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The Gourmet Cookbook: More than 1000 recipes
Book Summary InformationEditor: Ruth Reichl Consultant Editor: John Willoughby Consultant Editor: Zanne Early Stewart Edition: Hardcover Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2006-09-22 ISBN: 061880692X Number of pages: 1040 Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Book Reviews of The Gourmet Cookbook: More than 1000 recipesBook Review: One of the ten best cookbooks ever! (details) Summary: 5 Stars
I cook from scratch every day and I also review plenty of cookbooks, some good and some awful. This particular cookbook is nothing short of first-class.
Don't let the title scare you. All of the over 1,000 recipes found in here are quite manageable for any home cook of moderate experience and your family will love these dishes. This is food for the 21st Century and these presentations represent over sixty years of published works by "Gourmet" magazine. All the recipes have been revised, tested, and re-tested to meet contemporary standards of cooking and of ingredients which have also evolved over time, (such as hybridized vegetables and "new" cuts of meat.)
Renowned culinary professional and editor, Ruth Reichl (you can read her compelling autobiography: Tender at the Bone: Growing Up at the Table), does make one tiny overstatement on the back cover, a quotation from page xvi in the Introduction: "Our goal was to give you a book with every recipe you would ever want." I don't believe that any cookbook can ever achieve that lofty aspiration -- maybe Joy of Cooking: 75th Anniversary Edition - 2006 comes closest to realizing this challenging goal.
To illustrate my point, I came up with just a few popular dishes which Reichl does NOT include: Banana Cream Pie, Cincinnati Chili, Waldorf Cake, Chilies Rellenos, Salmon Cakes, and, [plain] Yeast Bread. But if you can live without those particular recipes, she has pretty much corralled everything else! I discovered some versions of recipes which I will certainly be preparing again soon: Blinis (page 39); Spicy Lemon Marinated Shrimp (page 45); Chicken Kiev (page 357); Mincemeat Pie (page 766), and; Georgian [as in the former Soviet Union] Salsa (page 896), among many, many others.
These are all scratch preparations but the ingredient lists are remarkably brief and most of them are quite easy to obtain at mainstream grocery stores. There are no photographs of the prepared dishes but I didn't find this to be especially problematic since the instructions are written very clearly and some special cooking techniques are illustrated with line drawings.
I really only encountered a single significant flaw in this book -- some artfully overzealous soul decided upon using pale yellow ink for the recipe titles and they are very difficult to read. I don't know how this glitch ever slipped past the editors but, somehow, it unfortunately did. Still, the recipes themselves are rendered in black ink on white paper and the subsequent text is quite easy to make out.
If you enjoy this remarkable cookbook, as I do myself, then you might also be interested in Gourmet Today: More than 1000 All-New Recipes for the Contemporary Kitchen.
For the serious home cook who is faced with the daily task of getting dinner on the table for a family then this very large cookbook (1,040 pages!) will be of great assistance to you. I award my very highest recommendation for this 2004 benchmark of culinary excellence.
Summary of The Gourmet Cookbook: More than 1000 recipesFor the past six decades, Gourmet magazine has shaped the tastes of America, publishing the best work of the foremost names in the world of food. To create this landmark cookbook, editor in chief and celebrated authority Ruth Reichl and her staff sifted through more than 50,000 recipes. Many were developed exclusively in Gourmet's test kitchens. Others came from renowned food writers and chefs and from the magazine's far-flung readers. Then the editors embarked on an extraordinary series of cook-offs, testing and retesting each dish to ensure impeccable results. This collection, the only one of its kind, spans a vast range of cultures and cuisines. With it, you can go back to the time when Beef Wellington ruled the table or prepare something as contemporary as Crispy Artichoke "Flowers" with Salsa Verde. And whether you're cooking a simple supper for two or throwing a cocktail party for fifty, you'll make every dish with more flavor and more flair using The Gourmet Cookbook. It includes
* 102 hors d'oeuvres, dips, chips, pâtés, and first courses
* exciting vegetable dishes -- more than 120 in all -- using everything from artichokes to yuca
* versatile recipes for every available kind of seafood, with many suggested substitutes
* hundreds of simple but exceptional dinners
* festive dishes for every occasion, including a perfect roast turkey with stuffings, the ultimate standing rib roast, and even a gorgeous (but easy) wedding cake
* definitive versions of all the classics, from Chicken Kiev to Crcme Brulée and from Bouillabaisse to Pad Thai
* more than 50 pastas and risottos, from quick everyday meals to party dishes
* scores of soups, salads, breakfast dishes, and sandwiches, including the editors' all-time favorite pizza
* a wealth of sauces and salsas, to transform ordinary meals into spectacular ones
* more than 300 desserts: cookies, pies, tarts, pastries, buckles, crumbles, ice creams, puddings, mousses, and cakes galore, including cheesecakes and the nine best chocolate cake recipes Gourmet has ever published
With engaging introductions to each chapter by Ruth Reichl, entertaining headnotes, indispensable information about ingredients and techniques, hundreds of tips from Gourmet's test kitchens, and an extensive glossary, The Gourmet Cookbook is the essential kitchen companion for anyone who wants unforgettable recipes and spectacular results every time. When Gourmet magazine opened shop in 1941, it addressed a small epicurean audience. In those days, fine dining was French, seafood specialties always seemed to include cream and sherry, and game made the meal--or so the magazine preached. The bill of fare has changed since then, and fine dining now includes dishes from the world's four corners, commanded by a broad, food-aware audience. Over the years, Gourmet has chronicled all this, changing to reflect a wider, more democratized food scene that has also, paradoxically, raised the bar on what's expected of the average, too-busy cook. The Gourmet Cookbook is the most comprehensive of the magazine's recipe anthologies--a mega-tome offering more than 1,000 formulas drawn from Gourmet since its birth. The statistics are indeed impressive: more than 100 hors d'oeuvre recipes; an equal number of vegetable dishes; 200 desserts--21 chapters in all, touching all courses and including stops at breakfast and brunch specialties; breads and crackers; plus sauces, salsas, and preserves. Included are recipes from Gourmet contributors like James Beard and Jean-Georges Vongericten, and hundreds of sidebars like "Salad Greens Primer" and "Blind Baking," all useful and informative. There are classic dishes like onion soup gratiné, gefilte fish, corn fritters, and peanut butter cookies; "new classics" such as fried calamari and spaghetti alla carbonara; and the "modern," including oatmeal brûlée with macerated berries and grilled lobster with orange chipotle vinaigrette--"every recipe you'd ever want," says the text, something of an understatement. Cooks should know, however, that this is not a basic cookbook, despite its Noah's ark of formulas. Rather, it's a Gourmet cookbook, which means that, notwithstanding some rudimentary recipes, the focus is on the stylishly up-to-date (which is not to deny the excellence of the formulas), resulting, often, in refinements. Thus its recipe for mac and cheese calls for dijon mustard and panko; its beef stroganoff requires cremini mushrooms; its grilled chicken calls for brining; and so on. Recipes can also run to over 450 words, and require unusual ingredients. (A list of sources is provided.) Of all its chapters, those for sweets are the most immediately attractive. For all the praise, though, there's one major goof. The recipe titles are printed in a light butter-yellow color, making them almost illegible. For many readers, this will be a deal-breaker; others will find it merely annoying. Should you own the book? For dedicated cooks and foodies the answer will be, How can I not? --Arthur Boehm
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