* THE RESTAURANT/CELEBRITY COOKBOOK...
  ...is one of the hottest trends in cookbooks. Actually, they've been around  for many years, but never in such proliferation. They are automatic best  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 and/or the media personality. 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 shtick 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 at  home, but how could that be? The books 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. The  celebrity books, with well-known chefs or entertainers, seem to have too much  self-involvement and ego. And, of course, there are a lot of food photo shots,  verging on gastroporn. There are endorsements from other celebrities in  magnificent cases 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 –
  CHERYL DAY'S TREASURY OF SOUTHERN BAKING (Artisan, 2021, 400 pages, ISBN  978-1-57965-841-0, $55 hardbound) is by Cheryl Day, who has written many other  baking books such as "The Back in the Day Bakery Cookbook" (from her place in  Savannah, Georgia), "Baking for Breakfast" and "Party Cakes". These preps here  are both savoury and sweet baked goods, over 200 of them in a recipe collection  that acknowledges the the nature of from-scratch Southern baking. Many are   family treasures from Day's great-great-grandmother who was an enslaved pastry  cook specializing in biscuits and cakes. It's arranged by category, beginning  with hot breads and crackers, moving on to coffee cakes, Bundt cakes, muffins,  scones, breads, layer cakes, cupcakes, pies, cookies, brownies, grits and  grains, custards and cobblers, jams and preserves. Southern food is a melange of  many cultural influences. She's got three kinds of chess pies – chocolate,  buttermilk, and raspberry chess pie bars. She's got a listing, with text, of her  Ten Southern Baking Rules. These rules include temperature checks, mise en   place, ingredients, measuring, creaming butter and separating eggs. There's a  chapter on baking equipment as well. So here we will find the traditional and  classic recipes for hush puppies, skillet cornbread, chess pies, calas,  popovers, griddle cakes, cheese straws, spoonbread. Preps are scaled in metric  weights but there are also American volume measurements. So while preparations  have their ingredients listed in either avoirdupois or metric measurements (but  not both), there is no table of equivalents.
  Audience and level of use: for the serious home baker.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: mini baked Alaskas, bacon  cheddar scones, lemon blueberry cake, sea salt crackers, benne crackers,  cardamom-spiced peach cheese, carmelita bars. 
  The downside to this book: both metric and American measurements are used,  but one is for volume and the other for weight.
  The upside to this book: comprehensive.
  Quality/Price Rating: 89.
  BITTMAN BREAD; no-knead whole grain baking for every day (Houghton Mifflin  Harcourt, 2021, 244 pages, ISBN 978-0-358-53933-9 $50 hardbound) is by Mark  Bittman, author of the "How to Cook Everything" series and participant in many  television food shows, and Kerri Conan, a collaborator with Bittman since 2004  developing recipes, testing, producing, et al. Bittman has six Beards and four  IACP Awards, plus other honours. Here, the theme is goof-proof breads. As the  cover says, "This is the least fussy, most flexible way to make 100% whole grain  bread...it's a sourdough upgrade to "no-knead" bread. With simple techniques and  starter, the home baker can expand into sandwich breads, baguettes, ryes and  seeded breads, pizza, waffles, cookies, beignets, and even tortes. They have  created a schedule for the baker to maintain a starter that's almost  indestructible. We get the history and the development of whole grain baking  since the beginnings (in 2006) of Sullivan Street Bakery's Jim Lahey's manner of  making bread with no kneading. This book starts off easily with a starter and  making a beginning loaf, transitioning to whole grain baking, and then Bittman  bread, and variations. Everything is nicely scaled in grams and easy to produce.  You just need a schedule. Quality/Price Rating: 91.
  10-MINUTE CHINESE TAKEOUT; simple, classic dishes ready in just 10 minutes  (Hardie Grand Quadrille, 2022, 160 pages, ISBN 978-1-78713-743-1 $30 hard  covers) is by Kwoklyn Wan, a UK chef who now teaches and demos Chinese cooking.  Here he tells all, how to replicate Chinese takeout food at home in minutes.  Alongside a basic pantry of five essentials (salt, pepper, soy sauce, sugar and  oil), one can make a feast of easy dishes using the bare minimum. All the major  favorites are here, from Laksa curry soup to spicy pepper omelette to miso saucy  pork to General Tso's chili tofu to sweet soy beef noodles. All ingredients are  readily available in local supermarkets. Wan has step-by-step instructions   expert tips, and classically good photography. It's all arranged by major  ingredient or course, from soups through apps, seafood, poultry, meats, veggies,  and desserts. 80 preps in all. Condiments are discussed in then larder section.  Do it yourself, stay home, cook at home, and have fun with such as Bang-bang  chicken salad, fried fish in Cantonese-style chili sauce, minced pork noodles,  boozy scallops with water spinach, or even deep-fried Sichuan king prawns – all  done in 10 minutes. Wan has also written CHINESE TAKEOUT IN 5; 80 of your  favorite dishes using only five ingredients – it too has 80 different preps. The  book could have been improved if it had also used more metric in the recipes, or  at least had a metric conversion chart. Quality/price rating: 88.
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  Chimo!  www.deantudor.com

 
 

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