from which most people suffer are caused by eating too much rich food.'' To their credit, the McDougalls do offer a wide range of recipes drawn from many different ethnic backgrounds--e.g., black bean burritos and waffles. They also discuss how to adapt a recipe to their regimen. Their recipes are well-organized, and a list of health food mail-order stores is provided. Given the draconian nature of the McDougall diet, however, it's not something to start without careful consideration. (July)

Library Journal

The McDougall Program is a health plan that revolves around a starch-based fat-and cholesterol-free diet. John McDougall, author of The McDougall Program ( LJ 4/15/90), runs an in-patient program at a California hospital. Mary, his wife, developed most of the 300-plus recipes presented here. A few, such as a Holiday Vegebird constructed out of brown rice and bread stuffing (it even has fake giblets), come from fans of the program. The McDougall plan does have some famous followers, but, overall, the dishes in this collection are unlikely to attract many new converts. And, oddly enough for a diet book, there are no nutritional analyses attached to individual recipes. Buy for demand.



Interesting book: Skinny Bitch or Warming and Welcoming Big Soups

Busy People's Fun, Fast, Festive Christmas Cookbook

Author: Dawn Hall

Dawn Hall's 7-ingredients or less, 30-minutes or less formula is adapted for the Christmas season. As a working mom, she knows how hard it is to prepare all the Christmas goodies and entertain friends and family on a budget, while juggling an already full schedule. Here are recipes and plans for cookie swaps, edible and affordable teacher's gifts, and easy but remarkable meals for your family and friends whether it is the office potluck lunch, an elegant Christmas eve buffet, or a fun breakfast under the tree.

Recipes will include Yuletide Pork Roast with Lemon Pepper and Rosemary, Cranberry Salsa, Busy Holiday Bruschetta, Festive Frittata, Broccoli and Tomato Trifle, Snowball Cheese Balls, Cranberry-Walnut Mini Scones and much more.

A special section will provide creative recipes for leftovers including Turkey a la King over stuffing.



Table of Contents:

Contents

Menus at a Glance....................vi
With Special Thanks....................x
Introduction....................1
Chapter 1: Christmas Eve Dinners....................11
Chapter 2: Breakfasts & Brunches....................51
Chapter 3: Christmas Day Dinners....................91
Chapter 4: Kids' Birthday Party for Jesus....................191
Chapter 5: Cookie and Candy Exchange....................199
Chapter 6: Edible Gifts....................221
Chapter 7: Using Leftovers....................233
Index....................247

Desserts around The World or Good Ole Boys Wild Game Cookbook

Desserts around The World

Author: Lee Engfer

Completely revised and updated, Desserts around the World serves up tantalizing recipes for Moroccan date cake, Sacher torte from Austria, Brazilian fried bananas, and more. Seasoned liberally with vibrant, color photographs and easy, step-by-step directions, many of the recipes are low in fat and call for ingredients you may already have at home. Also included are dessert menu selections and an expanded cultural section highlighting dessert customs from around the world, including holiday and festival traditions. This book will show you how to treat your family and friends to delicious, internationally inspired desserts.



New interesting textbook: Louies Backyard Cookbook or Williams Sonoma New Healthy Kitchen Desserts

Good Ole Boys Wild Game Cookbook

Author: Russ Chittenden

Tired of your hunting or fishing trophies getting freezer burn? These Good Ole Boys have experimented with cooking and eating about everything they could semi-legally capture whether it slithered, swam, flew, walked or crawled. One thing you can bank on...the finished product of these recipes will be good!



Tuesday, December 30, 2008

The Ultimate Tailgaters Big Ten Handbook or Olive and the Caper

The Ultimate Tailgater's Big Ten Handbook

Author: Stephen Linn

Millions of Americans participate in tailgating at college campuses during football season. Between the students and the alumni, and the visitors, a crush of fans are looking for places to park, to eat, to take part in traditional activities for each campus, and learn more about the school and team history. For the first time ever, fans can find the details at every campus in their favorite conference. Want to eat barbecue while you’re visiting USC? Want to know more details about massive Michigan Stadium? Need a place to stay for that game in Clemson? Choose your conference, which encompasses all teams in all divisions, pack the ULTIMATE TAILGATER’S HANDBOOK in the car, and you’re ready. Recipes, local venues and rules, sidebars about unique activities in each place, side tours, insider tips, and photos will help make your game day the best ever. Features Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Northwestern, Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue and Wisconsin. Stephen Linn is a reporter who markets Ultimate Tailgater television and news features around the country. He lives in Nashville.



Book review: Tormenting Thoughts and Secret Rituals or Healthy Life Kitchen

Olive and the Caper: Adventures in Greek Cooking

Author: Susanna M Hoffman

This is the year "It's Greek to me" becomes the happy answer to what's for dinner. My Big Fat Greek Wedding, the upcoming epic Troy, the 2004 Summer Olympics returning to Athens--and now, yet another reason to embrace all things Greek: The Olive and The Caper, Susanna Hoffman's 700-plus-page serendipity of recipes and adventure.

In Corfu, Ms. Hoffman and a taverna owner cook shrimp fresh from the trap--and for us she offers the boldly-flavored Shrimp with Fennel, Green Olives, Red Onion, and White Wine. She gathers wild greens and herbs with neighbors, inspiring Big Beans with Thyme and Parsley, and Field Greens and Ouzo Pie. She learns the secret to chewy country bread from the baker on Santorini, and translates it for American kitchens. Including 325 recipes developed in collaboration with Victoria Wise (her co-author on The Well-Filled Tortilla Cookbook, with over 258,000 copies in print), The Olive and The Caper celebrates all things Greek: Chicken Neo-Avgolemeno. Fall-off-the-bone Lamb Shanks seasoned with garlic, thyme, cinnamon and coriander. Siren-like sweets, from world-renowned Baklava to uniquely Greek preserves: Rose Petal, Cherry and Grappa, Apricot and Metaxa.

In addition, it opens with a sixteen-page full-color section, and has dozens of lively essays throughout the book--about the origins of Greek food, about village life, history, language, customs--making this a lively adventure in reading as well as cooking.

Publishers Weekly

Traditional Greek cuisine favors sour tastes: lemons, capers, vinegar, wild herbs. Cooking with these pungent ingredients takes a sure hand or, failing that, a good recipe. Hoffman's book supplies the latter in abundance; it attempts nothing less than to capture the whole of Greek food culture between covers. That includes side notes on language, myth, literature and botany; details of regional specialties; lists of native greens; and an explanation of why we say "Greek" instead of "Hellenic." Like many warm-weather cuisines, Greek food relies on an abundance of grilled meats and fish and dressed greens. Hoffman presents them in dazzling variety, alongside familiar exports like Dolmadakia (stuffed grape leaves) and Tzatziki. Hoffman, an anthropologist and cook, includes recipes that might be challenging or improbable for American home cooks: Retsina-Pickled Octopus, Thyme-Fed Snails and "Greek-inspired ice creams" made with mastic or olive oil. There are labor-intensive recipes, too, showing how to make filo pastry and homemade sourdough noodles. Desserts-Semolina Custard Pie; Yogurt Cake with Ouzo-Lemon Syrup-go far beyond Baklava. With its fascinating trove of information, this work will please armchair cooks and traveling foodies. For those willing to surrender to its searingly bright palate of flavors, it's a boon to the kitchen, too. Photos, illus. (July) Forecast: With the Olympics in Athens next month, interest should be strong. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.



Table of Contents:
Introduction: The Olive, the Caper, and the Legacy of Greek Foodxiii
Part 1Honored Drinks, Small Dishes, and Savory Pies
From water to wine5
Water7
Wine8
Ouzo13
Tsikoudia14
Brandy and Sweet Liqueurs16
Beer18
Coffee18
Tea20
Fruitades and Other Drinks22
Meze: The Grand Array25
The Simplest Mezedes27
The Glorious Cheeses of Greece28
The Many and Varied Greek Olives30
The Salads and Spreads32
The Eggplant Urbanization of Miltiades34
The Cyclades and the Scent of Lemon44
Two Famous Vegetable Mezedes47
Inviting Meat Mezedes52
Zeus, King of the Gods56
Mezedes from the Sea59
Tart and Tantalizing Pickles72
The People, Provinces, and Culinary Specialties of Greece76
Savory pies: From Filo Pastry83
Filo Finesse87
The Shapes of Filo Pies and Pastries90
The Trail of the Olive98
Opulent Byzantium110
Part 2The Banquet of Dishes
Bread: The Staff of Life!119
The Bread Man Cometh123
Greece's First Bread Bakers126
Cooking Bells and Beehive Ovens144
Cyprus: the Coppery Island148
Soup: For Hard Times and Good Times151
Fava Stories158
The Mycenaeans and Their Bill of Fare183
Salads: A Veritable Bounty187
The Tomato Revolution194
Pericles, the Father of Democracy202
The Sarakatsani, Greece's Roving Shepherds211
Eggs: The Daily Gift215
Oregano, Dill, and Mint218
The Greek Diaspora and the Denver Omelet224
Sustaining grain: Barley, Wheat, Rice & Noodles227
An Island Harvest234
The Sin of Opsophagia236
Saffron240
The Olympic Games244
Whence Cometh Trahana?248
Alexandria, Greek City by the Sea254
Alexander the Great and the Spread of Hellenism258
The vegetable parade263
Simmered, Sauteed & Fried265
The Herbs of Greece272
Stewed Vegetable Stand-Outs282
Apollo, the Sun God284
Crisp Croquettes and Fritters292
The Welcome Party294
Stuffed Vegetables300
The Renowned Casserole313
Two Greek Cooks, Two Great Moussakades314
Classical Greece--A Time of Philosophers and Farmers318
Fish and shellfish323
The Foufou328
Salt Cod, the Fish That Feeds in Hard Times336
Poseidon340
Where Did the Name "Greek" Come From?344
The Aegean and the Ionian--The "Fishing Ponds" of Greece350
Archestratos and His Fish354
The Minoans--Inhabitants of Greece Before the Greeks356
Meat: Of Every Sort361
Grilling371
The Caper Family Bush378
The Warp and the Weft: Sheep and Their Wool382
An Easter Journey on the Sea396
Who Were the First Greeks?402
Birds: From the Coop407
Chicken and the Changing Squares of Athens410
The Jews of Greece and Their Joseph's Coat Cuisine432
Wild game: From the Woods and Sky437
Aesop's Wild Kingdom: Morals with the Meal452
Savces, toppings, and marinades455
The Sauces457
Souvlaki Stands and the Best Tzatziki466
The Dodecanese Islands--Gateway of Many Sauces476
The Toppings477
Rhodes and the Crusaders480
The Marinades482
Greece's Saucy Minorities and Their Foods484
Fruit as the finale489
Greece's Fruitful Choices491
Part 3Confections Dulcet as Ambrosia
Sweets: In Profusion499
Time-Honored Syrups500
From Beehive to Oven503
The Nuts of Greece504
Tsikoudia and the Moor508
A Final Validation522
How Spices Got to Greece530
Luscious Puddings531
Sweetness by the Spoonful535
Croesus and His Golden Coins540
Plato, the "Cool" Philosopher544
Seven Innovative Sweets548
Night Wine, Day Wine, and the Barefoot Compressor550
Cyclades Village Wedding556
Ceremonial Sweets557
The Ottoman Rule and the Greek Fight for Independence562
Conversion Tables566
Bibliography567
Index572

Calling All Cooks Two or A Taco Testimony

Calling All Cooks Two

Author: Bellsouth Pioneers AL Chapter

Experience more of the tasteful recipes of Calling all Cooks with this second in the series. It contains recipes, charts, tips, and hints from active and retired members of BellSouth Pioneers. Proceeds from all cookbooks benefit various statewide charity and school organizations.



New interesting textbook: The Spectrum or New Womans Dress for Success

A Taco Testimony: Meditations on Family, Food and Culture

Author: Denise Chavez

Acclaimed author/actress Denise Chávez explores the history, lore, and preparation of tacos—and other art forms—in a warm and exuberant memoir, with recipes.

"Tacos are sacred to me," writes Chávez, who's set many a fictional scene in a Southwestern restaurant or around a dinner table. And here are her special recipes, including her mother's Tacos a la Delfina ("I swear these tacos are really good cold!") and Granma Lupe's Pasta (not macaroni but a savory mincemeat-like taco filling). Here, too, are tips on shopping, cooking, and serving: "Offer up the meal with gratitude and remember: Tacos are one of life's greatest things!"

"We live in chile country," she adds. "We are blessed to be here. Food is more than food; it's a culture. And tacos are more than tacos."

Chile country is the setting for Chávez's magical, tragicomic fiction. And in A Taco Testimony she also tells wonderful stories that connect literature with culture and food with life along the Mexican-American border.

"Time and love are the essence of all Mexican cooking," Chávez says—including her spicy, juicy writing, and this feast of a book.



Chinese Cooking for Beginners or Delias Vegetarian Collection

Chinese Cooking for Beginners (Chinese/English)

Author: Su Huei Huang

Each recipe has been updated, retested, and simplified to enable readers to make the most popular Chinese dishes and snacks. Readers will learn how to prepare authentic, formal banquet meals using easy, homestyle techniques.



Book review: A Remarkable Mother or Pet Food Politics

Delia's Vegetarian Collection: Over 250 Recipes

Author: Delia Smith

In response to her millions of followers, Delia Smith has amassed her best-ever vegetarian recipes in one volume. Here are 250 delectable recipes for all occasions, including Tunisian Eggplant Salad, Soba Noodles with Soy and Citrus Dressing, Wild Mushroom Stroganoff, Oven-Roasted Ratatouille, Mozzarella strudel with Parmesan and Pecans, Lemon Pasta with Herbs and Cracked Pepper, and Apricot Hazelnut Meringue. Beautifully illustrated with 200 color photos, and presented in Delia’s friendly, inimitable style, this is a book that all cooks will want to own.



Monday, December 29, 2008

Great Big Butter Cookbook or The Strang Cancer Prevention Center Cookbook

Great Big Butter Cookbook: Because Everything Is Better with Butter

Author: Diana C Von Glahn

When America needed a phrase to mean “It’s as good as it gets,” it’s no surprise that the winner was “It’s like butter!” There are many foods that aspire to be as rich, decadent, and versatile as butter is in the kitchen, but any chef worth his salt knows there is nothing like the real thing. Everything is unquestionably better when made with butter, and The Great Big Butter Cookbook celebrates butter in every form, from flavored spreads to baked goods, to sauces, to main courses. This comprehensive, no-holds-barred look on the world’s favorite ingredient is full of history, factoids, and helpful hints for getting the most out of butter. With more than 300 classic recipes.

Publishers Weekly

This collection, focusing on a single ingredient and assembled by the Wisconsin Milk Marketing Board seeks to remind readers of the usefulness and versatility of butter in the kitchen. The book's prologue highlights the relative healthfulness (compared with margarine, anyway) of butter, despite its reputation for clogging arteries. That leads to a "Cooking with Butter" basics chapter that explains the differences between European, cultured and whipped butter styles, and suggestions for when to use salted or unsalted varieties. While one might assume that butter's culinary role is rooted in baking and sauces, recipes here run the gamut from appetizers like Camembert Almond Balls and Blue Cheese Walnut Wafer to a cream-free Mexican-Style Corn Soup and Florentine Game Hens, with plenty of pastry, cookies, cakes and pies in between. There are also several recipes for compound butters, like a wild mushroom and shallot butter meant to accompany a sautéed steak. The book's most inventive ideas belong to the Sauces, Spreads and Condiments chapter, with its wide array of spreadable, meltable and pourable butters in both savory and sweet flavors. Throughout, recipes are clearly written and easy to follow, and colorful photos bring out all the golden richness of this dairy product. Trans-fat free though it might be, butter is still fattening, making this a special occasion cookbook rather than an essential cookbook for the day-to-day. (Nov.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

Judith Sutton - Library Journal

The 300 recipes in this wide-ranging collection come from the files of the Wisconsin Milk Marketing Board-so it's not surprising that so many of them are made with cheese as well as butter. Some are far more buttery than others, but all include at least a couple of tablespoons. Many of the recipes are for comfort food, although there is a sprinkling of more sophisticated dishes from restaurant chefs. The dessert chapter is the biggest, but all courses of a meal are included, many of them shown in full-page color photos. For larger collections.



Interesting book: Seasoned In The South or Old Fashioned Country Cookies

The Strang Cancer Prevention Center Cookbook

Author: Laura J Pensiero

A comprehensive guide to cancer prevention

The oldest cancer-prevention institute in the country, New York City's famed Strang Cancer Prevention Center advocates promoting cure through early detection. It has been instrumental in developing early screening and prevention programs as well as nutrition counseling.

Now readers can benefit from the same topnotch advice the center provides for its clients. A remarkable collaboration of leading cancer prevention experts and America's top gourmet chefs, The Strang Cancer Prevention Center Cookbook presents cuttingedge nutritional and scientific data on cancer, as well as a tantalizing collection of health-inducing recipes.

Complete with the latest information about the crucial link between diet and health, this book introduces nature's own powerful cancer-fighting agents such as the chemicals found in many fruits and vegetables. More than 150 recipes for appetizers, soups, salads, sides, entrees, and desserts are featured. Research has shown that up to 80 percent of all cancers can be prevented by the type of changes in diet and lifestyle outlined in this book.

Laura Pensiero, R.D., a graduate of the French Culinary Institute in New York, is a dietitian, nutrition educator, and restaurant owner.

Michael Osborne, M.D., is president of the Strang Cancer Prevention Center and a professor at Cornell University Medical College.

Susan Oliveria, Sc.D., M.P.H., is on the faculty at Strang, Cornell University Medical College, and Memorial Sloan-Kettering.



Table of Contents:
Forewordvii
Prefaceix
Acknowledgmentsxi
Introductionxiii
1.The Science Behind Diet and Cancer1
What Is Cancer?2
Why Study Diet?3
Overview of Diet and Cancer6
Vitamins and Minerals11
Other Dietary Factors16
2.Lowering Your Risk of Cancer Through Diet19
Strang Cancer Prevention Center Guidelines for Reducing Your Risk of Cancer19
General Caloric Requirements21
BMI22
The Fat Facts23
Protein34
Vegetarianism40
Soy44
Carbohydrates51
Fiber56
The Importance of Fruits and Vegetables64
The Balanced Plate69
Vitamins and Minerals71
Nutrition Facts Labels89
3.Phytochemicals: The New Functional Foods107
Allium Compounds109
Glucosinolates and Indoles110
Plant Polyphenols111
Terpenes117
Protease Inhibitors119
Inositol (Phytic Acid)120
Fatty Acids120
Plant Sterols121
Supplementation of Phytochemicals123
4.Cooking for Cancer Prevention125
Ingredients for Healthy Cooking127
Seasonal Ingredients131
Snacking133
Kitchen Equipment for Healthy Cooking134
General Tips for Healthy Cooking137
Organic Foods139
Cooking with Olive Oil141
5.Recipes145
Appetizers147
Soups and Stocks159
Salads179
Vegetables and Side Dishes195
Vegetarian Entrees217
Fish243
Poultry and Meat267
Breads and Desserts295
A Sample Week of Menus322
Restaurant Dining328
6.Prevention: Lifestyle Modifications to Minimize Cancer Risk337
Smoking338
Obesity339
Physical Activity/Exercise340
Hormones342
Occupation343
Radiation344
Environmental Pollution346
Infections and Viruses347
Heredity348
Medical Drugs349
Stress349
Screening350
AppendixNutrition and Cancer Information Resources and Cancer Facts353
References359
About the Contributors371
Index387

Food Combining for Health or Moms Big Book of Baking

Food Combining for Health: Get Fit with Foods That Don't Fight

Author: Doris Grant

Over 50 years ago, Dr. William Hay concluded that the body uses acids to digest proteins and alkalis to digest starches, and that mixing the two might lead to painful indigestion and more serious problems such as ulcers, allergies, and obesity. Though criticized at the time, the Hay System has been vindicated by modern research, and provides essentially the healthy, whole-food diet of mostly alkali-forming foods such as fruits, green vegetables, and salads advocated by many leading nutritionists today.

Food Combining for Health shows how to separate incompatible foods.

Explains how the Hay System can alleviate the symptoms of chronic diseases such as arthritis and diabetes, while increasing energy and well-being in those without specific health problems.

Includes recipes and seasonal menu suggestions.

Whole Foods

Compatible food combinations are nature's way of maintaining the body's correct chemical balance. The authors offer practical suggestions and recipes for putting the principles of food combining into practice.



Table of Contents:
Acknowledgments
Foreword by Sir John Mills
Introduction - A Personal Experience
Part One: The Theory and the Proof by Doris Grant
1. A Great Pioneer
2. The Hay System Explained
3. The Hay System and Degenerative Diseases
4. Animal Fats - Fact and Fiction
5. The Proof of the Pudding
Part Two: The Hay System in Practice by Jean Joice
6. How to Begin
7. Menu Planning and Suggestions
Table of Compatible Foods
Part Three: Recipes for Protein Meals
8. Soups and Appetizers
9. Salads, Dressings, and Sauces
10. Main Dishes
11. Vegetables
12. Desserts
13. Protein Sack Lunches
Part Four: Recipes for Starch Meals
14. Soups
15. Salads
16. Main Dishes
17. Desserts
18. Bread
Appendix: Acid and Alkali-forming Foods
Further Reading
Useful Addresses
Index

See also: Diabetes Cookbook or Night Light

Mom's Big Book of Baking: 200 Simple, Foolproof Recipes for Delicious Family Treats to Get You Through Every Birthday Party, Class Picnic, Potluck, Bake Sale, Holiday and No-School Day

Author: Lauren Chattman

200 recipes tailor-made for today's extremely busy mom.

Publishers Weekly

Author of the highly successful dessert cookbook Instant Gratification, Chattman now offers her skills as a mother as well as pastry chef. The book covers baking from pancakes, waffles and muffins through cookies and cakes to pies and breads. The recipes are clearly written and prefaced with short descriptions and notes. Many of the recipes offer tips on ingredients, variations and how and when to involve children. The Instant Homemade Microwave Brownies, recommended for kids seven and older to help in the baking fall well within their capabilities, although she suggests, "The dish will be hot... so removing it from the microwave should be mom's job." Her use of butter as the fat of choice, while not for cholesterol watchers, makes the recipes rich and inviting, particularly when she pairs it with the large quantity of blueberries in Best Blueberry Muffins to give a very berry satisfying result. One or two recipes, such as the Sprinkle Cookies, are slightly disappointing, although the description did prove to be accurate, as her daughter says, that "these taste like cupcakes." However, with such a wide variety of baked goods and the effortlessness needed to produce good results, this book will be a solid bake book for the busy mom, particularly one who wishes to involve her children. (Oct.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Chattman, author of Instant Gratification and Just Add Water, is known for her quick and easy recipes. Although she has worked as a pastry chef, the desserts in her new baking book are in that same style, just the thing for busy moms (and dads). The cookie chapter is, logically enough, the biggest one, but there are also dozens of recipes for birthday and other cakes; pies, tarts, and cobblers; and muffins, quick breads, and pizzas. There's even a breakfast chapter, with treats like Chocolate Milk Pancakes and Gingerbread Waffles. Recommended for most collections. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.



Sunday, December 28, 2008

Grillin and Chilin or Girlfriends Get Together

Grillin' and Chili'n': More than Eighty Easy Recipes for Searing, Sizzling, and Savoring Venison

Author: Kate Fiduccia

As any hunter or gourmet will tell you, venison is one of the great culinary treats, whether cooked on a grill or slowly simmered on a stove.
Grillin' & Chili'n' serves up eighty winning recipes that will have family and friends begging for more. There are recipes for marinated steaks, ribs, burgers, and sausages, including Balsamic Buck Steaks, One-for-the-Road Moose Ribs, Thai Pita Burgers, and Dijon Venison Sausage Kebobs. You'll also find superb chili recipes from the easy-to-prepare Quick-Fix Venison Chili to the slow-cooked Sloppy Does. Recipes that incorporate chili as a main ingredient are also featured, such as Venison Pronto Chili Taco Salad, Chili Shepherd's Pie, and even Mini Chili Cupcakes! Also included are some no-fail marinades, rubs, and butters to highlight your meals, and fabulous accompaniments such as Sizzlin' Fresh Tomato Salsa and Cheesy Grilled Zucchini. An invaluable listing of mail-order sources for venison (if you don't harvest your own) and grill accessories will come in handy, as well as a cooking conversion chart.
From one of the most respected experts on the subject, this is the most mouth-watering guide yet to preparing venison.



See also: Perfection Salad or Food That Says Welcome

Girlfriends Get Together: Food, Frolic and Fun Times

Author: Carmen Renee Berry

To whom do women turn when they want to celebrate their successes (like getting that long-hoped-for promotion)? Upon whom do they rely to make their special events (like moving into a dream house) even more special? Whose companionship do they seek when their dreams have been dashed, when they've had a bad week at work, when they've just been dumped, or when they just need to gab? Their girlfriends, of course! From crisis times, birthdays, and TGIF days, to showers and hallelujah lunches, these 15 girlfriend get-togethers include quick and easy planning ideas, succulent recipes, and innovative ways to create unforgettable memories with the gals.



Table of Contents:
Just Us Girls
1Women in the Wild4
2Friday Night Film Fest16
3Just Talk26
Women on the Move
4Moving Day Picnic36
5A Housewarming Dinner44
6A Hallelujah Lunch56
Counting on Each Other
7You're Better Off without Him Supper68
8Take Comfort Dinner76
9Safety Net Social84
Showered with Affection
10Wedding Shower Tea96
11Bachelorette Fete106
12Baby Shower Buffet112
Enduring Traditions
13A Sumptuous Birthday Feast126
14Perfect Pet Party136
15Holiday Cookie Classic144

Wine Label Language or A Thousand Days in Tuscany

Wine Label Language

Author: Peter Saunders


"Peter Saunders is, without doubt, one of the top wine tutors in the world."

- Dr. Alan Young, President of the International Wine Academy

Wine labels are cryptic and confusing to most wine consumers. The information provided there indicates specific quality standards, grape varieties, alcohol content and volume of production, but it is often hard to decipher the code.

Wine Label Language is a welcome encyclopedic reference that demystifies and explains how to interpret wine labels. Using simple terms, the book identifies and describes the various regions and appellations used on wine labels around the world. Knowing from which region a wine comes is a critical factor in determining its quality and value. This book introduces the labeling concept of the wine is from this region instead of the wine from this grape. This helps consumers identify the winemaking areas that consistently produce superior vintages.

Newcomers to the delights of wine will learn all the basics, for instance the difference between a Bordeaux and Burgundy. Longtime wine buffs will heighten their enjoyment by understanding the differences within their favorite regions. A single region such as Bordeaux has many distinct areas or districts that affect the wine's quality and price.

Wine Label Language covers every major winemaking region of the world and explains the natural conditions and legal restrictions that each region uses to produce and name its own unique wine.



See also: As Always or Well Filled Tortilla Cookbook

A Thousand Days in Tuscany: A Bittersweet Adventure

Author: Marlena de Blasi

American chef Marlena de Blasi and her Venetian husband, Fernando, married rather late in life. In search of the rhythms of country living, the couple moves to a barely renovated former stable in Tuscany with no phone, no central heating, and something resembling a playhouse kitchen. They dwell among two hundred villagers, ancient olive groves, and hot Etruscan springs. In this patch of earth where Tuscany, Umbria, and Lazio collide, there is much to feed de Blasi's two passions--food and love. We accompany the couple as they harvest grapes, gather chestnuts, forage for wild mushrooms, and climb trees in the cold of December to pick olives, one by one. Their routines are not that different from those of villagers centuries earlier.

They are befriended by the mesmeric Barlozzo, a self-styled village chieftain. His fascinating stories lead de Blasi more deeply inside the soul of Tuscany. Together they visit sacred festivals and taste just-pressed olive oil, drizzled over roasted country bread, and squash blossoms, battered and deep-fried and sprayed with sea-salted water. In a cauldron set over a wood fire, they braise beans in red wine, and a stew of wild boar simmers overnight in the ashes of their hearth. Barlozzo shares his knowledge of Italian farming traditions, ancient health potions, and artisanal food makers, but he has secrets he doesn't share, and one of them concerns the beautiful Floriana, whose illness teaches Marlena that happiness is truly a choice.

Like the pleasurable tastes and textures of a fine meal, A Thousand Days in Tuscany is as satisfying as it is enticing. The author's own recipes are included.

Publishers Weekly

From its opening scene of an impromptu alfresco village feast of fried zucchini blossoms, fennel-roasted pork, and pudding made from the cream of a local blue-eyed cow, this memoir of the seasons in a small Tuscan village is rich with food, weather, romance and, above all, life. De Blasi continues the adventures begun in her A Thousand Days in Venice, as she and her husband, Fernando, leave Venice for Tuscany in search of "a place that still remembers real life... sweet and salty... each side of life dignifying the other." Fortunately, the two are adopted by Barlozzo, an elderly local eager to share his knowledge of the old ways. He introduces them to the local customs: grape harvesting, truffle hunting, bread baking, etc. Although the book teems with food references, including recipes for intriguing traditional dishes, de Blasi is more than a sunny regional food writer-she digs into the meaning of life. As she fights Fernando's periodic depressions and brings him back to joy, gains Barlozzo's trust and love, learns his troubling lifelong secrets and comes to terms with the death of a beloved friend, she immerses her readers in life's poignancy, brevity and wonder. Agent, Rosalie Siegel. (Nov. 5) Forecast: Fans of Frances Mayes's oeuvre will gravitate to this, as well as those who read A Thousand Days in Venice. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Picking up where her A Thousand Days in Venice left off, American author and chef de Blasi and her Italian husband trade their stable life in Venice for a potentially idyllic Tuscan one. Taken under the wing by a local who mentors her foray into the ways of the past, the author participates in every aspect of the local food culture, from harvesting grapes to truffle hunting, and vividly describes her adopted community through its preparation and celebration of food. Equal parts an exploration of Tuscan food and culture and a touching story of its people, this book supplemented with complementary recipes reads more like a novel than the memoir it is. Recommended for public libraries and larger cooking collections. Sheila Kasperek, Mansfield Univ. Lib., PA Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Another savory slice of de Blasi's life (A Thousand Days in Venice, 2002, etc.), this one chronicling her move south to a small Tuscan town. "Three years ago, when I left America to come to live in Italy, it was neither Venice nor the house on the beach that lured me. Rather it was this man, this Fernando. It's quite the same thing now. We've hardly come to Tuscany for the house." Which is a good thing, for this old stable is far from chic. That's not the point; they have come there to scrub their lives as if with a loofa, to follow the rituals of rural culture in San Casciano dei Bagni, a place of olive and cypress trees, meadows with sheep and sunflowers and lavender. Food will take center stage: fat and velvety zucchini blossoms; a haunch of boar; pecorino bread; ropes of pasta dressed with green tomatoes, garlic, oil, and basil; all the humble, inspired dishes that make you want to bark with pleasure. Without fanfare, the townspeople can gather in a spontaneous convocation, "whispering gastronomic lore like vespers." De Blasi faithfully catches San Casciano in all its weathers, evoking its ancient roots (Roman legions tramped through this land), its artistic association (Rafaello and Perugino), and its political leanings (more than slightly red), as well as the wartime ingenuity that remains a wonder half a century later. The inhabitants, each in their own way, tilt de Blasi's days, making them sweeter and more pungent. One old soul advises on all things San Casciano; another woman makes sure the couple doesn't get too sentimental as they get evermore romantic. The proceedings entail both comfort and risk: the sun shines pink, and the stone floors deliver a welcome coolness, but theswift passage of time lends an edge with the prospect of death. An object lesson in living fully from a genuine sensualist unabashed by her emotions.



Table of Contents:
Contents

PROLOGUE
1
Summer
1The Gorgeous Things They're Cooking AreZucchini Blossoms7
2Figs and Apples Threaded on Strings30
3The Valley Is Safe, and We Will Bake Bread64
4Are You Making a Mattress Stuffed with Rosemary?81
5Sit the Chicken in a Roasting Pan on a Pretty Bed of Turnips and Onions, Leeks and Carrots 90

Fall
6Vendemmiamo--Let's Pick Those Grapes105
7Dolce e Salata, Sweet and Salty--Because That's How Life Tastes to Me124
8Now These Are Chestnut Trees150
9 Do Tuscans Drink Wine at Every Meal?170

Winter
10Perhaps as a Genus, Olives Know Too Much 195
11December Has Come to Live in the Stable 218
12Supper Made from Almost Nothing 248
13Fasting Was How We Were Living Anyway264

Spring
14Virtuous Drenches293
15Florì and I Are Shelling Peas303
16The First of the Zucchini Blossoms Are Up314

Recipes
Deep-Fried Flowers, Vegetables, and Herbs28
The Holy Ghost's Cherries62
Schiacciata Toscana, Tuscan Flatbread (or "Squashed" Breads)79
Winemaker's Sausages Roasted with Grapes120
Fagioli al Fiasco sotto le Cenere, Beans Braised in a Bottle under the Cinders122
Braised Pork to Taste Like Wild Boar147
Castagnaccio192
The One and Only True Bruschetta (brew-sket'-ah)What It Is and How to Pronounce It247
A Tasting of Pecorino Cheeses with Chestnut Honey301

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Starting out or Wine Report 2008

Starting Out: The Essential Guide to Cooking on Your Own

Author: Julie Van Rosendaal


The survival guide for first-time cooks, with 250 super-simple recipes.

Designed to help new cooks find independence, Starting Out is filled with crucial tips, basic cooking techniques, and guidelines for stocking cupboards and refrigerator with staples. A first cookbook, instruction guide, and food resource, the book includes easy-to-prepare dishes that any beginner can follow easily. There are even "first aid" tips for fixing food disasters!

Some of the features in this cookbook are:


  • Glossary of common cooking terms

  • Measurements chart

  • Simple menus

  • Party ideas

  • Ingredient resource guide

  • Shopping tips (and even tips for doing laundry).



Starting Out has more than enough delicious and nutritious dishes for the university student or budding executive. Included are simple, quick and effortless recipes for cooking for one, such as Turkey Burgers, Pad Thai, and Basic Curry. There are also more impressive yet still easy-to-follow recipes for entertaining, like Chicken à la King, Chicken Parmigiana, and Curried Peanut Shrimp.



Table of Contents:

Introduction

Buying tools, gadgets, and appliances for your kitchen

Stocking your pantry

Reading Labels

Produce 101

Applying heat 101

Tips from Mom


Breakfast [10 Recipes]

Soup [11 Recipes]

Salads [8 Recipes]

Stew [5 Recipes]

Meals in a bowl [4 Recipes]

Beef [6 Recipes]

Pork and lamb [7 Recipes]

Chicken [7 Recipes]

Fish and shellfish [8 Recipes]

Pasta and noodles [7 Recipes]

Rice and grains [8 Recipes]

Beans (legumes) [6 Recipes]

Vegetables [18 Recipes]

Potatoes [7 Recipes]

Baking basics

Quick breads [15 Recipes]

Cookies and bars [9 Recipes]

Cakes [10 Recipes]

Pies [9 Recipes]

Puddings and fruit desserts [9 Recipes]

Damage Control

How to do your laundry

Glossary of cooking terms

Planning your menus

Menu ideas

Index

Book review: Rivals or Ted White and Blue

Wine Report 2008

Author: Tom Stevenson

The essential insider's guide to every major wine-growing region in the world, this book offers dozens of helpful Top 10 lists covering a broad range of topics, including Best-Value Producers, Greatest-Quality Wines, and Most Exciting or Unusual Finds.



Encyclopedia of Sauces Pickles and Preserves or Cognac

Encyclopedia of Sauces, Pickles and Preserves

Author: Christine Franc

Over 350 sauces, salsas, dips, dressings, jams, jellies, pickles, preserves and chutneys, shown step-by-step with 1500 stunning colour photographs - how to add something special to every kind of dish for every kind of occasion



New interesting book: Finding Life in the Land of Alzheimers or Herbal Medicine Makers Handbook

Cognac

Author: Nicholas Faith

Presenting the most up-to-date illustrated guide to cognac! Here is the intriguing history of this delicious spirit, and a discussion of its increasing prominence in today's markets. The first part explores the intricate and diverse methods of producing cognac, and tells the extraordinary story of a brandy-producing region that fought to establish its own name and place. The second section describes how to get the most enjoyment out of drinking this superb liquor, and offers a selection of cocktail recipes. There is also advice on choosing the perfect cognac glass, matching different ages and styles to your personal taste, and even pairing a glass with a fine cigar. A directory—illustrated with cognac labels—profiles more than 100 top varieties, and provides details on the producer plus the author's own tasting notes.



Encyclopedia of Sauces for Your Pasta or Steaming

Encyclopedia of Sauces for Your Pasta

Author: Charles A Bellissino

The largest and most extensive collection of delectable pasta sauces available.



Go to: Weight Training or Cancer

Steaming: Great Flavor, Healthy Meals

Author: Brigid Treloar

We all want to provide tasty and healthy meals for our families, but few of us have the time. This book shows busy cooks how to keep the delicious and healthy meals coming without spending hours in the kitchen to prepare home-cooked dinners. An ancient Asian cooking technique, steaming fits in perfectly with contemporary eating styles. Quick and easy to prepare, steaming is a flavor-packed and nutritious alternative to cooking with fats.

Steaming is a wonderful introduction to this classic Asian art of cooking. Each recipe includes step-by-step directions that anyone can follow, and provides information on how to use a variety of steaming equipment, including tips for creating your own steamer. With recipes for everything from appetizers to desserts, everyone is sure to find new family favorites for dinner!



Friday, December 26, 2008

Whole Grain Cookbook or Migraine Cookbook

Whole Grain Cookbook: Delicious Recipes for Wheat, Barley, Oats, Rye, Amaranth, Spelt, Corn, Millet, Quinoa and More with Instructions for Milling Your Own

Author: A D Livingston

Grain truly is the staff of life - tasty, versatile, and highly nutritious. From the familiar oat to exotic ancient crops, The Whole Grain Cookbook is a celebration of the good eating offered by grains. These authentic, eclectic, homespun recipes show the various grains at their best, whether on their own or cooked with vegetables or meat.Rediscover the goodness of barley, oats, and corn in such recipes as Turkish Barley and Yogurt Soup, Applejack Oat Cake, and Pozole. Enjoy the marvelous flavors of newly available ancient grains such as amaranth and quinoa, first grown by the Aztecs and Incas. Taste the diverse possibilities of rice in recipes ranging from Balinese Pancakes to Azerbaijani Rice Pilaf to Norwegian Rice and Almond Pudding. This wonderfully inclusive cookbook also has tempting recipes for chickpeas, beans, buckwheat, spelt, nuts, seeds - and even acorns.Also included is information on where to buy whole grain, how to store it, and how to grind your own meal and flour with a home-milling machine (as with coffee and pepper, freshly ground grains are more flavorful, and less expensive, than store-bought). Appetizing, informative, and uncomplicated, The Whole Grain Cookbook is a resource you'll return to again and again. (7 X 91/4, 320 pages)

Internet Book Watch

Barley, oats and corn are the feature of this cookbook, which packs in recipes for using whole grains in a fresh way. Desserts and breads feature heavily in these dishes, which also include plenty of main course options.



New interesting textbook: Left in Dark Times or First In

Migraine Cookbook: More Than 100 Healthy and Delicious Recipes for Migraine Sufferers

Author: Michele Sharp

There are over 28 million people in the United States who suffer from migraine headaches, and there are shockingly few resources available to help them alleviate their pain. While there is still no cure for the migraine headache, research has proven that migraines do have physical causes; triggers for many sufferers include diet, stress, menstruation, and environmental changes. In The Migraine Cookbook, Michele Sharp brings together a wide range of carefully selected recipes—from appetizers and main dishes to comfort-food favorites—each complete with information about the trigger-free quality of the recipe, kitchen pointers for preparation, and cooking and serving tips. With over 100 recipes, eight pages of color photos, and sections that address the specifics of this disorder and provide medical information and resource materials, The Migraine Cookbook will prove to be an indispensable resource for every migraine sufferer.



Famous Daves Backroads and Sidestreets or Spice

Famous Dave's Backroads and Sidestreets: Recipes Inspired by America's Down-Home Eateries

Author: Dave Anderson

More than 100 recipes for comfort foods and authentic regional dishes. They come from neighborhood storefront restaurants and blues joints (Voodoo Chicken & Mojo Salsa and Beale Street Shrimp and Corn Fritters); small town roadhouses and cafes (Route 66 Truck Stop Chili, Creamy Sweet & Sour Cole Slaw, and Caraway Cheese Soup); country kitchens (Front Porch Cheesy Grits, Real Honest Southern Fried CHicken, and County Fair Blue Ribbon Peach Pie); and rustic cabins and lodges (Log Cabin Chicken Pot Pie, Ketchickan Lodge Salmon Pate, and Drunken Peach Cobler).

About the Author:

A native American, Dave Anderson is as remarkably unique as his food and his award-winning restaurants. A man recognized for his extraordinary palate, devotion to detail, and dedication to perfection, he is also a silversmith, antiques expert, homespun philosopher, and philanthropist. (All profits from his book will be donated to The Mino-Giizhig Fund.) In 1997, Nation's Restaurant News honored Famous Dave's Inc. with its coveted "Hot Concept Award" for being the most innovative and exciting new restaurant in the marketplace, and that same year, Famous Dave himself won the "Minnesota and the Dakota Entrepreneur of the Year Award" from Ernst & Young, NASDAQ and USA Today. Famous Dave lives in Edina, Minnesota with his wife and two sons.

What People Are Saying

Carolyn Wells
This is the ultimate comfort food cookbook. It's food that people love to eat. Dave's outdone himself this time.
— (Carolyn Wells, Kansas City Barbecue Society)



The Best Cookbook Ever! Passion on Every Page! 25 Years of Living, Loving, Laughing and Eating.
— (Steven Schussler, Creator, Rainforest Cafe)


Rich Melman
Dave Anderson is a guy whose heart is even bigger than his appetite. These recipes reflect his love for his Chicago roots and his zest for life with a little kick.
— (Rich Melman, Chairman: Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises, Inc.)




Go to:

Spice: The History of a Temptation

Author: Jack Turner

A brilliant, original history of the spice trade—and the appetites that fueled it.

It was in search of the fabled Spice Islands and their cloves that Magellan charted the first circumnavigation of the globe. Vasco da Gama sailed the dangerous waters around Africa to India on a quest for Christians—and spices. Columbus sought gold and pepper but found the New World. By the time these fifteenth- and sixteenth-century explorers set sail, the aromas of these savory, seductive seeds and powders had tempted the palates and imaginations of Europe for centuries.

Spice: The History of a Temptation is a history of the spice trade told not in the conventional narrative of politics and economics, nor of conquest and colonization, but through the intimate human impulses that inspired and drove it. Here is an exploration of the centuries-old desire for spice in food, in medicine, in magic, in religion, and in sex—and of the allure of forbidden fruit lingering in the scents of cinnamon, pepper, ginger, nutmeg, mace, and clove.
We follow spices back through time, through history, myth, archaeology, and literature. We see spices in all their diversity, lauded as love potions and aphrodisiacs, as panaceas and defenses against the plague. We journey from religious rituals in which spices were employed to dispel demons and summon gods to prodigies of gluttony both fantastical and real. We see spices as a luxury for a medieval king’s ostentation, as a mummy’s deodorant, as the last word in haute cuisine.

Through examining the temptations of spice we follow in the trails of the spice seekers leading from the deserts of ancient Syria tothrill-seekers on the Internet. We discover how spice became one of the first and most enduring links between Asia and Europe. We see in the pepper we use so casually the relic of a tradition linking us to the appetites of Rome, Elizabethan England, and the pharaohs. And we capture the pleasure of spice not only at the table but in every part of life.

Spice is a delight to be savored.


From the Hardcover edition.

The New York Times - Michiko Kakutani

In this, his first book, Mr. Turner not only gives the reader a wonderfully vivid history of the quest for spices and the lucrative spice trade, but he also provides some intriguing insights into why spices once exerted such a hold over the human imagination -- and how they catalyzed the Age of Discovery. He shows how the early spice trade forged an enduring, often exploitative relationship between the West and the East, traces the ambivalent attitude of the Church toward spices, and chronicles the gradual de-mythologizing of spices with the advent of the modern era. In doing so, he has succeeded in writing a book that is at once a social and cultural history, a culinary history and a delightful read.

The New York Times Sunday Book Review - Tobin Harshaw

Turner's genius lies in his organization. Rather than trying to deal with his Asian delights individually or track their stories through a tidy timeline, he has divided his book into sections devoted to the effects these spices have had on the human body and psyche. This allows him not just to trace the biological evolution of Piper nigrum and the changing manifests of royal pantries but to jump from continent to continent, century to century, and explore the bigger picture: how a West that once saw spices as the product of a literal and geographic Eden matured into a society in which ''Paradise survives not as a place but as a symbol.''

The New Yorker

Turner arranges his history of spices thematically, in a series of lively essays on their role in different aspects of human endeavor, such as exploration (Columbus was looking for cinnamon when he discovered America) and love (a fifteenth-century tract prescribes an ointment of honey and ginger for “Increasing the Dimension of Small Members and Making Them Splendid”). Turner’s sedulous research is manifest on every page, as he follows spices across cultures and eras, with allusions that range from St. Augustine to the Spice Girls. The book’s unlikely hero is the peppercorn, which has linked East and West since the time of the Romans and which typifies the way that spices, although no longer the luxury items they once were, have become quietly ubiquitous. Cinnamon and nutmeg are rumored to be the key to “capitalism’s most closely guarded secret,” the formula for Coca-Cola.

Publishers Weekly

Spices helped draw Europeans into their age of expansion, but the Western world was far from ignorant of them before that time. Turner's lively and wide-ranging account begins with the voyages of discovery, but demonstrates that, even in ancient times, spices from distant India and Indonesia made their way west and fueled the European imagination. Romans and medieval Europeans alike used Asian pepper, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg and mace to liven their palates, treat their maladies, enhance their sex lives and mediate between the human and the divine. While many of these applications were not particularly efficacious, spices retained their allure, with an overlay of exotic associations that remain today. Turner argues that the use of rare and costly spices by medieval and Renaissance elites amounted to conspicuous consumption. He has perhaps a little too much fun listing the ridiculous uses of spices in medieval medicine-since, as he notes in a few sparse asides, some spices do indeed have medicinal effects-and fails to get into the real experience of the people. His account of religious uses, on the other hand, paints a richer picture and gets closer to imagining the mystery that people found in these startlingly intense flavors and fragrances. It is this mystery and the idea that sensations themselves have a history that make the entire book fascinating. Agents, Giles Gordon and Russell Galen. (Aug. 17) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Daniel Levinson - KLIATT

The history of spices—the exotic faraway places they come from, how people fought over their trade, their variety of uses—is almost always fascinating. This version of the story is well written, thoroughly researched, and wide-ranging in scope. It covers spices in history, literature and legend. The book's subtitle suggests the author's focus on mind more than stomach in handling material. (He prefers the sensational to the prosaic, too). The book is organized into three sections: the spice race, palate, body and spirit. The book has a good index, copious notes and a few color images. For my money, Wolfgang Schivelbusch's Taste of Paradise (Pantheon, 1992) is a shorter, more pointed, and better illustrated history of the historical lure of stimulants in general (though, admittedly, that book focuses more on alcohol and tobacco than spices). KLIATT Codes: SA—Recommended for senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 2004, Random House, Vintage, 352p. illus. maps. bibliog. index., Ages 15 to adult.

Library Journal

Rhodes Scholar and first-time author Turner (Ph.D., international relations, Oxford) leads readers along the fascinating trail of spice through time, from the pre-Common Era use of various spices as medicine, embalming aids, and food flavor enhancers to current, everyday applications. His interest in spices began in primary school and was further piqued by his mother's regular preparation of spicy kormas, chutneys, and curries. Instead of a chronological approach, Turner presents chapters organized around major themes, including the spice race in the Europeanization of the New World, the longtime use of spices as food enhancers and aromatics, the integration of spices in food preparation in medieval Europe, the use of spice in preserving cadavers in ancient Egypt, and the importance of spices in enhancing sensuality. Readers will be thoroughly entertained by the tasty tidbits that follow the trail of spice in medicine, magic, religion, sex, avarice, fantasy, and gluttony and will likely think again next time they shake pepper on their evening meals. Exhaustively researched and amply footnoted, Turner's title nicely updates J.W. Purseglove's Spices, fleshes out Elisabeth Lambert Ortiz's The Encyclopedia of Herbs, Spices, and Flavorings, and provides more details about the intriguing story of spice than Andrew Dalby's Dangerous Tastes. Highly recommended for all academic and larger public libraries. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 4/1/04.]-Dale Farris, Groves, TX Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

A convincing case that once upon a time spices were pretty influential in world history. Visiting olden lands like the Moluccas, Malabar, and Vindoland, the text is redolent of such exotic, long-forgotten substances as malabathron and costus, galangal and zedory. Extracted from bark, root, gums, resins, seeds, and fruits for the gratification of Caesars and potentates, they are the reason Columbus set sail and brought back little more than hot chili peppers. Magellan died for the craving for spices; da Gama did better on his trip to Calicut. In ancient Egypt, Ramses was laid to rest with peppercorns in his nostrils. The attraction of pepper, the most widely popular spice, had something to do with the decline of Rome. In the Middle Ages, pepperers and spicers flourished. And, debut author Turner maintains, their products were not really used to salvage rotten meat. That's a canard: medieval meat was probably local and therefore fresh. (Wine needed spicing, though.) Sundry spices were prescribed, like diet supplements today, to cure illnesses resulting from imbalances of the four humors. Some, presaging Viagra, were recommended to enhance amatory performance. (Thus ginger was in every pharmacopoeia.) Churchmen were often conflicted about the use of spices, which represented the sweetness of good or the stink of evil, but found a place for them in the sacristy. Eventually the consumer pepper index plunged, and flavorings became more available. Other than perfumery, the uses of such assets remain principally as condiments and flavorings. Frankincense and myrrh may be rare now, but the ancient favorites ginger, pepper, cardamom, cloves, and caraway still fill spice racks. A wide-ranging,learned treat for epicures and cultural historians from-let us say it first-a man for all seasonings. (8-page color insert, b&w illustrations in text)Author tour. Agent: Russell Galen/Scovil Chichak Galen Literary Agency



Table of Contents:
Introduction : the idea of spice
Ch. 1The spice seekers3
Ch. 2Ancient appetites57
Ch. 3Medieval Europe98
Ch. 4The spice of life145
Ch. 5The spice of love183
Ch. 6Food of the gods227
Ch. 7Some like it bland265
Epilogue : the end of the spice age289

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Last Dinner on the Titanic Menus and Recipes from the Great Liner or Recipe of the Week

Last Dinner on the Titanic Menus and Recipes from the Great Liner

Author: Dana McCauley

From the splendor of the a la carte restaurant and the exclusive surroundings of the first-class dining saloon, to the solid comforts of dining second class and the wholesome practicality of supping in third, Last Dinner on the Titanic offers an on-board tour with fascinating descriptions and anecdotes, archival photographs and memorabilia, and a host of evocative period paintings and illustrations. Fifty dishes featured on the Titanic's menus have been researched from period sources and carefully tested for modern kitchens. For the April 14th dinner held for Captain Smith in the a la carte restaurant, there are recipes for Quail Eggs with Caviar, Lobster Thermidor, and Oranges en Surprise. In the first-class dining saloon, passengers could choose from a menu that featured Consomme Olga, Poached Salmon with Mousseline Sauce, Filets Mignons Lili, and Chocolate Painted Eclairs. For a taste of life belowdecks, sample Roasted Pork with Sage and Pearl Onions or Plum Pudding with Sweet Sauce. Complete directions for hosting a Titanic dinner include ideas for sending the invitations, setting the mood, and decorating the table, as well as choosing the wines and presenting each dish. As the string orchestra plays and the champagne is poured, step back into a world of lost elegance aboard the liner of legend.

Library Journal

According to Walter Lord (A Night To Remember, LJ 10/15/55), April 14 finds many "sentimentalists" re-creating the Titanic's last meals. Now, with the help of research chef McCauley, Archbold (coauthor of The Discovery of the Titanic, LJ 1/88) reveals these menus to the population at large. A handsome gift book filled with photos, graphics, and Edwardian motifs, this work will appeal to foodies, Titanic buffs, and trend seekers. The recipes, taken from all five dining room menus, include delicacies like Quail Eggs and Caviar, Lobster Thermidor, and Oysters la Russe; even the steerage "saloon" fare is formidable by present standards. There's also advice on how to host a Titanic dinner party complete with wardrobe and table-setting ideas, helping diners to feel like an Astor at the captain's table. With renewed interest and marketing of things Titanic in anticipation of the much-publicized film and Broadway musical (this year marks the 85th anniversary of the disaster), this book is surely the tip of the iceberg.David Nudo, "Library Journal"



Table of Contents:
Foreword10
Last Dinner on the Titanic: An Essay13
Choreographing a First-Class Titanic Dinner34
The "Ritz" Restaurant40
The First-Class Dining Saloon and Reception Room63
The Second-Class Dining Saloon94
The Third-Class Dining Saloon110
Epilogue120
Conversion Charts122
Acknowledgments, Credits, Suggested Reading, Index124
AppendixHosting a Titanic Dinner129

Book review:

Recipe of the Week: Kabobs

Author: Sally Sampson

Want new, fun ideas for quick and easy dinners? This full-color cookbook gives you fifty-two delicious, easy-to-prepare recipes [featuring] for beef, pork, chicken, lamb, fish, and vegetarian kabobs, many with intriguing international flavors. Author Sally Sampson, a former writer for Cooks Illustrated magazine, gives you background notes, serving suggestions, and wonderful tips for spicing up your menus with a different kabob every week.



Its Bunco Time or Wild Fish Cookbook

It's Bunco Time!: Cookbook and Party Ideas

Author: Leslie Crouch

The official game rules and book of entertaining that will ensure you have a terrific Bunco party.

America is going Bunco! According to a recent article in Time magazine, "Women are going crazy over this old game." Now the World Bunco Association offers one book full of everything Bunco players need to know. Complete with rules, scorecards, recipes, and information on how to start a Bunco club and organize a Bunco party, It's Bunco Time! will let readers join the craze -- without rolling the dice.

Played by 8-20 people, Bunco is a friendly game of dice. Players are divided into small groups and compete with each other to roll a set of "ones," progressing in rounds up to rolling "sixes." Bunco encourages social interaction, and eating and drinking are a big part of the fun. The old-fashioned game of the future is becoming ever more popular at parties and social events, and new groups are popping up across the country. The cookbook includes recipes for beverages, appetizers, main and side dishes, desserts, and much more, all aimed at increasing the fun!

Leslie Crouch is founder and president of The World Bunco Association. She lives in Carlsbad, California, and plays Bunco once a week with friends.

"If you are not in good spirits when you walk out the door, it's your own fault." (Barbara Baker, Bunco player)



Read also

Wild Fish Cookbook: Recipes from North America's Top Fishing Lodges

Author: Anna Kasabian

For recreational fishing enthusiasts, participants, and "foodies," finding ways to prepare, cook, and enjoy the daily catch is a large part of the fun. Since not everyone can always reach the premier waters where rich fishing resources can be found, everyone can have access to those enticing areas with the recipes found in The Wild Fish Cookbook. This unique collection of 80 fully tested freshwater and saltwater fish recipes is culled from the U.S. and Canada's outstanding fishing lodges and resorts, from the Bering Sea to the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic to the Pacific. Keen fishermen and armchair enthusiasts alike will enjoy these recipes which allow home cooks to recreate dishes from some of their favorite fishing locations and top-rated resorts. The recipes will appeal to all skill levels, whether you catch your own or buy from the local market. Recipes include dishes that are grilled, pan fried, baked, broiled, barbequed, poached, stewed, and steamed, as well as casseroles, sauces, marinades, salsas, and other cooking methods that work well with various fish species. 15-20 sidebars (plus various tips throughout) on different topics, ranging from wine pairing to fishing tips, round out this delicious, easy-to-use collection.



Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Fat Free Italian or Get the Salt out

Fat-Free Italian: Healthy Ways With a Favorite Cuisine

Author: Anne Sheasby

All recipes are illustrated in color, with easy-to-follow step-by-step photographs, nutritional notes, at-a -glance fat and calorie contents, and beautiful pictures of the finished dish.

Over 160 authentic Italian recipes, including regional classics and contemporary creations, each containing no more than 5 grams of fat per portion, and many with less than 1 gram.

Expert advice on healthy eating, with guidelines for cutting down on fat, information on fat content and fat-free cooking techniques, and essential equipment for cooking delicious low-fat Italian food.

Features a full-color photographic identification guide to Italian ingredients, including fruit, nuts, vegetables, breads, rice, grains, beans, pasta, herbs and spices.



Interesting book: Herbs and the Earth or Quick Easy Ayurvedic Cookbook

Get the Salt Out: 501 Simple Ways to Cut the Salt Out of Any Diet

Author: Ann Louise Gittleman

In this day and age, when fat is blamed for all our health problems, it's often easy to forget that salt can also be a dietary culprit. While salt is necessary for both bodily and cellular function, and is certainly crucial to the satisfying taste of some of our favorite foods, recent research shows that its excess consumption can also lead to hypertension, strokes, and a variety of cardiovascular problems.

In Get the Salt Out, nationally recognized nutritionist Ann Louise Gittleman reveals 501 ways to avoid excess salt intake by serving a variety of delicious low-sodium foods, taking advantage of tasty salt substitutes and steering clear of many surprising hidden sources of salt. She provides more than fifty delicious recipes for low-sodium foods, which will add healthful new staples to the diet of anyone who wants to "get the salt out."

Other features include:
¸  Advice on how to use herbs effectively to reduce sodium intake
¸  Tips for reading labels to expose salt where it is hidden in ingredient lists, as well as other points of supermarket salt savvy
¸  Ways to reduce the salt level in your water
¸  Advice for avoiding salt when you eat out
¸  Tips for dealing with stress and other impediments you may face in your efforts to get the salt out
¸  A week-long menu plan
¸  A resource section

Get the Salt Out has all the tips, menu plans and recipes to help you enjoy real foods again and create meals that both your taste buds and your body can truly savor!



New Whole Foods Encyclopedia or La Bonne Cuisine de Madame E Saint Ange

New Whole Foods Encyclopedia: A Comprehensive Resource for Healthy Eating

Author: Rebecca Wood

The one-of-a-kind encyclopedia of natural, whole foods that shows you how to eat right and feel better.

To a large degree, the quality of what we eat determines our health, and many cultures understand that food is the best medicine for what ails us. Arranged alphabetically, fully cross-referenced and indexed, and illustrated with line drawings, The New Whole Foods Encyclopedia provides information on how to select, prepare, store, and use medicinally more than 1,000 common and uncommon whole foods, from acorn to zucchini and aduki (a healthful Japanese bean) to zapote (a tropical fruit). Sidebar anecdotes, unique recipes, historical background, and a complete glossary of terms also contribute to the book's modern, user-friendly format.

For three decades, Rebecca Wood has conducted workshops and seminars on whole foods cookery and the properties of foods according to Western, Ayurvedic, and Chinese models. The New Whole Foods Encyclopedia shares her wisdom with a new generation of readers at a time when the benefits of holistic medicine are being recognized by the entire medical community.

With a Foreword by Paul Pitchford, author of Healing with Whole Foods.

Wood received both the 1998 James Beard Award and the Julia Child/IACP Award for her latest book, The Splendid Grain

Library Journal

In this update of a book originally published in 1983, Wood, author of the award-winning The Splendid Grain (LJ 2/15/97), provides an alphabetical listing of more than 1000 whole foods: grains, vegetables, fruits, nuts, seeds, seaweeds, fungi, sweeteners, fats, oils, herbs, and spices. Entries include historical information, health benefits, uses, and buying guidelines. Sidebars studded throughout the text contain interesting anecdotes, recipes, and even the occasional poem. Wood includes a helpful section on how to store whole foods and a list of mail-order sources. She derives her information about the healing properties of foods from a combination of Western nutrition, traditional Chinese medicine, and Indian Ayurvedic medicine. Although some readers may be skeptical of Wood's claims for health benefits that have not been clinically proven, the book is filled with practical information that would be useful to anyone wanting to further their food horizons. Recommended for public and academic libraries.--Jane La Plante, Gordon B. Olson Lib., Minot State Univ., ND Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.



Table of Contents:
Foreword by Paul Pitchfordvii
Introductionxv
Health Benefitsxix
How to Implement a Nourishing Dietxxxi
The New Whole Foods Encyclopedia1
Glossary of Terms380
Appendix I: Storage386
Appendix II: Nutritional Sources390
Appendix III: Ayurvedic Food Guidelines394
Appendix IV: Mail-Order Resources399
Selected Bibliography405
Index410

Interesting textbook:

La Bonne Cuisine de Madame E. Saint-Ange

Author: Madame Evelyn Saint Ang

PAUL ARATOW is a writer and film producer in the entertainment industry. In 1970 he founded Chez Panisse with Alice Waters. Before that, he was a faculty member in the Department of Comparative Literature at the University of California, Berkeley. He lives in Studio City, California.
* The French equivalent of the Joy of Cooking, featuring classic French techniques, 1,300 recipes, and 110 illustrations, available in English for the first time.
* The original edition has been in print continuously since its first publication in 1927.
* An indispensable source of inspiration and instruction for chefs such as Julia Child and Madeleine Kamman.

Publishers Weekly

Translated into English for the first time since its original 1927 publication, La Bonne Cuisine has long been the French housewife's equivalent of The Fannie Farmer Cookbook or The Joy of Cooking-a trusted and comprehensive guide to "la cuisine bourgeoise" or home cooking, rather than the haute cuisine of chefs and Escoffier. Julia Child called LBC "one of my bibles" and drew heavily upon its detailed approach to preparation as she labored on her own classic Mastering the Art of French Cooking. Aratow has retained the book's exhaustive scope and delightfully imperious Gallic tone ("The only true roast is a roast cooked on a spit"). The result is a comprehensive if old-fashioned tome that is an excellent basic guide to techniques, equipment and every staple of the French repertoire, from Sauce Velout and Fricass e de Poulet to Cr me Caramel. Francophiles and food history buffs will thrill to see the legendary book in its entirety, complete with original illustrations, though few modern cooks still need guidelines for lighting the firebox of a cast-iron coal-fired stove or plucking and flaming a fresh-killed chicken. A more detailed apparatus of notes on modernization would've made the book more user-friendly. As it stands, this magisterial translation offers a window into a bygone moment in French life and is a testament to the enduring joy of cooking with cookbooks. (Dec.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.



125 Best Microwave Recipes or 70 Napkin Folds and Table Decorations

125 Best Microwave Recipes

Author: Johanna Burkhard


Perform microwave magic in your kitchen.

Typically, microwave ovens are only used to heat leftovers, thaw frozen foods or nuke popcorn. Yet, there are many benefits to microwave cooking, such as:


  • A greater retention of taste and natural flavors

  • More vitamins and minerals are retained for better nutrition

  • Shorter cooking times use less electricity than a conventional oven

  • Less mess to clean up



In 125 Best Microwave Recipes, Burkhard brings her culinary expertise to this versatile and convenient appliance with outstanding recipes for delicious main meals in a fraction of the time required by conventional ovens.

From the tantalizing Chicken Creole, Beef, Macaroni and Zucchini Casserole to the Salmon Steaks with Creamy Tomato-Dill Sauce there is a variety of recipes for every occasion and taste. Grains and pastas are particularly well suited to cooking in a microwave. Lemon Barley Pilaf with Mushrooms, Asparagus Risotto, Linguine with Broccoli-Tomato Sauce and Tortellini with Basil, Cream and Walnut Sauce are sublime when cooked in the microwave. There is also a wonderful array of recipes for appetizers, side dishes and desserts.

The recipes in 125 Best Microwave Recipes reflect the latest technology in microwaves, while recognizing that many cooks still use older microwaves. Rediscover the easy and convenient way to cook with this practical and appetizing cookbook.



Table of Contents:

Acknowledgments

Introduction

All About Your Microwave


Appetizers and Dips

  • Caponata

  • Honey Mustard Brie with Walnuts

  • Spicy Thai Shrimp Wrapped in Snow Peas

  • Appetizer Meatballs with Plum Mustard Sauce

  • All-Dressed Pizza Pockets

  • Appetizer Meatballs with Spicy Chili Sauce

  • Garlic and Herb Pita Toasts

  • Cream Salsa and Cheese Dip

  • Red Pepper and White Bean Dip

  • Warm Salmon Dip

  • Warm Mushroom Parmesan Spread

  • Salsa Crab Spread


Soups and Chowders

  • Asian Chicken Noodle Soup

  • Chilled Corn and Red Pepper Soup

  • Chilled Zucchini Soup with Cilantro

  • Creamy Cauliflower Soup with Feta and Dill

  • Moroccan-Spiced Carrot Soup

  • Lemon Broccoli Soup

  • Mushroom Lentil Soup

  • Cheesy Italian Vegetable Chowder

  • Tomato Clam Chowder

  • Salmon and Dill Chowder

  • Bean and Pasta Chowder with Basil Pesto


Breakfast and Brunch

  • Creamy Scramble Eggs with Ham

  • Quick Scrambled Eggs

  • Egg Tomato Muffin Melt with Bacon

  • Mushroom Cheese Muffin Melt

  • Potato and Red Pepper Frittata

  • Spinach and Cheddar Bread Pudding

  • Cream of Wheat with Dried Fruits

  • Oatmeal with Apples and Cranberries

  • Breakfast Couscous

  • Cinnamon Dried Fruit Compote

  • Café au Chocolat


Poultry

  • Honey Lemon Chicken

  • Singapore Noodles withChicken

  • Chicken Provençal

  • Streamlined Chicken Stew

  • Chicken Paprika

  • Hawaiian Chicken

  • Quick Chicken Cacciatore

  • Creole Chicken and Rice Bake

  • Chicken Caesar Wrap

  • Swiss Cheese and Smoked Turkey Melt

  • Amazing Turkey Enchiladas


Beef, Pork and Lamb

  • Spicy Asian Beef with Peppers and Snow Peas

  • Herb Beef Ragout with Vegetables

  • Beef Cobbler

  • Italian Beef Heroes

  • Tex-Mex Beef and Rice Casserole

  • So Easy Chili

  • Chili Sloppy Joes

  • Sweet-and-Sour Meatballs with Vegetables

  • Herb Pork and Rice with Cranberries

  • Spareribs with Orange Soy Sauce

  • Braised Cabbage with Ham and Cheese

  • Sauerkraut with Knackwurst and Apples

  • Sausage, Corn and Black Bean Chili

  • Lamb Stew with Apricot


Fish and Seafood

  • Shrimp in Red Pepper Cream Sauce

  • Cod with Spicy Tomato Sauce

  • Salmon with Creamy Tomato Dill Sauce

  • Sole with Orange Ginger Sauce

  • Mediterranean Sole with Potatoes

  • Halibut with Cucumber Sauce

  • Trout with Fresh Tomato Herb Sauce

  • Spanish Fish Stew


Pasta, Grains and Legumes

  • Beefy Macaroni and Zucchini Casserole

  • Spicy Spaghettini with Peppers and Olives

  • Creamy Tortellini with Basil and Walnut Sauce

  • Tuna Mushroom Bake

  • Quick Vegetable Lasagna

  • Chicken Penne Casserole with Broccoli

  • Fusilli with Ricotta and Spinach

  • Linguine with Shrimp, Asparagus and Mushrooms

  • Homespun Macaroni and Cheese

  • Risotto with Parmesan

  • Brown Rice Pilaf with Black Olives and Feta

  • Mushroom Rice Pilaf

  • Potato and Chickpea Chili

  • Easy Baked Beans

  • Chili Black Bean Wraps

  • Curried Lentil Stew with Vegetables

  • Vegetable Barely Casserole

  • Italian Couscous with Zucchini and Red Pepper

  • Bulgur Pilaf with Apple and Cilantro

  • Creamy Polenta


Vegetables and Salads

  • Baked Potatoes with Broccoli Cheese Sauce

  • Tuna-Stuffed Potatoes

  • Baked Pizza Potatoes

  • Scalloped Potatoes

  • Buttermilk Mashed Potatoes

  • Garlic and Cheese Mashed Sweet Potatoes

  • Broccoli with Orange Sauce

  • Brussels Sprouts with Parmesan Cheese Sauce

  • Stewed Zucchini and Red Pepper

  • Rutabaga with Parmesan Crumb Topping

  • Company Vegetables with Toasted Almonds

  • Creamed Corn with Chives

  • Orange Ginger Carrots

  • Asian Vegetable Medley

  • Red Cabbage with Apples

  • Fennel with Tomatoes and Black Olives

  • Summer Vegetables with Basil

  • Honey Acorn Squash

  • Couscous Salad with Orange and Basil

  • Creamy Green Bean Salad

  • Potato Dill Salad

  • Warm Potato Salad with Goat Cheese and Walnuts

  • Curried Basmati Rice and Apple Salad

  • Warm Zucchini Salad with Parmesan

  • Asparagus Salad with Gorgonzola

  • Warm Snow Pea and Red Pepper Salad


Sauces (Savory and Sweet)

  • Hot! Barbecue Sauce

  • Curry Peach Basting Sauce

  • Sweet-and-Sour Dipping Sauce

  • Satay Peanut Sauce

  • Cranapple Sauce

  • Maple Rum Sauce

  • Raspberry Sauce

  • Vanilla Custard Sauce

  • Peanut Butter Fudge Sauce

  • Maple Walnut Sauce

  • Rhubarb Orange Sauce

  • Lemon Curd


Desserts

  • Raspberry Pear Trifle with Chocolate

  • Strawberry Mousse Pie

  • Lemon Cheesecake Mousse with Strawberries

  • Bananas in Spiced Rum Sauce

  • Fresh Pineapple with Citrus Sauce

  • Brown Sugar Apple Slices with Raisins

  • Maple Baked Apples

  • Chocolate Pudding Cake

  • Vanilla Pudding

  • Steamed Cranberry Orange Pudding

  • Creamy Rice Pudding

  • Gingerbread

  • Nanaimo Bars

  • Chocolate Irish Cream Fondue

  • Double Chocolate Brownies

  • Peanut Butter Raisin Crispies

  • Raisin Nut Popcorn Balls

  • Rocky Road Popcorn



Index

New interesting textbook: Fundamentals of Advanced Accounting or Advertising Campaign Strategy

70 Napkin Folds and Table Decorations

Author: Bridget Jones

how to create special napkin and table displays for every occasion - tricks and secrets of the professional trade all shown in simple step by step photography