Few chefs in America have won more acclaim than Suzanne Goin,owner of Lucques restaurant. A chef of impeccable pedigree, she gother start cooking at some of the best restaurants in theworld–L’Arpège. Olives, and Chez Panisse, to name a few–placeswhere she acquired top-notch skills to match her already flawlessculinary instincts. “A great many cooks have come through thekitchen at Chez Panisse,” observes the legendary Alice Waters, “ButSuzanne Goin was a stand-out. We all knew immediately that one dayshe would have a restaurant of her own, and that other cooks wouldbe coming to her for kitchen wisdom and a warm welcome.” And come they have, in droves. Since opening her L.A. restaurant,Lucques, in 1998, Goin’s cooking has garnered extraordinaryaccolades. Lucques is now recognized as one of the best restaurantsin the country, and she is widely acknowledged as one of the mosttalented chefs around. Goin’s gospel is her commitment to thefreshest ingredients available; her way of comb
After five years atop the Skinny Bitch phenomenon, author KimBarnouin has grown as a cook, a nutritionist, and a mom. Now shedelivers the Ultimate cookbook that will be for everyone lookingfor a healthier way to feed themselves, their families, andfriends. Kims emphasis is on easy, and her kick-ass recipes featureseasonal produce (no fake meat or hard-to-find ingredients) andprovide a versatility of tastes and cuisines, from Mediterranean toCalifornia-fresh. With almost 150 recipes, full-color photos,complete nutritional breakdowns, and simple switch-outs for quickvariations, it will be the new gotta have" on any bookshelf.
By now, you’ve heard of (and maybe tried) them all: thelow-carb diet, the grapefruit diet, the miracle diet . . . the listgoes on and on. Fad diets may promise a quick fix, but few deliverlasting results. If you’re like millions of other Americans, you’restill struggling to lose weight and get in shape—without harmingyour long-term health in the process. It’s time to leave behind the one-size-fits-all approach todieting. Now, the American Heart Association, the nation’s mosttrusted authority on heart-healthy living, introduces itsfirst-ever comprehensive weight-loss book. No-Fad Diet helpsyou create a personalized plan to lose weight in a healthful way.After a simple assessment of your current habits, you choose theeating and exercise strategies that best fit your needs. You’lllearn how to set realistic goals, eat well to lose extra poundssafely, and add physical activity to keep the weight off forgood. This book offers more than 190 delicious, all-new recipes,including Cream of Triple-Mush
Spago's pastry chef to the stars and author of the James BeardAward-winning Secrets of Baking shares the recipes that propelledher to the top of her profession Night after night at Spago inBeverly Hills, Sherry Yard dazzles the powerful, rich, and famouswith incredible desserts. Her marvelous confections have won overpatrons from Madonna to Frank Sinatra. Now the country's premierpastry chef reveals the recipes that have made her a star in herown right and won her two coveted James Beard Awards. Desserts bythe Yard begins with inspirations from Yard's childhood, such as MyFavorite White Birthday Cake with Chocolate and Butter FudgeFrosting, and culminates in the spectacular creations she makesevery year for the Academy Awards. Included here are some of Yard'smost famous recipes: the slinky crcme brulee she perfected when sheworked at New York's Rainbow Room, the coffeecake that made CamptonPlace Hotel San Francisco's most popular breakfast spot, and thesouffleed crcme fraiche pancakes with strawberry sauce s
"I want my wines to tell a good story. I want them naturaland most of all, like my dear friends, I want them to speak thetruth even if we argue," says Alice Feiring. Join her as she setsoff on her one-woman crusade against the tyranny of homogenization,wine consultants, and, of course, the 100-point scoring system of acertain all-powerful wine writer. Traveling through the ancientvineyards of the Loire and Champagne, to Piedmont and Spain, shegoes in search of authentic barolo, the last old-style rioja, andthe tastiest new terroir-driven champagnes. She reveals just whatgoes into the average bottle--the reverse osmosis, the yeasts andenzymes, the sawdust and oak chips--and why she doesn’t find muchto drink in California. And she introduces rebel winemakers who areembracing old-fashioned techniques and making wines withindividuality and soul. No matter what your palate, travel the wine world with Feiringand you’ll have to ask yourself: What do I really want in myglass?
America's favorite baker, Nancy Baggett, has been on a roadtrip around the country. Now she's back, with something for everydessert lover: the best pies, cakes, puddings, crisps, cookies, icecreams, and candies in the land. Many of her discoveries werelocally famous family secretsuntil now. They include a memorablysimple blueberry buckle from a Vermont bed-and-breakfast; a coconutchiffon cake from an island off the coast of Virginia that hasbecome a "destination dessert"; a never-before-revealed recipe forchocolate-dipped caramel candies, the fund-raising specialty of thewomen of an Episcopal church in New Mexico; and a sublime peachcobbler from a cook in the Ozarks. Baggett has tested and retestedevery recipe in her home kitchen to ensure that all cooks get thesame results. She has even included a chapter on easy gifts to makewith children, from "bars in a jar" (a homemade brownie mix) tofancifully decorated graham-cracker holiday cottages. Every recipein this lavishly photographed book comes with an
Kathleen Daelemans's inspiring story is familiar to millionsof readers and TV viewers. After creating a new cuisine for one ofthe world's most luxurious spas, the Grand Wailea, in Maui, Hawaii,she earned rave reviews from the New York Times, Bon Apptit, theLos Angeles Times, and Esquire. In the process, she herself lost 75pounds, dropping all the way down from a size 22 to a trim and fitsize 8. Now she tells how she did it, sharing tips and favoriterecipes for her outrageously delicious food. Kathleen, who is afrequent contributor to NBC's Today Show, is also the author ofGetting Thin and Loving Food!
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."
Celebrated French chef Pierre Gagnaire offers 175 classicand yet refined recipes for everyday and special occasions, fromlazy brunches to midnight feasts. Revered for pushing theboundaries of taste and texture, Gagnaire transforms old favoriteswith a twist of originality in recipes designed for the casualcook. Four chapters include ideas for mealtimes and entertaining,from French Toast and Lemon-Rhubarb Marmalade to GrilledLine-Caught Bass to Bell Pepper Cocktails or Raspberries withParmesan. The creative recipes of this master chef will expand therepertoire of the home cook—novice or accomplished—and provide afresh, new home-dining experience
The Surprising Power of Family Meals is the first book to takea complete look at a ritual that was virtually universal ageneration ago but has undergone a striking transformation. Nolonger honored by society as a time of day that must be set aside,some families see family supper as little more than a quaint relic.But others are beginning to recognize it as a lifeline – a way toconnect with their loved ones on a regular basis and to get moreenjoyment out of family life. The Surprising Power of Family Mealspresents stories, studies, and arguments from the fields ofpsychology, education, nutrition, family therapy, anthropology,sociology, linguistics, and religion. It provides examples offamilies and communities around North America responding creativelyto the pressures of a 24/7 world to share strategies for takingwhat is best from our past and transforming it to meet currentneeds.
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
Part memoir, part guidebook, part cookbook, and all partshilarious, Two for the Road shares the lessons the Sterns havelearned during thirty years of sampling regional fare on America'sback roads. If you want a great restaurant, forget the YellowPages, ask the local cop--and avoid anything that calls itself"world famous." Sure bets are places with a giant plastic pig onthe roof or pictures of Jesus on the walls. As the Sterns searchfor the Holy Grail of barbecue, they relate achingly funnyadventures and misadventures, and what emerges is a big picture ofAmerica, revealing exotic eating customs that flourish right underour noses.
Each chapter in this revolutionary new cookery book focuses on asingle ingredient, and the accompanying recipes in chef AlizaGreen's culinary tour-de-force demonstrate the broad range ofpossibilities for each ingredient, utilizing a variety of cookingmethods, flavours and ethnic inspirations. This innovative work isthe product of Green's ceaseless culinary curiosity and in-depthknowledge of ingredients. With these tools, she has createdhundreds of clear and imaginative recipes that will enableexperienced and fledgling chefs to recognize how foods should lookand behave, their fragrance and feel, their seasonal changes, howthey are transformed by different cooking methods, and theirflavour affinities. Extensive sidebars satisfy the most curiousepicure.
Now you can re-create the best and most inventive sandwichesin America right in your own kitchen. In this eating tour of thenation, those gurus of the road, Jane and Michael Stern, hunt downnearly 100 examples of supreme sandwichery. You'll enjoymouthwatering discoveries from nearly every state, from California(grilled Gruycre with leeks on multigrain from a neighborhoodbakery in Los Angeles) to Maine (an overflowing, warm lobster rollfrom a seaside diner) to Florida (a Cuban: ham, pork, Swiss, andgarlicky salami with pickles, lettuce, and tomato). The Sterns havetracked down America's best muffuletta (cold cuts and cheese toppedwith a bold and briny olive salad on Italian bread) and thespecialty of Louisville, Kentucky (the Hot Brown: white turkey meatunder sizzling cheese with tomato and bacon), not to be confusedwith Hot Truck (a hot pizza sub baked open-face, a campus sensationin Ithaca, New York). Each of the legendary heroes, hoagies, wraps,grinders, blimps, gyros, and subs comes with its own qui
Ten years ago, Colbin's Food and Healing stood at theforefront of the food revolution, exploring the link between dietand health. In this anniversary edition, she provides updates onrecent dietary systems, including low-fat, food combining, andalternative medicine.
The daughter of a British Foreign Service officer, MoiraHodgson spent her childhood in many a strange and exotic land. Shediscovered American food in Saigon, ate wild boar in Berlin, andlearned how to prepare potatoes from her eccentric Irishgrandmother. Today, Hodgson has a well-deserved reputation as adiscerning critic whose columns in the New York Observer were devoured by dedicated food lovers for two decades. A delightful memoir of meals from around the world—completewith recipes— It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time reflectsHodgson’s talent for connecting her love of food and travel withthe people and places in her life. Whether she’s dining on Moroccan mechoui , a whole lamb baked for a day over coals, orstruggling to entertain in a tiny Greenwich Village apartment, herreminiscences are always a treat.
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
What was eating them? And vice versa. In What the Great Ate, Matthew and Mark Jacob have cooked up abountiful sampling of the peculiar culinary likes, dislikes,habits, and attitudes of famous—and often notorious—figuresthroughout history. Here is food · As code: Benito Mussolini used the phrase “we’re makingspaghetti” to inform his wife if he’d be (illegally) dueling laterthat day. · As superstition: Baseball star Wade Boggs credited his on-fieldsuccess to eating chicken before nearly every game. · In service to country: President Thomas Jefferson, America’soriginal foodie, introduced eggplant to the United States and wrotedown the nation’s first recipe for ice cream. From Emperor Nero to Bette Davis, Babe Ruth to Barack Obama, thebite-size tidbits in What the Great Ate will whet your appetite fortantalizing trivia.