THE RESTAURANT/CELEBRITY COOKBOOKS...
  
 ...are one of the hottest trends in cookbooks. 
Actually, they've been  around for many years, but never in such 
proliferation. They are automatic  sellers, since the book can be 
flogged at the restaurant or TV show and  since the chef ends up being a 
celebrity somewhere, doing guest cooking or  catering or even turning up 
on the Food Network. Most of these books will  certainly appeal to fans 
of the chef and/or the restaurant. Many of the  recipes in these books 
actually come off the menus of the restaurants  involved. Occasionally, 
there will be, in these books, special notes or  preps, or recipes for 
items no longer on the menu. Stories or anecdotes will  be related to 
the history of a dish. But because most of these books are  American, 
they use only US volume measurements for the ingredients;  sometimes 
there is a table of metric equivalents, but more often there is  not. 
I'll try to point this out. The usual schtick is "favourite recipes  
made easy for everyday cooks". There is also PR copy on "demystifying  
ethnic ingredients". PR bumpf also includes much use of the magic 
phrase  "mouth-watering recipes" as if that is what it takes to sell 
such a book. I  keep hearing from readers, users, and other food writers 
that some  restaurant recipes (not necessarily from these books) don't 
seem to work,  but how could that be? They all claim to be kitchen 
tested for the home, and  many books identify the food researcher by 
name. Most books are loaded with  tips, techniques, and advice, as well 
as gregarious stories about life in  the restaurant world. Photos 
abound, usually of the chef bounding about. But  of course there are a 
lot of food shots, verging on gastroporn. The  endorsements are from 
other celebrities in a magnificent case of logrolling.  If resources are 
cited, they are usually American mail order firms, with  websites. Some 
companies, though, will ship around the world, so don't  ignore them 
altogether. Here's a rundown on the latest crop of such books  
  
 10. PINTXOS; small plates in the Basque tradition (Ten Speed Press,  
2009, 202 pages, ISBN 978-1-58008-922-7, $24.95 US, hard covers) is by  
Gerald Hirigoyen, chef-owner of two San Francisco restos (Piperade and  
Bocadillos). He was named or nominated for several "best chef" awards 
in  California. The focusing food writer is Lisa Weiss, who has co-
written many  other cookbooks. Top notch log rollers here are Eric 
Ripert, Paula Wolfert,  and Chuck Williams (Williams-Sonoma). With 
"small plates" as the single  hottest menu trend in North America, it 
seems appropriate to begin  specializing beyond Spain and the Eastern 
Mediterranean. Here are 75 preps  for appetizer-sized French Basque and 
Spanish Basque dishes, albeit with  some California influences. The 
arrangement is by type of dish (griddle,  beans, sandwiches, braises, 
innards, fried bites, salads, skewers,  montaditos, and soups). He has 
wine notes that offering pairings for each  dish, as well as tips for 
cooks to make their own pairings. Avoirdupois  measurements are used in 
the recipes, but there is no metric table of  equivalencies. There are 
notes about the Basque pantry, US sources of  supply, and a large 
typeface index. Try hanger steak with chimichurri,  calamari with 
peppers and wild mushroom salad, white bean and salt cod stew,  fava 
beans with crème fraiche and mint, oxtail empanadas, sweetbreads,  
artichoke chips with lemon aioli, or sardines escabeche. Quality/Price  
rating: 88. 
  
 
11. DIRTY DISHES; a restaurateur's story of passion, pain and pasta  
(Bloomsbury, 2009, 256 pages, ISBN 978-1-59691-442-1, $25 US hard  
covers) is by Pino Luongo, who has owned and operated several  
restaurants, since 1983, in New York and Chicago. Currently, he is chef  
and owner of New York's Centolire. As he says, "Everybody has an 
opinion  about me
A lot of people love me, and a lot of people hate me
a 
lot of what  you've heard about me is true". His memoir covers his 
Tuscan boyhood right  up through his business partners, former partners, 
food critics, and others.  He is also the author of several cookbooks. 
He rose from dishwasher to  owner-operator. But after dealing with a 
corporate chain (the relationship  went sour), he left everything behind 
and returned to cooking. Here are his  stories about the rich and 
famous, ably assisted by collaborator Andrew  Friedman, who has co-
authored many cookbooks with celebrity chefs. Portions  of the book were 
in "Don't Try This at Home", a collection of kitchen  disasters. And for 
the first time since 1988, he's back to just one  restaurant. There is 
index to the contents, so you cannot look up Warhol,  Zagat, Stallone, 
or Onassis to see what he says about them  you must  browse. There are 
10 recipes, mostly for basic Tuscan dishes. Quality/Price  rating: 88.
  
  
  
 12. SIZZLE IN HELL'S KITCHEN; ethnic recipes from restaurants of New  
York City's Ninth Avenue neighborhood (Gibbs Smith, 2009; dist.  
Raincoast, 224 pages, ISBN 978-1-4236-0445-7, $30 US hard covers) is a  
collection of preps collated by Carliss Retif Pond, a culinary advisor  
living in New York. Arranged by course (apps to desserts), this  
collection reflects the preps as presented by 43 local restaurants  
reflecting the cuisines of Africa, Louisiana, Belgium, Brazil, Chile,  
Asia, Cuba, Druze (Israel), the Mediterranean, Russia, Puerto Rico,  
Argentina, even Ireland: all of course reflective of the waves of  
immigrants that have arrived through the Hell's Kitchen area. Recipes  
are sourced, and include such as railroad pork chops with apricot-mango  
sauce, yebeg tibs (Ethiopian), spiedino macelleria, spiha (Deuze), pla  
lad prik (Thai), molokhia (Egypt), kartoffelsuppe (Germany), pistou  
soup, and samosas with potato and peas. All of it perfect street or  
diner food. There are some photos and stories about the restaurants and  
their owners, many of which have been ion the same family hands for  
generations. Avoirdupois measurements are used in the recipes, but 
there  is a metric table of equivalencies. Quality/Price rating: 89.
  
  
  
 13. CANYON RANCH: NOURISH; indulgently healthy cuisine (Penguin Viking  
Studio, 2009, 372 pages, ISBN 978-0-670-02073-7, $40 US hard covers) is  
by Scott Uehlein, executive chef at the Canyon Ranch Health Resort in  
Tucson since 1999. For almost thirty years, it has been a top spa  
destination for health and wellness. The culinary philosophy here is 
the  same as at all spas: natural, nutritional, wholesome ingredients 
must be  fresh and seasonal. Each prep includes nutritional data and 
techniques. The  book is arranged by course, from beverages and snacks 
through to desserts,  with vegetarian entrees and all of the major food 
groups. Avoirdupois  measurements are used in the recipes, but there is 
no metric table of  equivalencies. There is, however, a useful chart of 
ingredient conversions  from weights to volumes, so that a pound of 
acorn squash could be three  cups. There are lists of gluten-free 
recipes and dairy-free recipes, but no  page references are given. There 
is also a US web resources listing. Uehlein  emphasizes colour and 
downplays white. Try his chilled cucumber soup with  arugula, apple-
cranberry salmon salad, tomato feta relish, grilled beef  tenderloins 
with tomato-blue cheese salsa, and almond macaroons.  Quality/Price 
rating: 87.
  
 
14. SEVEN FIRES; grilling the Argentine way (Artisan, 2009; dist. T.  
Allen, 278 pages, ISBN 978-1-57965-354-5, $35 US hard covers) is by  
Francis Mallmann, who owns two restaurants in Mendoza and Buenos Aires,  
plus a third in Uruguay. This Patagonian chef has applied his skills 
for  the home cook. According to the publisher, the Argentines grill 
more meat  per capita than any other country. Since 1995, Mallmann has 
been working  exclusively with wood-fired cookery, both rustic and 
refined. He has burnt  stories and crusty stories here. He has seven 
methods of cooking. Parilla is  the most prominent, since this is 
basically what's called BBQ in North  America. But the other six can be 
employed as well, although asador (whole  pigs or lambs affixed to an 
iron cross that faces a bonfire) and rescoldo  (cooking food by burying 
in hopt embers and ashes) may not be too practical  at home. Most 
recipes are adapted for cooking indoors, so the book is useful  for any 
kitchen in any season. Preps cover the whole range of food from apps  to 
desserts; the arrangement of the book includes extensive chapters on  
beef, lamb, chicken, pork, plus seafood and vegetables. Try fresh figs  
with mozzarella, pears and iberico ham, bricklayer steak, lamb Malbec,  
salt crust chicken, salmon a la vara, or carmelized endives with  
vinegar. There are, of course, sections on techniques and equipment  
needed. Absolutely gorgeous photography. Avoirdupois measurements are  
used in the recipes, but there is a metric table of equivalencies.  
Quality/Price rating: 90.
  
 
15. TEA & CRUMPETS; rituals & recipes from European tearooms  and cafes 
(Chronicle Books, 2009, 180 pages, ISBN 978-0-8118-6214-1, $19.95  US 
hard covers) is by Chronicle cookbook author Margaret M. Johnson, who  
also writes food articles for the press. Here she collects and collates  
recipes from tearooms throughout Europe, in some cases adapting them 
for  home use. Preps concern mainly sandwiches, pastries, cakes and 
scones,  crumpets, et al. After the primer material on teas and some 
history, she has  separate chapters on the sandwiches, the breads, and 
the sweets. Preps are  sourced. Thus, there is The Clarence (Dublin)  
and its spiced egg  sandwiches, the cucumber sandwiches from Claridge's 
(London), tea brack from  the Quay House in Galway, meringues from 
Willow Tea Rooms (Glasgow), and  gooseberry mousse from Llangoed Hall in 
Wales. Most tearooms are in the UK  and Eire. Others are spotty in Paris 
and Switzerland (in the French  cantons), principally at hotels with an 
English clientele. She has a  concluding chapter on the French style of 
teas, along with recipes for  madeleines, crème caramel, and petit pains 
au chocolat. There is a US  resource list for ingredients. Avoirdupois 
measurements are used in the  recipes, but there is a metric table of 
equivalencies. Quality/Price rating:  87.
  
  
  
 16. RUSTIC FRUIT DESSERTS; crumbles, buckles, cobblers, pandowdies, and  
more (Ten Speed Press, 2009, 164 pages, ISBN 978-1-58008-976-0, $22 US  
hard covers) is by Cory Schreiber (founder of Wildwood Restaurant) and  
Julie Richardson (founder of Baker & Spice), both of Portland, Oregon.  
I am not sure what is in the publisher's mind here: most of the preps  
come from Richardson (she's the baker) but it is Schreiber's attributed  
book as first author. In addition, the publisher felt it necessary to  
have heavy duty log rolling from such as Sara Moulton (exec chef of  
Gourmet) and David Lebovitz (former top dessert chef from Chez 
Panisse).  This is a basic book of old time cooked fruit desserts, 
generally without  pastry crusts. Anyone can make them. Included are 
crisps, slumps, betties,  buckles, grunts, crumbles, cobblers, 
pandowdies, bread puddings, cakes,  compotes, custards, fools (but no 
syllabubs), galettes, teacakes, and  trifles. Generic preps are listed 
for stone fruit slump, stone fruit tea  cake, stone fruit crisp, and 
stone fruit upside-down cornmeal cake.  Substitutions are encouraged. 
Apples, stone fruit, and berries are the main  three categories of 
fruit. The book is arranged by season as it follows the  course of 
development of the fruit. And it is also based primarily on what  is 
available in the Pacific Northwest. Try raspberry red currant cobbler,  
upside-down sweet cherry cake, maple apple dumpling, cranberry buckle  
with vanilla crumb, or caramel peach grunt. There's a short US sources  
lists. Avoirdupois measurements are used in the recipes, but there is 
no  metric table of equivalencies. Quality/Price rating: 89.
  
  
  
 17. MRS. ROWE'S LITTLE BOOK OF SOUTHERN PIES (Ten Speed Press, 2009,  
118 pages, ISBN 9788-0-1-58008-980-7, $16.95 US hard covers) is by  
Mollie Cox Bryan, a food writer. Here are more than 65 recipes for pies  
from the family-owned "Mrs. Rowe's Restaurant and Bakery" in the  
Shenandoah Valley, VA. It is sixty years old, and her family now runs  
it, along with some cafeterias, a buffet, catering business and a  take-
out counter which sells 100 pies a day. To me, the classic US Southern  
pie has always been Chess Pie, made with either lemons or vinegar or a  
combination. But try to find it in this book. There is no index entry  
for "Chess" Pie. The inside front cover says that there is a Lemon 
Chess  Pie in the book. Most references I've seen to Chess Pie don't 
mention  "Lemon" in the title. I look up Lemon in the index, and find an 
entry for  "Lemon pies" on page 73 and 110. Not on 73, but it is on page 
110. Are they  trying to hide something? Other deficiencies of the index 
include a  Make-Your-Own-Flavor Chiffon Pie entry, but none for Chiffon 
Pie. Streusel  Topping has its own entry, but it is not cross-listed 
under Toppings and  sauces as it should be. Part one of the book covers 
crusts and toppings. The  second part deals with fruits and nut pies. 
Cream and custards are up next,  followed by frozen/icebox pies, and 
"pies for the cupboard". There's some  good primer material on how to 
make pie crusts and cooking times. Try  weepless meringue, caramel apple 
nut pie, chestnut pie, winter squash pie,  brown sugar pie, raisin pie, 
and shoo fly pie. Avoirdupois measurements are  used in the recipes, but 
there is no metric table of equivalencies.  Quality/Price rating: 88. 
  
 
18. SMOKED, SLATHERED, AND SEASONED; a complete guide to flavoring food  
for the grill (Wiley, 2009, 334 pages, ISBN 978-0-470-18648-0, $19.95  
US, soft covers) is by Elizabeth Karmel, owner of the Grill Friends 
line  of grilling products and the executive chef for Hill Country 
barbecue  restaurant in New York City. She also runs girlsatthegrill.com 
and  grillfriends.com. Here she offers a booming 400 recipes for 
marinades,  brines, barbecue sauces, glazes, mops, salsa, jellies, 
dipping sauces,  pestos, and tapenades. All of these can be applied to 
hot-and-fast grilling  or low-and-slow BQ. The essence is in balancing 
the flavours for the likes  of ribs, burgers, steaks, poultry, seafood, 
vegetables and fruit. The book  is arranged by the title: there's a 
section of items to be soaked, another  for slathered items, and a third 
for seasoned (rubs). Double-columns  throughout are used, with 
economically smaller pictures. There is good use  of typefaces and 
sizes. Sidebars are used wherever appropriate. Avoirdupois  measurements 
are used in the recipes, but there is no metric table of  equivalencies. 
Try pomegranate BBQ sauce, carrot-jalapeno relish,  cherry-chile steak 
sauce, sesame-soy mop, or roasted garlic-Dijon butter.  Quality/Price 
rating: 90.
  
 
19. A TOUCH OF TROPICAL SPICE; recipes from chili crab to Laksa (Tuttle  
Publishing, 2009; distr. Ten Speed, 144 pages, ISBN 978-0-8048-4081-1,  
$24.95 US hard covers) has been collated by Wendy Hutton, an Asiatic  
food specialist. These 75 preps all come from four Four Seasons Resorts  
and Hotels  the ones in Bali at Jimbaran Bay and Sayan, the Maldives  
resort at Kuda Huraa, and Hotel Singapore. This is high level spicy  
Asiatic cooking at its best from the world-renowned Four Seasons teams.  
The range is India, Maldives, Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand,  
and Vietnam, and covering virtually every course from breakfast and  
snacks through to evening mains. Brunches and picnics are also 
included.  In addition to the 75 preps, there are 34 recipes for basics 
of sambals,  sauces, dips, dressings, jams, chutneys, and pickles. The 
list of web-based  resources includes Australia, Germany, Scandinavia, 
the UK, and the USA.  Executive chefs responsible for the home versions 
of the food are named, and  ingredients are expressed in both 
avoirdupois and metric weights and  measures. Try passionfruit 
cheesecake, pan fired fish fillets with mango,  grilled rending rib-eye 
steaks, sweet corn and leek soup with crab  dumplings, BBQ jumbo shrimp 
with vindaloo dip, or even "coconut rice with  assorted side dishes".  
All with gorgeous photography. Quality/Price  rating: 89.
  
 
20. THE RUSTY PARROT COOKBOOK; recipes from Jackson Hole's acclaimed  
lodge (Gibbs Smith, 2009; distr. Raincoast, 224 pages, ISBN  978-1-4236-
0347-4, $50 US hard covers) is by Darla Worden and Eliza Cross.  Both 
are lifestyles writers; Worden lives in Jackson Hole (Wyoming) and  
Cross lives in Centennial, Colorado. The Rusty Parrot Lodge & Spa seems  
to make everybody's top ten lists. Indeed, it has been AAA Four Diamond  
for 15 consecutive years. Their Wild Sage Restaurant specializes in  
"over-the-top" breakfasts. This is a typical souvenir type book,  
featuring the home kitchen version of their most popular dishes. It has  
a lot of photography and essays, historical gleanings from the area. 
And  of course it has to be nicely recommended for anyone who has had a 
good  experience there. It is an oversized book, and it is very heavy in 
weight.  The arrangement is seasonal, with a source directory that is 
all US.  Surprisingly, they recommend a local Wyoming source for 
seafood. Avoirdupois  measurements are used in the recipes, but there is 
a metric table of  equivalencies. Try a jumbo lump crab cake, opal basil 
stuffed chicken  breast, yakinori salad roll, hazelnut blanc mange, sake 
and green  curry-braised pork belly, or griddled haystack mountain goat 
cheese.  Quality/Price rating: 85.
  
 
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