Sunday, December 6, 2009

Brandy Brandy Drinks or Mediterranean Soups

Brandy & Brandy Drinks (Quamut)

Author: Quamut

Quamut is the fastest, most convenient way to learn how to do almost anything. From tasting wine to managing your retirement accounts, Quamut gives you reliable information in a concise chart format that you can take anywhere. Quamut charts are:

  • Authoritative: Written by experts in their field so you have the most reliable information available.
  • Clear: Our explanations take you step-by-step through everything from performing CPR to threading a needle.
  • Concise: You’ll learn just what you need to know—no more, no less.
  • Precise: Quamut charts include detailed text, photos, and illustrations to show you exactly how to do just about anything.
  • Portable: Your know-how goes with you wherever your projects lead.
Break out the snifters.

Nothing puts a night to bed like a fine glass of brandy—or gets a party rolling like a classic brandy cocktail. So prepare to add a touch of sophistication to your evenings with:

  • A brief history of brandy and the basics of how brandy is made
  • A rundown of different types of brandy, so you’ll know what you’re buying
  • Brandy cocktail recipes from the Four Seasons restaurant




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Mediterranean Soups

Author: Carol Robertson

Mediterranean Soups presents glimpses of the Mediterranean at its most charming—people attending to the simple tasks of everyday life, architecture that evokes memories of the converging histories of East and West, and a wonderful array of traditions, cultures and cuisines. All contribute their stories and recipes to this unique travel cookbook. Don't hesitate to dive right in and transport yourself to the Spanish countryside, the lavender fields of southern France, the spice markets of North Africa, or the enchanting islands that dot the coast of Italy, Greece, and Turkey. Enjoy!



Saturday, December 5, 2009

Simply Delicious Irish Christmas or Flavors of Provence

Simply Delicious Irish Christmas

Author: Darina Allen

Christmas too often is a complex combination of activity and frustration, yet it should be a reflective time for families, feasting, and fun. Here, the author provides recipes for delicious Irish dishes and helpful hints on reducing holiday stress.

The recipes are kept simple to minimize preparation time. Many dishes, such as St. Stephen's Day Pie, even may be cooked ahead of time and frozen, or at least be kept a week or longer without the need for freezing, like White Christmas Cake. Just by doing this, anyone may instantly reduce the anxiety that accompanies last-minute cooking and enjoy an authentic Irish Christmas dinner as well.

Colleen Clancy Zanotti

As the title suggests, readers will discover many traditional Yuletide recipes that are easy to prepare, delicious and truly Irish. . . . This is a tempting collection of traditional Irish recipes guaranteed to simplify and enrich holiday celebrations. -- ForeWord Magazine



Book review: Playboy or Access 2002 Bible with CDROM

Flavors of Provence

Author: Isabelle de Borchgrav

Oscar Wilde said that when good Americans die they go to Paris, but today they would more likely go to Provence. The Flavors of Provence envelops you in the charm of this magical land, combining gorgeous paintings that capture the sights with recipes from the most respected Provençal chefs that evoke the tastes and smells of the region. Provence continues to captivate the imaginations of millions in the wake of Peter Mayle's bestsellers. And its Mediterranean cuisine, the health benefits of which have received so much attention in recent press, has only added to the phenomenon.
Here you'll discover a field of lavender, a café table under plane trees, an orchard of olive trees, a rocky promontory by the sea-all rendered by Isabelle de Borchgrave in the vibrant colors that made Van Gogh's works so beloved. The dishes, which capitalize on simple combinations that are easy to achieve at home, include regional specialties like Red Mullet with Basil, Duck with Olives, and Warm Apricot Soufflé, as well as innovative takes on classics such as Jerusalem Artichoke Soup with Curry, Truffled Raviolis with Leeks, and Goat Cheese and Blackberry Terrine. Interspersed throughout are brief essays on the essential elements of Provençal culture. Exceptionally packaged, The Flavors of Provence conveys both the visual beauty and the culinary poetry of this land as no other book has.



Friday, December 4, 2009

Kitchen in Corfu or Moveable Feasts

Kitchen in Corfu

Author: James Chatto

Since Odysseus died on mezethes and spit-roasted meat on Corfu in the Homeric epic, the island has been conquered by Rome and Byzantium; taken by Norman adventurers, Genoese pirates and the Angevin kings of Naples; and held for four hundred years by the Venetians. Through the vicissitudes of war and peace the classical Greek cooking has become distinctly Corfiot.



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Moveable Feasts: The History, Science, and Lore of Food

Author: Gregory McName

Food has functioned both as a source of continuity and as a subject of adaptation over the course of human history. Onions have been a staple of the European diet since the Paleolithic era; by contrast, the orange is once again being cultivated in large quantities in southern China, where it was originally grown. Other foods remain staples of their original regions as well as of the world diet at large. Still others are now grown in places that would have seemed impossible in the past—bananas in heated greenhouses in Iceland, corn on the fringes of the Gobi Desert, tomatoes on the International Space Station. But how did humans discover how to grow and incorporate these foods into their diet in the first place? How were they chosen over competing foods? In this charming and frequently surprising compendium, Moveable Feasts gathers revelations from history, anthropology, chemistry, biology, and many other fields and spins them into entertaining tales of discovery while adding more than ninety delicious recipes from various culinary traditions around the world.  Among the thirty types of food discussed in the course of this alphabetically arranged work are the apple, the banana, chocolate, coffee, corn, garlic, honey, millet, the olive, the peanut, the pineapple, the plum, rice, the soybean, the tomato, and the watermelon. All the recipes accompanying these diverse food histories have been adapted for re-creation in the modern kitchen.

KLIATT

Have you ever wondered about the history of a particular food? Well, here is a delightful book that answers those questions. Each chapter contains a brief history of the food, basic nutritional information and trivia, all related in a conversational tone, followed by several recipes containing the featured ingredient and suggestions for further reading. Some of the 30 foods discussed are: apple, chocolate, coffee, garlic, honey, peanut, plum, soybean, tomato and watermelon. All recipes accompanying these diverse food histories have been adapted for the modern kitchen. Gregory McNamee is the author of 28 books and has also published articles in a wide variety of periodicals including Smithsonian and Sierra. He is also a contributing editor for Encyclopedia Britannica. This is a fascinating book. Reviewer: Shirley Reis

Pauline Baughman - Library Journal

All food is the product of history, but who ate the first tomatoes and garlic, and how did they become so important in our diet and ubiquitous at the grocery store? Writer, journalist, editor, and critic McNamee presents a cultural geography of how food, such as broccoli, corn, rice, and honey, has moved about the planet. Each chapter contains a brief history of the food, basic nutritional information, and trivia, spun together in a chatty, conversational tone, followed by several recipes containing the featured ingredient and suggestions for further reading. While the primary focus is supposedly history, this title is heavy on anecdote with its true focus on storytelling. Recipes seem like a bit of an afterthought and, on occasion, in some ways unrelated to the text. Nevertheless, this amusing volume will likely appeal to casual readers; serious scholars of food history, as well as those writing reports, will want to explore further reading. For larger collections.



Thursday, December 3, 2009

Practical Cook Book Including Suggestions Regarding Proper Food Combinations with Illustrative Menus or Practical Food and Beverage Cost Control

Practical Cook Book Including Suggestions Regarding Proper Food Combinations with Illustrative Menus (1926)

Author: John Henry Tilden

Including Suggestions Regarding Proper Food Combinations with Illustrative Menus. By the leading naturopathic doctor of the late 1800's.



Go to: Last Train to Paradise or Discover Your Sales Strengths

Practical Food and Beverage Cost Control

Author: Clement Ojugo

This book provides a complete, comprehensive overview of the food and beverage industry's cost control methods and how they are applied within profitable, successful food-service establishments. It presents useful and important guidelines for assessing, interpreting and planning food and beverage operations, as well as financial information that will help owners, operators and managers minimize expenditures and improve profits. Unique coverage of issues such as "make or buy" decisions, inventory control, forecasting, departmental interaction, how to view markets and customers, and more, give this book a richness and relevance that can truly impact the bottom line.



Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Duchess Who Wouldnt Sit Down or Why Water Just Wont Do

Duchess Who Wouldn't Sit Down: An Informal History of Hospitality

Author: Jesse Browner

Partisan, witty, and laced with astonishing historical detail, The Duchess Who Wouldn't Sit Down is dedicated to a new understanding of the art of hospitality. Jesse Browner leads the way back through Western civilization, from a present-day poker game where Browner's devastatingly delicious sandwiches leave the best players penniless, to the ancient Greeks, whose gods punished or exalted the mortals according to their excellence as hosts. On the way, we visit Hitler at his summer home, Gertrude Stein in Paris and Lady Ottoline Morrell in England, Audubon in nineteeth-century America, Louis XIV at Versailles, and the Roman emperors, for whom classic dinner-table entertainment was a good poisoning. As delightful and edifying as an evening in favored company, The Duchess Who Wouldn't Sit Down is a must-read for anyone who's ever accepted an invitation-or wonders why they keep sending them out.

The New York Times

Hospitality, Browner writes in The Duchess Who Wouldn't Sit Down, is designed to give the host what he needs while letting the guest imagine that he has been gratified. It is ''Your guests must be made to bend to your will or else you are lost.'' — Elizabeth Hanson

Publishers Weekly

Like an artfully served canap , Browner's brief exploration of hospitality may seem light, but has a rich, lingering flavor. He works backward through time, beginning with Adolf Hitler's quirky type of hospitality at his retreat, at which every guest room had a copy of Mein Kampf and French pornography books on the bedside table. From there, novelist Browner (Conglomeros; Turnaway) wanders into the realm of Gertrude Stein, John James Audubon and Louis XIV, whose court witnessed the humiliation of a duchess who wouldn't sit because she was offered a stool instead of a chair. The book also explores Rome's Julio-Claudian dynasty and the rough days of Agamemnon's army. Browner plumbs these historical periods for hospitality anecdotes and finds some pearls, proving the host-and-guest relationship has never been particularly carefree. While directing the conversation, Browner proves an excellent host himself, throwing out delicious bons mots and peppering the work with personal details. Excursions into his daughter's teddy bear teas and his own propensity for weakening his poker buddies' resolve with homemade sandwiches give the book a sense of coherence and smooth charm. By the time he devotes an entire chapter to his family's Thanksgiving dinner, it's easy to see how his analysis of hospitality through the ages has shaped the event. He writes, "When I am a good host, I can order the world precisely as I believe it ought to be." It's no effort to delight in the fact that Browner is also a good storyteller, and the way he orders the world here is an invitation worth answering. (Oct. 1) Forecast: Browner's book has the quirky appeal to land it the book review sections of culinary and travel magazines, aided by blurbs from New York restaurateur Danny Meyer and Oxford Companion to Food author Alan Davidson. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.



New interesting book: Easy Scrapbooking or When Pancakes Go Bad

Why Water Just Won't Do

Author: Malcolm Gluck

Here, leading wine writer Malcolm Gluck explains how to get the most out of wine in our everyday lives. This book contains all the essential facts and information you need to know, such as why wine is good for you and your health, as well as all essential wine names (whether region or brand name), and what to drink on different occasions, from birthdays to barbecues. It also explodes some of the ridiculous myths about wine and shows that you don’t have to spend a fortune on a bottle for it to be a real treat.



Table of Contents:
Introduction7
1Why wine matters to health13
2Why wine matters to food39
3Why wine rules don't always matter55
4Why the wine world must change85
5Which wine names matter & why99
A final word about enjoyment156
Index158