Now in paperback–the debut cookbook from the beloved Italiancook, restaurateur, and public television personality. Lidia Bastianich is famous for her Italian-American cooking, butthis cookbook–her first–captures the distinctive cuisine of hernative Istria, located on Italy’s northeastern Adriatic coast nearthe border of the former Yugoslavia. This book is also her mostpersonal; in addition to the recipes, she has included numerouspersonal stories, memories, and photographs from herchildhood. With La Cucina di Lidia, you can savor antipasti such as Polentawith Fontina and Mushrooms or Shrimp and Mixed Bean Salad. Rice andpastas include Plum Gnocchi, Risotto with Squash Blossoms, andZucchini and Tagliatelle with Leek Sauce. Entrées feature fish(Swordfish in Sweet and Sour Sauce), fowl (Roast Chicken withRosemary and Orange), meat (Stuffed Breast of Veal), and game (DuckRoasted with Sauerkraut). Desserts range from Chocolate ZabaglioneCake to Apple-Custard Tart. Here is an Itali
Americans are drinking more alcoholic beverages than ever, andalmost 30 percent of tipplers name wine as their drink of choice.Recent studies have touted the health benefits of wine-drinking. Sowhy is wine so intimidating? The sheer numbers and types of wines?The wine snobs with their arcane terminology? The French with theirinsufferable Frenchiness? Demystifying oenophilia and offering more than a few laughs alongthe way, Jennifer Rosen’s THE CORK JESTER?’S GUIDE TO WINE is acollection of fast, funny anecdotes and informative lessons sure toentertain both the vintage idiot and the savvy sipper. In the book’s introduction, Rosen offers a typically frankexplanation of her approach: "A wise winemaker told me, ‘Drinkingwine with a sommelier is like making love to a gynecologist: it’sbetter if they don?’t tell you everything they know.’ Instead, Ioffer a series of bite-sized stories; Trojan horses filled withfacts programmed to infiltrate and lodge in your brain, with noeffort on
Do lobsters feel pain? Did Franz Kafka have a funny bone? Whatis John Updike's deal, anyway? And what happens when adult videostarlets meet their fans in person? David Foster Wallace answersthese questions and more in essays that are also enthrallingnarrative adventures. Whether covering the three-ring circus of avicious presidential race, plunging into the wars betweendictionary writers, or confronting the World's Largest LobsterCooker at the annual Maine Lobster Festival, Wallace projects aquality of thought that is uniquely his and a voice as powerful anddistinct as any in American letters.
Why do we overeat time and time again? Why do we make poordiet choices while we want to be healthy? What makes losing weightso difficult? These and many other vital questions are addressed in 12 Steps to Raw Foods in an open and sincere dialogue. Basedon the latest scientific research, Victoria Boutenko explains thenumerous benefits of choosing a diet of fresh rather than cookedfoods. This book contains self-tests and questionnaires that helpthe reader to determine if they have hidden eating patterns thatundermine their health. Using examples from life, the authorexplores the most common reasons for people to make unhealthyeating choices. Rather than simply praising the benefits of raw foods, this bookoffers helpful tips and coping techniques to form and maintain new,healthy patterns. Learn how to make a raw food restaurant card thatmakes dining with co-workers easy and enjoyable. Discover threemagic sentences that enable you to refuse your mother-in-law’sapple pie without offending her. Find out how to
Melanie Rehak always loved cooking, eating, and sharing foodwith loved ones. After reading the likes of Michael Pollan, EricSchlosser, and Wendell Berry, she tried to buy organic and localfoods. But upon the birth of her son, Jules, she realized that shewas responsible for feeding someone else, and she wanted to knowmore. Eating for Beginners details a year of discovering what itmeans to be an eater and a parent in today’s complicated world.Rehak harvested potatoes, milked goats, sorted beans, and worked ata small restaurant where she learned what to eat and why, that eventhe most dedicated organic farmers sometimes serve their childrenfrozen chicken fingers, and that we really can make peace with ourfood.
This comprehensive collection of beers will inspire everydrinker to venture beyond their comfort zone and try out some ofthe finest beers in the world. If you've always wanted to know thedifference between stout and porter, wondered how beer is producedor needed advice on matching beers with food, here is the book foryou. 500 Beers takes the guesswork out of selecting and enJoying beer,with tips on everything from choosing glasses to storing, pouringand tasting beer.
This book holds all the secrets to opening and running asuccessful inn. It gives you guidelines for choosing a profitablelocation and describes a day in the life of the average inn owner.You can find information about how to write up a business plan,what to include on you Web site, what "house rules" you need to setup to keep your guests and your investment safe, and how to useyour own personal touch to make your inn unique.
Delicious, nutritious, tempting recipesfor every occasion. More than 140 ideas for healthy,scrumptiouspasta meals. Each recipe is accompanied by a beautiful colorphotograph,showing exactly how the finished dish will look.
Clotilde Dusoulier is a twenty-seven-year-old Parisian whoadores sharing her love of all things food-related—recipes,inspirations, restaurant experiences, and above all the pleasure ofcooking with the fresh ingredients found in her local Montmartreshops. But her infatuation with food was born not in her mother’sParisian kitchen, but in San Francisco, where she moved aftercollege and discovered a new world of tastes. When she returned toher beloved France, her culinary exploits inspired her popular andcritically acclaimed blog, ChocolateandZucchini.com. In her first book, Dusoulier provides a glimpse into the life ofa young Parisian as she savors all that the city has to offer andshares her cooking philosophy in the form of more than 75 recipesthat call for healthy ingredients (such as zucchini) and moreindulgent tastes (such as chocolate). The Los Angeles Times callsher recipes "simple, charming, and fun." Appetizers such as Cumin Cheese Puffs, sandwiches and tarts likeTomato Tatin, sou
"Chinese Cooking Made Easy" features a selection of over 40delicious Chinese dishes that are easy to prepare at home, and arelight and healthy too. Enjoy classic favorites like Pot StickerDumplings, Black Bean Sauce Noodles and Five Spice BeijingSpareribs. Clear recipes, step-by-step photographs and a glossaryof ingredients ensure fantastic results every time
Lasting weight loss doesn’t come from following extreme dietsor quick-fix fads. Being able to lose weight and keep it off comesfrom choosing the lifestyle habits that make sense for you in thelong term. If, like millions of other Americans, you are strugglingto lose weight, this second edition of the American HeartAssociation No-Fad Diet will show you how to find just the rightcombination of attitude, eating, and exercise to achieve your goalsin an effective and healthy way. Updated with the latest information on nutrition science andweight management, No-Fad Diet leads you through an assessment ofyour current eating and exercise habits and then helps you create apersonalized program to fit your weight-loss needs and yourlifestyle, instead of you having to follow a one-size-fits-allapproach to dieting. This new edition also offers nearly 200 delicious, low-calorierecipes, including 50 brand-new dishes. You can lose weight whileenjoying: - Lemon-Ginger Trail Mix - Creamy Brocco
Salmonella-tainted tomatoes, riots, and skyrocketing pricesare only the latest in a series of food-related crises that haveilluminated the failures of the modern food system. In "The End ofFood, "Paul Roberts investigates this system and presents astartling truth--how we make, market, and transport our food is nolonger compatible with the billions of consumers the system wasbuilt to serve. The emergence of large-scale and efficient foodproduction forever changed our relationship with food andultimately left a vulnerable and paradoxical system in place.High-volume factory systems create new risks for food-borneillness; high-yield crops generate grain, produce, and meat ofdeclining nutritional quality; and while nearly a billion peopleare overweight, roughly as many people are starving. In this vividnarrative, Roberts presents clear, stark visions of the future andhelps us prepare to make the necessary decisions to survive thedemise of food production as we know it.
From the author of French Women Don't Get Fat, the #1 NationalBestseller, comes an essential guide to the art of joyful living—inmoderation, in season, and, above all, with pleasure. Together with a bounty of new dining ideas and menus, MireilleGuiliano offers us fresh, cunning tips on style, grooming, andentertaining. Here are four seasons' worth of strategies forshopping, cooking, and exercising, as well as some pointers forlooking effortlessly chic. Taking us from her childhood inAlsace-Lorraine to her summers in Provence and her busy life in NewYork and Paris, this wise and witty book shows how anyone anywherecan develop a healthy, holistic lifestyle.
31-year-old Nancy Trejos was supposed to be an expert onhandling her money - after all, she's the personal financecolumnist for one of the nation's leading newspapers, TheWashington Post . But a few months ago, she found herself inher own dire financial straits. Faced with a mountain of bills,debt, and no way to pay her rent, she was forced to call herparents to ask them for a loan. That night was a wake-up call - shevowed to get herself out of debt and into financial solvency. In Hot Broke Messes , Trejos takes readers along with heron her journey. She meets with a financial planner and a therapistto deal with all the issues young people face today - from creditcard debt and student loans, to impulse buying and emotionalspending, to the cost of having a social life, to buying a housewith someone during a potentially impermanent relationship andmore. Trejos learns what causes these problems in herself, how shecan fix them, and how she can pass that advice on to other youngpeople going through the same exp
For the Trigianis, cooking has always been a family affair–andthe kitchen was the bustling center of their home, where folksgathered around the table for good food, good conversation, and theoccasional eruption. Example: Being thrown out of the kitchenbecause one’s Easter bread kneading technique isn’t up to par. AsAdriana says: “When the Trigianis reach out and touch someone, wedo it with food.” Like the recipes that have been handed down forgenerations from mother to daughter and grandmother togranddaughter, the family’s celebrations are also anchored to thelife and laughter around the table. We learn how Grandmom YolandaTrigiani sometimes wrote her recipes in code, or worked frommemory, guarding her recipes carefully. And we meet Grandma LuciaBonicelli, who never raised her voice and believed that when peoplefight at the dinner table, the food turns to poison in thebody. Adriana Trigiani’s voice springs to life from the first page ofCooking with My Sisters, a collection of belove
This isn't a diet book. This is a book about plates. And the twisted conspiracy that ismaking our country fat. FACT :: 95 percent of dieters regain the weight after fiveyears. FACT :: The average American dinner plate has grown from 9 inchesin diameter to 12 inches since 1970. FACT :: As a result, we’re now consuming more than 300 excesscalories per day. FACT :: Our bodies have kept pace growing with our plates. CURE :: A return to 9-inch dinner plates. Behold The 9-Inch "Diet."
Go ahead. Get passionate about the food you eat. You don’t have to hide it. You can love food and lose weight atthe same time! The secret, which you’ll learn about in Love Foodand Live Well, is to know when to have carrot cake and when it’stime for just a carrot. For most dieters, food is the daunting factor that trips up ourbest intentions to lose weight and get fit. Let Chantel Hobbs teachyou that food is not the enemy! It’s our attitudes toward it thatdefeat us. Losing weight does not require being deprived of thefoods you love and being forced to eat boring, tasteless meals, andleft feeling hungry most of the time. Turn food into your ally byfollowing Chantel’s 80/20 rule: A full 20 percent of the time,splurge on the foods you love and incorporate them intocelebrations and social occasions. The remaining 80 percent of thetime, choose food on the basis of delivering maximum fuel for yourbody and ultimate health. Simply by having freedom in what you eat,you can train yourself in