LOW   & SLOW; the art and technique of braising, BBQ, and slow roasting (Houghton   Mifflin Harcourt, 2014, 246 pages, ISNM 978-1-118-10591-7, $19.99 US hard   covers) is by Robert Briggs (professor) and the Culinary Institute of America.   The basic principles here concern low heat and slow cooking times for prepping   tough but flavourful cuts of meat. It tells one how to make the most of every   cut of meat, any time of the year. There are chapters on homemade rubs and   sauces, plus some accompanying sides to prepare. It is arranged by the three   techniques, and each chapter begins with a master recipe, with all the   techniques fully illustrated and explained. Under braising, there are two   recipes for each prep, one using a slow cooker, the other a stovetop or oven   braise. Under BBQ, there are extensive notes on prepping and regional styles.   The emphasis throughout is on international cuisine influences. It is a good   thorough book, with plenty of techniques illustrated and good suggestions for   sides. Just under 100 preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois   measurements, but there are tables of metric equivalents.
  Audience and level of use: beginning cooks, and men.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: braised pulled pork BBQ   sandwiches; Korean-style braised short ribs; beef braised in beer and onions;   braised oxtail; Moroccan chicken tagine; Eastern North Carolina BBQ pork butt;   spit-roasted garlic and lime chicken.
  The downside to this book: could have had more recipes.
  The upside to this book: very compact.
  Quality/Price Rating: 88.
  8.SOUTHWEST DUTCH OVEN (Gibbs Smith, 2014, 128 pages, ISBN   978-1-4236-3635-9, $15.99 US spiral bound) is by George and Carolyn Dumler, both   seasoned Dutch oven cooks preparing food for large crowds. They have qualified   for the World Championships every year since 2009. Indeed, some of these preps   here are reprinted from cookbooks of the 2010-2012 World Championship Cook-Off   Dutch Oven Recipes. There's a primer, and then the book is arranged by course or   ingredient such as chiles, sauces, sides, mains, breads, and desserts. There is   also a menu for a big Southwestern Thanksgiving, with nine recipes. This must be   the tenth book published this year on Dutch ovens: a really popular item?
  Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but   there is a table of metric equivalents.
  Audience and level of use: Dutch oven users.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: mashed potatoes; turkey with   chile garlic marinade; turkey breast with chipotle gravy; chorizo and pistachio   stuffing; corn pudding; cheddar jalapeno twists; tequila cranberry compote;   pumpkin pinon bread; and pecan chile pie.
  The downside to this book: ripped out pages are easy (spiral binding)
  The upside to this book: spiral bound, lies flat.
  Quality/Price Rating: 86.
  12.MARINADES; the quick-fix way to turn everyday food into exceptional   fare, with 400 recipes (Harvard Common Press, 2014; dist. T.Allen, 320 pages,   ISBN 978-1-55832-827-3, $17.95 US paper covers) is by Lucy Vaserfirer, recipe   developer and cookbook author. This is a great idea for a book, as an   alternative to a slow-cooker. With the right marinade, you can dress up meats or   veggies in the morning, put the food in the fridge for the day, and finish off   the plate at night with a broil, grill, microwave, or saute. Of course, for meat   like beef, this only works on the softer textured cuts. The heavy duty stewing   meats may be a tad too tough for quick cooking. The 200 marinades here are   vinegar-based, oil-based, fruit-based, milk-based, and alcohol-based. There is   certainly something for every day; each marinade comes with a recipe that shows   one way to use it.  More than half the "suggested use" recipes are for   grilled dishes and BBQs, but they can be adapted for indoor use. She opens with   the marinades, in separate chapters for herbs, spices, citrus, tomato and the   like. Then she moves on to different cuisines, such as southwestern marinades,   South American marinades, European, Chines-Japanese-Korean, Southeast Asia,   Indian, African, Caribbean, and even "sweet" dessert marinades.
  Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but   there is no table of metric equivalents.
  Audience and level of use: those willing to experiment or looking for more   jazzy flavours.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: Buffalo wing marinade;   balsamic-soy marinade; grilled portobellos; cranberry-cider marinade; teriyaki   marinade.
  The downside to this book: I just wish that there was something that can be   done for the bully beef and the mutton, and other tough cuts of meat, that can   happen within the 12 hour spread of AM and PM in the fridge.
  The upside to this book: there are two indexes, one to the marinades and   another to "suggested use".
  Quality/Price Rating: 89.
  14.FIRE & SMOKE (Clarkson Potter, 2014, 256 pages, ISBN   978-0-7704-3438-0, $24.99 US soft covers) is by Chris Lilly, executive chef and   partner of Big Bob Gibson Bar-B-Q. Their competition cooking team has won 10   World BBQ Championships, six other world titles, and other competitions. Lilly   has also written Big Bob Gibson's BBQ Book. It is just one of many new BBQ books   unleashed this season (see below for others), by competition champion   celebrities and cookbook authors. Each, of course, has pitmaster secrets and   also reflects as a Good Ol' Boy. Lilly combines the speed of grilling with smoky   flavours of low-and-slow BBQ. No special equipment required: just the hot grill   of smoldering coals and a rack or pan. There are 100 preps here, covering BBQ   oysters, lamb ribs, grilled pizza, smoked pork belly confit, and cowboy ribeye.   Sides, apps, salads, desserts, and cocktails are also here. Preparations have   their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of   metric equivalents. Profusely illustrated. Quality/price rating: 87.
  15.VIRGIL'S BARBECUE ROAD TRIP COOKBOOK; the best barbecue from around the   country without ever leaving your backyard (St. Martin's Press, 2014, 335 pages,   ISBN 978-1-250-04109-8, $29.99 US hard covers) is by Neal Corman, executive chef   of Alicart Restaurant Group, with freelancer Chris Peterson as the focusing food   writer. Virgil's has been doing BBQ since 1994 in New York City, with ideas from   US BBQ country of Texas, North Carolina, Kansas City and Memphis.  Here   there are preps for beef (Texas brisket, chicken fried steak, burnt ends), pork   (baby ribs, pulled pork, slow ham), and chicken (pulled, fried, jerked). No   lamb. It's arranged by course, from apps to desserts, with suggested menus   (social gatherings, game day, afternoon grill fest, fish fry, Sunday brunch – 7   in all). There are also beer notes. These are recipes modified for home use from   the restaurants which use 1400 pound smokers. Preparations have their   ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric   equivalents. Quality/price rating: 88.
  16.WILEY'S CHAMPIONSHIP BBQ (Gibbs Smith, 2014, 216 pages, ISBN   978-1-4236-3631-1, $19.99 US spiral bound) is by Wiley McCrary, a former Atlanta   BBQ caterer, now a BBQ pitmaster champion and owner of Wiley's Championship BBQ   restaurant in Savannah, Georgia. He's a co-author here with his wife Janet and   Amy Paige Condon, associate editor of Savannah magazine and food writer (she's   also co-authored The Back in the Day Bakery Cookbook). It is all done with the   engaging subtitle "secrets that old men take to the grave". It is thorough and   comprehensive, with pix of techniques. The spiral binding in a plus, for the   recipes can lie flat on the counter or by the BBQ. There's the primer on smoking   and BBQ, calculating, sauces (he also has a line he sells), and a section on how   to use this cookbook, including getting a notebook for your own revisions. He's   got a beef tri-tip, a smoked leg of lamb, pulled pork, deep-fried turkey, smoked   and stuffed chicken breasts, and even a seafood casserole. Sides and   accompaniments include fried pickles, black-eyed pea hummus, grilled peaches,   and a bread pudding with bourbon. Preparations have their ingredients listed in   avoirdupois measurements, but there is a table of metric equivalents on the   inside back cover.
  Quality/price rating: 88.
  25.MAN MADE MEALS; the essential cookbook for guys (Workman Publishing,   2014; distr. T. Allen, 631 pages, ISBN 978-0-7611-6644-3, $24.95 US paper   covers) is by Steven Raichlen, author of seven grilling books (one of which is   the award-winning Barbecue! Bible which I reviewed in 1998, with its 500 BBQ   recipes) and host of the PBS series Barbecue University and Primal Grill. The   book concentrates on guy food: heavy, substantial flavours, lots of protein and   starches. Veggies are mainly chiles, beans, corn, potatoes, mushrooms, kale,   cauliflower, and collard greens, although he does have a (downplayed) salad   chapter. The 300 preps here stress that knowledge is power and that all men have   an inner chef who loves showing off that power. Like in the wine world, Raichlen   advises kicking butt (in the introduction)-- whatever sells the book which is   being billed as a cookbook, textbook, and guidebook to male cooking. He also   manages to pull in material from Thomas Keller, Michael Pollan, and Mark   Bittman, among others. The 17 food chapters embrace courses and meals, such as   breakfast, sandwiches, pizza, breads, ribs, chili, soups, and a short sweet   chapter (rum and coke float, affogato, bourbon brown cow, Mexican chocolate   pudding, bananas Foster). There are lots of lists and tables (male things)   scattered throughout, plus an opening primer. Preparations have their   ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there are tables of metric   equivalents. I found some inconsistencies in the index, such as the matter of   corn-flour-taco-tortilla. Quality/price rating: 89.
  28.THE TEXAS FOOD BIBLE; from legendary dishes to new classics (Grand   Central Life & Style, 2013, 2014; distr. Hachette, 256 pages, ISBN   978-1-4555-7430-8, $30 US hard covers) is by Dean Fearing, former chef at the   Mansion on Turtle Creek and now at Fearing's. He's been a fave chef of mine for   years; maybe it's his first name. Here he offers a history of Texas food through   culinary experiences. He expands it all to the southwestern regional experience   through such as Navajo fry bread, sweet potato spoonbread, enchiladas, and BBQ.   It is a guide to regional grilling-smoking-braising, with additional recipes   from other chefs. There is also material about local suppliers. He begins with a   pantry, and moves through the courses of breakfast, brunch, apps, salads, mains,   sides – with other chapters on the grill and BBQ. Good boldfacing of ingredient   lists, as well as a list of sources. Preparations have their ingredients listed   in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents. Try   poblano-mango-carmelized onion quesadillas with cilantro-lime-sour cream, or   molasses-tabasco duck with smoked veggie dressing, or even smoked salmon tartare   with roast jalapeno cream and roasted garlic. Innovative stuff. Quality/price   rating: 89.
  29.THE NOLAN RYAN BEEF & BARBECUE COOKBOOK; recipes from a Texas   kitchen (Little Brown and Co., 2014; distr. Hachette, 172 pages, ISBN   978-0-316-24826-6, $25 US hard covers) is by baseball great Nolan Ryan and three   others: JP Rosenthal (food and baseball writer), Cristobal Vazquez (executive   chef at Texas Rangers Ballpark), and Charlie Bradbury (CEO of Nolan Ryan Beef).   Texas BBQ is all about beef, so here it is: hamburgers, hot dogs, T-bones,   rib-eyes, strip steaks, tenderloins, sirloin, roasts, ribs, brisket, flank   steak, flat iron steak – plus some salads and sides and desserts. It is not Dean   Fearing, but it is Texas and it is beef. The idea too is to pitch Texas beef,   specifically Beefmaster cattle (half Brahman, quarter Hereford, quarter   Shorthorn). So you can order it, at least in the USA, and try it out on the BBQ   grill. He's got easy T-bone with soy and pineapple, slow-roasted prime rib with   natural jus, beer-braised country ribs, and grilled balsamic flank steak. It is   a good introduction to Texas beef, with many compelling recipes. Preparations   have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table   of metric equivalents. Quality/price rating: 87.
  30.SAUSAGE MAKING (Chronicle Books, 2014, 207 pages, ISBN   978-1-4521-0178-1, $35 US hard covers) is by Ryan Farr, author of Whole Beast   Butchery, and owner of 4505 Meats, an artisanal meat company where he teaches   butchery classes and makes sausages. Jessica Battilana is the focusing food   writer. It is a basic book for home cooks, with the techniques skills and   equipment needed for cooking/curing/smoking every type of sausage. The   arrangement is by texture, with a section on coarse (chorizo, merguez, Italian),   firm (linguica, Polish, bratwurst), soft (boudin noir, scrapple), smooth   (bierwurst, bologna, wieners), and combination (duck confit and cherry terrine,   headcheese). There is a major discussion of selecting meats and fats (including   frog), techniques of grinding-mixing-stuffing-twisting, and cooking styles –   most with photos. Typical preps of the 38 sausages here include those for goat   sausage with peppers, turkey-apple-campari sausage, guinea hen and kimchee   links, smoked trout and pork sausage, and the veal-sweetbread-morels en croute   combo. Other recipes cover condiments and breads. There is a resources list and   a picture of a side view of each sausage. Preparations have their ingredients   listed in both US and metric measurements, along with ratio tables.   Quality/price rating: 89.
  34.TRUE FOOD; season, sustainable, simple, pure (Little, 
  Brown, 2012, 2104, 255 pages, ISBN 978-0-316-12940-4, $19 US 
  paper covers) is by Andrew Weil and Sam Fox, with Michael 
  Stebner. Weil is well-known for his books and columns on 
  alternative health practices and issue (including many food 
  recipes). He is partner with Sam Fox in the True Food 
  Kitchen chain. Stebner is the executive chef of these 
  restaurants. The work comes heavily endowed with log 
  rollers Alice Waters and Marion Nestle. This is the 2014
  paperback reprint. It's a book based 
  on SLOFE principles (seasonal, local, organic, fast, and 
  easy); there are about 150 recipes adapted from the six 
  restaurant chain. The important thing you need to know 
  about Andrew Weil is that the guy is completely 
  trustworthy: he has impressed me for over 20 years. Other 
  than that, this is good food with plenty of explanations 
  from Weil and a pantry to start up. You cannot go wrong 
  here. There are good illustrations and sufficient white 
  space in the book's layout. The chapters follow a daily 
  meal, with breakfast, appetizers, salads, soups, mains, 
  pasta, veggies, desserts and drinks (only a few with 
  alcohol). This is a good book for the struggling dieter – 
  you will get your appetite sated. Dishes include chocolate-
  banana tart, stir-fried long beans with citrus-sesame 
  sauce, bibimbap, bison umami burger, and halibut with 
  fingerling potatoes. There are no tables of nutritional 
  sources. Preparations have their ingredients listed in 
  avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric 
  equivalents, which is a shame for international sales.
  Quality/price rating: 88.
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com   
 
 

No comments:
Post a Comment