THE NIMBLE COOK (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2019, 400   pages, ISBN 978-0-544-93550-1 $30 USD hardbound) is by Ronna Welsh, owner of a   NYC cooking school The Purple Kale Kitchenworks. She specializes in teaching   cooks to strategize efficiently while cooking simply and creatively. Notable log   rollers include Jacques Pepin, Amanda Hesser, and Dorie Greenspan. Here she has   a book of great meals that make the most of your ingredients. She rides the   crest of books that use the whole food item in cooking, with no waste. She tries   to get you to learn new techniques for releasing flavour so you eventually cook   without recipes, putting the ingredients first. She cleverly uses end papers of   the book to layout graphs of cooking chicken, herbs, pork, and citrus, showing   relationships created by herb-infusions, roasted whole lemons, sausage, and   chicken stock – for example. It is all arranged by type of ingredient, from   aromatics through leaves, stalks, shoots, heads, bulbs, summer veggies, winter   roots, mushrooms, apples, lemons, fish, poultry, meat, pasta and polenta, and   grains. She concludes with a pantry: eggs, bread, wine, vinegar, dried fruit,   nuts and seeds, rubs, butters, condiments, and cheese. The chapters of   ingredients are sub-arranged by seasons. She then gives us some fave preps for   each (called "starting points"), followed by ways to use these preps with other   dishes (which she calls "explorations"). The starting points should see you   through more than one dish, thus allowing you to get the ingredients ready for   another use. She says, "Your kitchen starts to sustain itself". Preparations   have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but the book could   have been so improved if it also used metric in the recipes, or at least had a   metric conversion chart. 
  Audience and level of use: cooks, innovators.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: seared sausage with julienned   celeriac; pulled pork and pickled squash sandwich; cabbage and green lentils   with orange vinaigrette; sauteed unravelled Brussels sprouts with caraway, lemon   and dill; braised chicken legs with rhubarb compote and sun-dried tomatoes;   spiced lamb meatballs with chickpeas, pickled parsley and yogurt.
  The downside to this book: publishers should please think about ROW (rest   of the world) when dealing with measurements. Of the developed countries, the   USA stands alone with avoirdupois measurements. At least quality US bakers use   metric in scaling their recipes.
  The upside to this book: good material on how to use food that used to be   thrown away.
  Quality/Price Rating: 91.
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

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