Gadgetology: Kitchen Fun with Your Kids, Using 35 Cooking Gadgets for Simple Recipes, Crafts, Games, and Experiments Review

Gadgetology: Kitchen Fun with Your Kids, Using 35 Cooking Gadgets for Simple Recipes, Crafts, Games, and Experiments
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This book is so much fun to use, and is gorgeous to look at. Having projects that you can do with your child by just going to the kitchen and using tools and food you already own is such a fabulous idea. So many project books for kids require items you have to go out and get especially for the project --- not very convenient for spur of the moment fun. This book makes it easy to be spontaneous. And you'll have as much fun as your child! My eight year old and three year old both love it.
I highly recommend this book!

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Getting kids involved in the kitchen at an early age is a great, hands-on way to introduce them to new foods and teach them valuable skills. Gadgetology makes it fun. Kids and parents will love spending time together with this user-friendly, full-color activity book, making everything from Circle Snacks and edible log cabins with a corer to Green Bean-Sesame Sauce Toss and homemade sidewalk chalk with a mortar and pestle. It's chock-full of recipes, experiments, crafts, and games using 35 everyday kitchen gadgets from an apple peeler to a salad spinner to a whisk.

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Kitchen Table Entrepreneurs: How Eleven Women Escaped Poverty And Became Their Own Bosses Review

Kitchen Table Entrepreneurs: How Eleven Women Escaped Poverty And Became Their Own Bosses
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So whaddya know, turns out I'm a sucker for inspirational literature after all. This book was sent to me by a friend who's been following my dreams of starting my own business, and I have to say it was extremely encouraging - both the act of his sending it to me and the stories contained herein. Even if you're not coming from a place of poverty or disenfranchisement, each one of these stories has a good nugget of truth in it: the obvious value of hard work and believing in oneself, but also seeing what people go through in the process of applying for a loan with tenuous collateral, or looking to expand an existing business, or taking a second job to secure health coverage. There's something good in each of these stories, and - yep - they're heartwarming. It's a nice collection.

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In the Kitchen (Andrew Lost #3) Review

In the Kitchen (Andrew Lost #3)
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The book Andrew Lost in The Kitchen is a funny, and full
Of adventure kind of book. Andrew is a boy with his cousin Judy,
and Andrew's little robot named Tudd. Andrew accidently shunk
himself, Judy, and Tudd so they're going through all these disasters like almost getting hit with a fly swatter. This is the funny
part of the story. Andrew, Judy, and Tudd call it toilet bowling when they got flushed dawn the toilet with Andrew's invention the
`imbubble,'' also know as a shield. They also got flushed dawn the toilet with something else. Do you know what? Dog pop.
You should read this book because it's funny, and full of adventure. Also you can have more fun when you read all
the other book of it.

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Andrew, his cousin Judy, and super-smart robot Thudd escape the bathtub–only to get flushed down the toilet! Now they have to find their way through a maze of pipes to the kitchen sink. But the kitchen is no place to be when you're the size of a flea. Monster cockroaches scurry across the counter while flies patrol the skies. Will the kids survive the kitchen? Or will they end up frozen in the fridge? Time is running out!

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Old World Kitchens and Bathrooms: A Design Guide Review

Old World Kitchens and Bathrooms: A Design Guide
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This is the biggest rip off book of all time. Basically a collection of Kraftmaid and other cabinet manufacturers brochures put together into a book. These are the materials that you can get for free at any home remodel center or from the manufacturers directly when you are planning a remodel. As most of those brochures tend to be, the book is uninspiring and completely unoriginal. All the layouts are too "staged" and don't look real probably because most of them are showroom designs with zero real life feel.Pompous designs without real charm ,in other words.
Worse I purchased it becaused it mentioned bathrooms, my area of interst at the moment - turns out the book only has 15 out of 110 pages covering bathrooms.

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This book captures today's hottest design trend for the home - textures, design, colors, and craftsmanship that evoke European ideals of a bygone era. Explore kitchens and baths rich in the fine details that characterize Provencal, Tuscan, and English country designs. Massive range hoods and brick hearths, faux finishes, rich natural stone, and tile provide polish and posh to up-to-the-minute home environments. Enjoy hand-carved wood, wrought-iron, and fine crystal chandeliers in spaces filled with the latest appliances and an abundance of workspace. The atmosphere is timeless, and these designs are certain to endure. This is an indispensable design guide for professional designers and discerning homeowners.

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Kitchen Ceramics (Everyday Things) Review

Kitchen Ceramics (Everyday Things)
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This was a beautifully done book with wonderful pictures! The major problem I found with it is that it only covered four or five of the major brands of collectible kitchen ceramics. I ordered it under the impression that it covered a vast range of kitchen ceramics. What proved to be even more disappointing was that there was no price guide! I guess if you're an experienced collector of yellowware, redware, ironstone, etc. this would be a great book. For a novice such as myself, it proved to be relatively useless.

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Collectors' guide to utilitarian kitchen antiques. With an international source directory, bibliography and index.

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On the Side (William-Sonoma Kitchen Library) Review

On the Side (William-Sonoma Kitchen Library)
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I've had this cookbook for three or four years, and I'm surprised at how often I turn to it. There aren't all that many recipes -- perhaps 40 or 50? -- and few of them sound like a terrifically exciting and different thing to cook. Yet, the book flips open to three or four of its recipes without effort, and a few are on my Thanksgiving standards list -- the "oh, you *have* to make your cranberry chutney again!" no-brainers.
The recipes are simple without being stupid... only a little more involved than steaming that asparagus (make the "asparagus with caper and pine nuts, with shaved parmesan" instead, with not a whole lot more effort), or boiling carrots (the glazed carrots with marsala and hazelnuts recipe takes the dull veggie to new heights). Befitting the book title, you won't find a veggie main course here; they're all accompaniments.
Few, if any of the recipes, use chicken stock, so the book is suitable for vegans.
Not all the recipes are winners -- the baked ratatouille is pretty dull -- but the book's inexpensive enough to keep for its several winners.

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This collection of favorite side dishes, culled from the Williams-Sonoma Kitchen Library volumes, includes such delights as Grilled Corn on the Cob with Chile-Lime Butter, Zucchini with Mint Salad, and many others.

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Williams-Sonoma The Best of the Kitchen Library: Meats & Poultry Review

Williams-Sonoma The Best of the Kitchen Library: Meats and Poultry
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This is a pretty good book. There are a variety of recipes for beef (including steaks, roasts, ground), pork, poultry (primarily chicken, but some quail, duck, etc), lamb, and veal. The Williams-Sonoma publishers are masters at selling pictures to the audience and getting you to buy the book based on the picture (hey, they sold me! :) ). Each recipe is accompanied with a beautiful picture of the dish. Sometimes the pictures have side dishes in them that look equally appealing, but there is no recipe in the book for the side dishes (so the title is strict: this is only meats and poultry). There also is a small section in the front for creating sauces that are used in the dishes. I have made a few of the beef recipes and the chicken sausage fettucine with white wine (amazing and VERY quick to make), and have been happy so far.
My only major qualm with this book is that many of the recipes are geared for grilling. I know WS has other books on grilling, and this book seems to encompass many of the recipes. I do love grilled foods, but living in a small apartment, I don't have the luxury of firing up the grill like others may have. Most of the recipes that require grilling also have instructions for broiling or searing/grilling indoors, so you can likely still make the recipe--it probably just won't taste as good. Overall a good book for the money. However, it seems like a good portion of these recipes are in other WS cookbooks, so if you already have some WS meat, poultry, and grilling books (I do not), this may not be for you.

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All of your favorite recipes from the award-winning, forty-three volume Williams-Sonoma Kitchen Library can now be found in four new comprehensive collector's editions. These collector's editions feature gorgeous, full-color images of every recipe as a finished dish, and step-by-step photographs that illuminate more challenging tasks. Written by international cooking authorities, these timeless recipe collections provide everything the home cook needs to prepare delicious, inspiring meals for friends and family.

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Collectibles for the Kitchen, Bath & Beyond: A Pictorial Guide Review

Collectibles for the Kitchen, Bath and Beyond: A Pictorial Guide
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You'll enjoy the 224 page book with over 1,000 full color terrific, sharp photos in this photo-price guide. Everything from napkin dolls, pie birds, stringholders and laundry sprinkler bottles, to egg timers, childs cups, baby dishes and razor blade banks is shown. Each major topic is fully discussed. A delightful addition to the collector's library and reference shelf.

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This comprehensive collector's guide provides more than 1,300 colour photographs and current prices for collectibles in the kitchen, bathroom and beyond. Includes many listings which are not featured anywhere else, including napkin doll ladies, figural egg timers, laundry sprinkler bottles, whistle cups, toothbrush holders, plus much more. Vintage advertisements and original patents offer valuable historical background information. The book also includes a 'wannabe' section at the end of each chapter to provide the reader with helpful hints to distinguish between the genuine article and a fabulous fake.

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Even More Top Secret Recipes: More Amazing Kitchen Clones of America's Favorite Brand-Name Foods Review

Even More Top Secret Recipes: More Amazing Kitchen Clones of America's Favorite Brand-Name Foods
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If the poor condition of the library copy is any indication, Even More Top Secret Recipes is a very popular book!
Todd Wilbur has a number of books, and it can be a little confusing sorting them out. There are three "Top Secret Recipes" books, Top Secret Recipes, More Top Secret Recipes (this book) and Even More Top Secret Recipes. These books focus on what Wilbur calls "convenience foods." That is, most packaged sweets and fast food. He also has a book Top Secret Restaurant Recipes, in which he attempts to duplicate the foods of mostly casual dining restaurants like Chili's and Applebee's. He also has a book solely on drinks.
Wilbur explains in the Introduction of More Top Secret Recipes that these are not the actual recipes used by restaurants, and he did not obtain them through bribery, theft other illegal or illicit means. He starts with the ingredient list on packages of food and modifies the relative amounts, or with fast food, tries to identify the ingredients by taste. He admits that the real producers of these foods often use custom ingredients unavailable to the consumer, and that the goal was to match the texture and flavor of the food, and appearance is secondary.
So why try to clone commercially-available food? In both More Top Secret Recipes and Even More Top Secret Recipes, the author mentions availability. Some of the foods are regional, and you may not get them where you live. In the introduction to More Top Secret Recipes, he gives a list of reasons including low cost and curiosity. I'm not so sure about the cost argument, since I have to sacrifice two boxes of Macaroni and Cheese to make half a box of Cheese Nips, but the curiosity is what applied to me. I just wanted to know, "Can I really duplicate these commercial foods at home?"
This book contains 88 recipes, a big increase over the 37 of the previous book. The recipes clone the likes of McDonald's, Nabisco, Carl's Jr. and Taco Bell. Every recipe includes a history of the food item, something alone which makes this book valuable, and a dimensioned engineering graphic of the product. Even More Top Secret Recipes includes an interesting introduction discussing the fast food industry, and gives some tips on creating the clones. The recipes make as much use as possible of premade food and mixes. For example, most candy bars are coated with melted chocolate chips, so you will not find that you have to crush cocoa beans, or perform any such low-level task.
From this book, so far, I attempted to make Girl Scout Thin Mint cookies, (I AM a Girl Scout after all. Really. My wife signed me up. It was a surprise to me, too!) and Nabisco Cheese Nips. The thin mints turned out pretty good. The flavor and texture were pretty close. The only problem is that the chocolate was a little thick. Applying it to a desired thickness is difficult. Also, the chocolate remained quite soft. A little more experimentation with cookie thickness and baking time and temperature might make the centers a little more consistent, too. The Cheese Nips are made using the cheese packets from Kraft Macaroni and Cheese (Cheese and Macaroni?). They turned out crispy, and although bright orange like the real thing before baking, turned out grayish-tan when done. Although crispy, they weren't light and bubbly like the real thing, but were more like crispy cookies. They needed to be cheesier. They tasted like the flour and shortening. They weren't bad, though, and my wife liked them, but they weren't much like Cheese Nips. A lot of recipes would benefit from the use of rolling pin rings to establish uniform dough thickness.
I also had mixed results with the recipes from More Top Secret Recipes. You can read my amazingly similar review on that book for more details.
Using this book was fun and informative. I've had mixed results using these books. In short, have fun, but don't expect miracles with every recipe.

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Bestselling author Todd Wilbur serves up another mouth-watering batch of your favorite brand-name foods to make at homeWith more than 1.5 million Top Secret Recipes books sold, Todd Wilbur is the reigning master of professional-quality clones of America's best-loved, brand-name foods. In Even More Top Secret Recipes, Wilbur shares the secrets to making your own delicious versions of:' McDonald's French Fries' KFC Extra Crispy'Chicken' Wendy's Spicy Chicken Fillet Sandwich' Drake's Devil Dogs ' Taco Bell Burrito Supreme ' Boston Market Meatloaf' And many more!With a dash of humor, a tantalizing spoonful of food facts and trivia, and a hearty sprinkling of culinary curiosity, Even More Top Secret Recipes gives you the blueprints for reproducing the brand-name foods you love.--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

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The Shaker Kitchen: Over 100 Recipes from Canterbury Shaker Village Review

The Shaker Kitchen: Over 100 Recipes from Canterbury Shaker Village
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This is the best, the easiest, the tastiest way to re-create your grandmother's cooking. Simple directions and easily-found ingredients plus appetizing-looking pictures of the food get you going. Preparation and cooking times are included.
We have been to the Shaker Village in Canterbury, eaten at their candlelit dinners - and then I have come home and followed the recipe in the book for what I ate the night before - and it both looked as good and tasted as delicious as when their chef prepared it.
This is one of my all-time favorite cookbooks.

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Fresh indigenous ingredients become sublime dishes in this collection of simple recipes from Canterbury Shaker Village, a historic Shaker community in New Hampshire. Jeffrey S. Paige, who learned cooking techniques and philosophy directly from the last living Shakers, offers more than 100 recipes for Shaker-inspired soups and chowders, salads and dressings, breads, meats, poultry, seafood, vegetables, and desserts. 45 black-and-white photographs.

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Simplicity from a Monastery Kitchen: A Complete Menu Cookbook for All Occasions Review

Simplicity from a Monastery Kitchen: A Complete Menu Cookbook for All Occasions
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It seems ridiculous to try to describe a cookbook as "peaceful" but this cookbook really is. Just reading it almost always fills me with the feeling I get when I am working on a familiar, much-loved recipe for people I care about on a special occasion, which unfortunately is rare. I think that is the magic of this author and this book; the author really seems to approach every meal as a celebration--but a celebration of simple things, as the title says.
This book is mostly vegetarian except for a short but notable chapter on fish. It seems to draw effortlessly from a variety of ethnic sources but all the dishes share the same basic qualities. They really are simple and easy to prepare; there isn't a single one I would describe as fussy. I suppose when you are cooking for an entire monastery you wind up with recipes that also are easy to prepare for 4 or 6!
The directions are simple and clear and the book itself is beautiful. There are interesting illustrations, seemingly woodcarvings not of the food but of mideaval life. There are also quotes on the subject of simplicty, joy, prayer in the margins which are as inspirational as the recipes.
This book will make you hungry for a hundred different kinds of vegetables, a peaceful weekend in the kitchen and a lot else. I recommend it to anyone who takes real joy in cooking.

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The Dance of Spices: Classic Indian Cooking for Today's Home Kitchen Review

The Dance of Spices: Classic Indian Cooking for Today's Home Kitchen
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I was always on the look-out for recipes that covered Indian cooking methods from the basic foundation of making your own spices to elegant pairings of traditional Indian and Western ingredients. When my husband came home with 'The Dance of Spices', given to him as a gift at a seminar, I was surprised by the level of detail, care, and passion. Things that my mother cannot explain to me because of the miles between us, Laxmi has done comprehensively in her new cookbook. I have learned simple techniques like how to make my own ghee at home, understand the marriage of spices, and most importantly, how to make finger-licking Indian food in a San Francisco home. I hope you all enjoy this book as much as I have.

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A new classic on adapting authentic Indian seasonings and techniques to today's American kitchen
Indian cuisine has finally come into its own in the United States, as evidenced by the opening of numerous stylish, upscale Indian restaurants. The "dance of spices" refers to the complex, subtle layering of flavors that is at the base of all Indian cooking. This definitive cookbook showcases the wonderful diversity of new Indian cuisine with 238 recipes: fragrant basmatis and rice pilafs; rich, soothing dishes like Chicken Korma; exotic dishes like Fennel-Scented Kashmir Lamb; tongue-teasing chutneys and relishes; side dishes like Velvety Mango Paneer; and sweet confections, all of which can be made with ease at home. Special chapters are devoted to subjects not fully explored in other books, such as tandoor barbecue, chaats–the savory street snacks of India–and popular flatbreads.
Laxmi Hiremath (San Ramon, CA), born in the South of India, has taught Indian cooking in the United States for more than a decade and is one of the San Francisco Chronicle's most popular food writers. Her articles and recipes have appeared in such publications as Gourmet, Bon Appétit, and Fine Cooking.

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Marie Claire Seasonal Kitchen Review

Marie Claire Seasonal Kitchen
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First of all, this is a very beautiful (and heavy!) cookbook. The photographs of the finished dishes are gorgeous and full-page. The print is relatively large and easy to read. I have tried several of the recipes with perfect results. What I like most about this cookbook is that it isn't a collection of slightly tweaked adaptations from other sources but refreshingly original and easy to make combinations of ingredients. There are a lot of ideas between the formal recipes as well that are interesting,useful suggestions for making the most of seasonal ingredients. So far, I have made the Pineapple and Lime muffins (with coconut and coconut milk), the Aromatic Roast Chicken Breasts, Dill Pancakes with Smoked Salmon, Tuna and Quinoa Salad, Squash and Hazelnut Salad, Baby Beets with Walnut Dressing, Tomato and Prosciutto Risotto and the Chestnut and Mushroom Soup. They all tasted terrific and looked as good as the photographs in the book. The recipes are very up-to-date and well tuned in to how we eat today. You will enjoy reading and cooking from this book for a long time. Highly recommended.

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The upscale magazine provides stylish recipes that complement each season of the year.

Since 1994, marie claire magazine has attracted a broad audience of younger working women by offering smart, service-oriented content. This new cookbook is devoted to those home cooks who are eager to make the most of fresh produce and respond to the changing moods of each season.

Michele Cranston includes inspiring recipes from light and healthy spa cuisine for summer days to heartier casseroles and soups for cooler weather months. This vibrant cookbook reinvents old and comforting favorites and creates new and exciting flavor combinations from the Mediterranean, the Middle East, Asia and the Pacific. Recipes include everything from salt and pepper crab cakes (for autumn), to tagine of chicken, tomato and artichoke (winter); from lamb with lentils and goat cheese (spring), to apricot and orange jam (summer).

marie claire Seasonal Kitchen has dishes for all occasions, from a lazy family night with a bowl of spicy noodles to an afternoon of slow grazing. Featuring 250 recipes with 400 photographs, it is a fabulous book on home-style cooking and entertaining.


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Ice Creams & Sorbets (Williams Sonoma Kitchen Library) Review

Ice Creams and Sorbets (Williams Sonoma Kitchen Library)
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As stated above, I don't have a spiffy title for my review. However, if you'd like to hear raves about your dessert at a formal dinner party, mix up a batch of the Cataloupe Sorbet with Minted Melon from this cookbook. It's practically a staple in our home when we bring out the formal china!
We did make a few changes to the recipe to make our lives easier. We buy a few slices of honeydew and watermelon off the local grocery store salad bar instead of entire melons that would go to waste. We don't use specially carved cantaloupe rinds to serve the sorbet. We also used dried mint instead of fresh for a stronger taste.

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Risotto: 30 Simply Delicious Vegetarian Recipes from an Italian Kitchen Review

Risotto: 30 Simply Delicious Vegetarian Recipes from an Italian Kitchen
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I bought this book years ago and use it each time I make risotto. I have since worked out my own variations from Ferrigno's recipes. She does call for a homemade veggie stock, but I use veggie bouillion and it works fine.
Must try recipes: Fontina/Walnut Risotto, Milanese (Saffron) Risotto, Artichoke Risotto and the Fennel Risotto.


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Risotto, Italy's most famous rice dish, is enjoyed the world over. It's utterly delicious and nutritious, versatile and economical ; and can be prepared in only 20 minutes. 30 authentic risotto recipes ; inspired by the regional cooking of Italy ; in three simple chapters: Cheese, Beans and Vegetables.

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The Kitchen Book & The Cook Book Review

The Kitchen Book and The Cook Book
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This volume consists of two works originally published by Freeling in the 1970s, "The Kitchen Book," and "The Cook Book." The two are presented here one after the other as separate entities, together with whimsical illustrations by John Lawrence. At the back of the book is an index covering material in "The Cook Book".
"The Kitchen Book" describes Freeling's formative years as a cook in the 1950s and 60s. Freeling came of age in Britain at the close of World War II. He wanted to become a chef, and set off to the continent to find himself a job in a the restaurant of a fancy Parisian hotel. Determination and perseverance enabled him to withstand the rigors of an informal apprenticeship in the kitchen, where he learned the foundation of French cooking. Ambition and a desire for more pay led him to take a position in a provincial hotel, where he learned more, and not necessarily just about food. Much of the more interesting material in this volume covers this period in his life. The remainder covers his later cooking career, when he shifted from hotel to hotel in Britain, and presided as executive chef over a restaurant that was doomed from the start by fantastically poor management. Some of the material in the latter part of this volume can be slightly hard to follow for readers unfamiliar with the context of restaurant work in Britain or British dialects and slang.
"The Cook Book" is a written in a very informal narrative style, quite different from the detailed didactic instructions of more typical cookbooks. Freeling enumerates the merits of a dish and how and when it may best be enjoyed, and then narrates entirely in prose how the dish can be prepared. He eschews exact measurements, temperature or timing guidelines, since he knows that ingredients are variable, and will cook differently depending on their age and treatment, and the humidity and temperature of the kitchen. He notes that it is far more important to observe, taste, smell, and touch the food as it cooks than to rely on measurements of volume, temperature, or time.
Indeed, in the introduction to "The Kitchen Book," Freeling explains some of his philosophy on the subject, emphasizing that a good cook makes a dish well not through slavishly following a recipe, but through shear practice, and continuing to make the same dish repeatedly until it consistently comes out right. He tell us "In this book are no recipes, absolutely no useful hints, and above all no damned instructions; they do not give one an appetite." Actually, that's not quite true-a careful reader can pick up a number of great hints by reading the book, starting with the idea that good cooking comes through practice, not instructions. Nevertheless, Freeling's narrative style for giving recipes in "The Cook Book" is not for everyone. It works well for experienced cooks who are familiar with the ingredients mentioned. Such cooks won't have a problem with statements like "cook until done," but the rest of us may wistfully wish for a few more specific guidelines to help us along. But this doesn't detract from the delightful readability of the recipes.


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Nicolas Freeling, best known for producing some of the finest of modern crime fiction, began his working life as an apprentice cook in a large French hotel. He continued cooking professionally for many years, and his enthusiasm for, and interest in, gastronomy in its broadest sense is at least equal to his passion for crime. Here, reprinted in a single volume, are his two splendid books of gastronomical memoir drawn from those experiences. Each is a delicious blend of the culinary and the literary, and include such recipes as cinnamon lamb stew and bouillabaisse, all charmingly floating about in a consistently entertaining text. The work is illustraited by the witty and winsome pen of John Lawerence, the perfect visual sauce for Freelin's savouries. Funny, wise, full of inspiration and delight, The Kitchen Book & The Cook Book will find a place close to every cook's hearth and heart.

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Vera in the Kitchen (Vera the Mouse) Review

Vera in the Kitchen (Vera the Mouse)
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Vera in the Kitchen is a charming combination of rhyme and pictures by Majolein Bastin. It tells the story of a mouse named Vera and her escapades with food and cooking. She is joined by her dollie, a wren named Little Chick, and a ladybug.
The illustrations are the best part of the book and make you wish you too could be a mouse. Although the text is sometimes juvenille, this book is one to be enjoyed by all ages. I recommend this and all other Vera books.

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Vera the mouse and her friends make spaghetti, pancakes, and a lot of mess when they try their hand at cooking.

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