DONE; a   cook's guide to knowing when food is perfectly cooked (Chronicle Books, 2014;   distr. Raincoast, 224 pages, ISBN 978-1-4521-1963-2, $27.50 US hard covers) is   by James Peterson, the prolific award-winning food writer and former restaurant   chef. He's authored 15 books and has won seven Beards. And, of course, a great   food reference book almost always trumps a cookbook in the category FOOF BOOK OF   THE MONTH. Here, Peterson tells you how to know – by sound, smell, look and/or   feel – when more than 85 vexatious cooked foods are really cooked to their   standard. You can check out too-firm artichokes, rubbery shellfish (e.g.   calamari), uncooked (in the middle) fish or chicken, runny pies, limp bacon, dry   poultry, gray yolked eggs – and more. There are three alone for asparagus:   boiled, steamed, roasted. Great photography of the finished products keyed to   the text, so you can see what it "should" look like. He opens with a small   section on how to determine "doneness", for sauteing, glazing, braising, frying,   roasting, poaching, grilling, broiling, smoking, and barbecuing. Then he goes on   to cover the elements of sauces, the prep work for eggs, and then the other   foods of veggies, seafood, meats, and desserts. Lots of hand tests and   visualizations. Terrific for beginners and an aide-memoire for the unsure. No   real recipes (just narratives) but what there is have their ingredients listed   in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, with no table of equivalents. Be   aware that there are no fixes if you screwed up – just ways to prevent it from   happening again. Quality/price rating: 91.
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

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