Cookbooks

You are currently browsing the archive for the Cookbooks category.

PIZZABIANCA

Jim Lahey is rightly famous for two things: his incredible bread and pizzas at The Sullivan Street Bakery; and his no-knead bread recipe. Lahey’s new book, My Bread: The Revolutionary No-Work, No-Knead Method combines the two into a serious contender for the ultimate bread bible. He’s updated the no-knead technique for even better results, and reveals how to make Sullivan Street classics like the pizza bianca in your home oven. The key to his technique is letting the bread proof for an extraordinary 12-18 hours, which results in a complex crumb and sophisticated flavor that ordinary proofing times can’t deliver. The second element is a very wet dough which bakes inside a dutch oven, steaming the bread so it can fully rise before the crust forms. Professional bakers achieve this same effect with expensive steam-injection ovens – Lahey’s method uses time, extra water and a pot. Pretty clever – and it really does produce an incredible bakery-quality loaf. A lot of people are turned off by baking – the complexity, the kneading, and the uncertain results are deal-breakers for a lot of people. This book should change a lot of minds.

Tags: , ,

COOKBOOK: Ad Hoc At Home

ADHOC

You won’t need a $1,200 thermal circulator for these recipes. Unlike his previous hi-tech how-to Under Pressure, uber-chef Keller’s latest work will cover everyday eats like burgers and grilled cheese – the kind of unfussy items he serves in his restaurant Ad Hoc. Given the complex dishes he’s famous for, I’m curious to see what insights and techniques he’ll bring to simpler dishes. Here’s a description of what to expect from Amazon.com’s pre-release page:

In the book every home cook has been waiting for, the revered Thomas Keller turns his imagination to the American comfort foods closest to his heart—flaky biscuits, chicken pot pies, New England clam bakes, and cherry pies so delicious and redolent of childhood that they give Proust’s madeleines a run for their money. Keller, whose restaurants The French Laundry in Yountville, California, and Per Se in New York have revolutionized American haute cuisine, is equally adept at turning out simpler fare.

In Ad Hoc at Home—a cookbook inspired by the menu of his casual restaurant Ad Hoc in Yountville—he showcases more than 200 recipes for family-style meals. This is Keller at his most playful, serving up such truck-stop classics as Potato Hash with Bacon and Melted Onions and grilled-cheese sandwiches, and heartier fare including beef Stroganoff and roasted spring leg of lamb. In fun, full-color photographs, the great chef gives step-by-step lessons in kitchen basics— here is Keller teaching how to perfectly shape a basic hamburger, truss a chicken, or dress a salad. Best of all, where Keller’s previous best-selling cookbooks were for the ambitious advanced cook, Ad Hoc at Home is filled with quicker and easier recipes that will be embraced by both kitchen novices and more experienced cooks who want the ultimate recipes for American comfort-food classics.

Tags:

EGGPLANT

If you’ve got a recipe you think deserves space in a cookbook, here’s your chance to put it to the test. Food writers Amanda Hesser and Merrill Stubbs have launched a new website called Food52.com, which they’re using as a platform to find reader-sourced recipes for their upcoming cookbook. Every week for a year (hence the Food52 moniker) they’ll announce the subject of their recipe contest and readers will enter their best recipes for consideration. Contest results will be announced on a weekly basis, and after a year the winning recipes will be published in a cookbook by HarperStudio. Another reason to enter: all finalists get some free gear from OXO Good Grips.

So for all the culinary competitors waiting impatiently for the next Takedown, Smackdown or Cook-Off, here’s a chance to get busy on a weekly basis.

Tags: ,