Saturday, January 31, 2009

Postres Divinos or Stylish Mediterranean in Minutes

Postres Divinos

Author: Edimat Libros Staff

For chefs and novices alike, this handy series makes cooking a delight and eating a pleasure. Featuring cuisines from around the world, each recipe is depicted with clear instructions and illustrated sequences. The versatility and use of everyday ingredients to enhance and enrich meals is explored in each book.
 

La cocina dejará de ser un secreto con esta colección de 40 títulos con las recetas más exquisitas de la cocina nacional e internacional. Si comer es un placer, cocinar puede ser un deleite. Todas las recetas incluyen claras instrucciones que se completan con ilustraciones. Estos libros le harán descubrir la versatilidad de los ingredientes más cotidianos así como estos trucos que enriquecerán sus comidas.



Book about: Direction de Chaîne de Réserves

Stylish Mediterranean in Minutes

Author: Sophie Braimbridg

A true celebration of all things Mediterranean, fast, fresh and full of flavor, these easy-to-follow recipes will come to the rescue whenever you want to cook delicious food quickly. Spanning the length and breadth of the Mediterranean, from Spain and Morocco to Turkey and Syria, Sophie Braimbridge presents classic and exotic dishes for everyone to enjoy. There are over 100 sensational recipes to choose from, all of which can be completed in less than 30 minutes preparation and cooking time.



Table of Contents:
Introduction     6
Hors d'oeuvres, tapas, antipasti, mezze     10
Soups and sauces     32
Salads     46
Pasta, rice, and legumes     60
Egg and cheese dishes     78
Vegetables     90
Fish     104
Meat and poultry     130
Desserts     148
Index     159

Friday, January 30, 2009

Come to the Table or Something in the Cellar

Come to the Table: A Celebration of Family Life

Author: Doris Christopher

In this helpful and heartfelt book, Doris Christopher shows families how to honor and celebrate one of our most beloved traditions: togetherness around the family table. An American entrepreneur, who is also an enterprising American mom, Christopher serves up a blend of inspiration and practical advice, revealing the ways dozens of others have transformed their tables into vehicles for strengthening family life.



See also: Espíritu emprendedor Corporativo:Edificio de una Organización Empresarial

Something in the Cellar

Author: Ronald Searl

This lighthearted look at the secrets of the world's wine ceremonies invites vintners and wine drinkers to experience the mysteries of wine and its production. Illustrated in Searle's inimitable style are the ancient noble ceremony of slashing the trockenbeerenauslese, the inauguration of the first authentic denominazione di origine controllata e garantita, and the vinolympics. For wine lovers who have never tasted ptolemy nouveau or watched the uncorking of the kangarouge, these experiences are related with warmth and humor. The many ways to open a bottle of wine are illustrated, and the rituals and delights of wine around the world are described.

Author Biography: Ronald Searle is a political cartoonist whose work appears regularly in Le Monde. He is the author of Illustrated Winespeak and Slightly Foxed but Still Desirable.



Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Book of Cocktails or En minutos

Book of Cocktails, Vol. 2

Author: Hilaire Walden

Following the success of the original Book of Cocktails, The Book of Cocktails, Volume 2 is a tantalizing selection of drinks from all over the world. Many of today's famous cocktails were invented in the 1920s, but over the past four years there has been a growing interest in cocktails made from more exotic ingredients. With the distinctive, illustrated step-by-step format of the original Book of... series, clear and concise instructions show what to mix, shake and stir in order to create an exciting array of drinks to delight family and friends.

Author Biography: Hilaire Walden is the author of five titles in the Book of... series: Fish & Shellfish, French Provincial, Malaysian, Spanish, and Thai.



See also: Adobe Photoshop Elements 5 Classroom in a Book or Online Learning Idea Book

En minutos

Author: Donna Hay

Tener poco tiempo no es motivo para renunciar a lo mejor de la cocina. En la línea de su anterior título Al instante, que tan buena acogida tuvo hace un par de años, Donna Hay nos presenta en esta obra 177 recetas deliciosas realizadas siempre a base de ingredientes frescos preparados sin complicaciones. Desde un delicioso pollo asado que podemos preparar en la mitad del tiempo habitual hasta postres ultrarápidos que hacen que el horno de la cocina tradicional se convierta en algo del pasado.
Sopas, ensaladas, pastas, arroces, pollo, carnes, mariscos, vegetales, dulces... todo tipo de platos pueden prepararse prácticamente al instante sin renunciar por ello a la mejor cocina. Platos tan adecuados para una cena formal como para comer bien si tener que passar horas y horas frente a los fogones.



Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Spanish Kitchen or Chef Robert Presents Romantic Dinners for Two

Spanish Kitchen: Regional Ingredients, Recipes, and Stories from Spain

Author: Clarissa Hyman

"There are many common threads within the cooking of Spain, from rice to oranges, and Spanish home cooking throughout the Peninsula is simple, uncomplicated, and direct. The flavors of fresh, local ingredients need no disguise or affectation. Yet, for both historical and geographical reasons, the sense of regional identity and separatism remains strong in the many provinces of Spain, and this is also proudly reflected in the cooking." "The book is divided into 17 chapters, each highlighting an ingredient from a particular region of Spain. Each chapter tells the story of an ingredient in terms of culture, history, cultivation, traditions, location, and context. A selection of recipes using the ingredient then follows, illustrating the Spanish pride in quality regional products and their determination to safeguard their unique Iberian culinary heritage." Illustrated with photographs of Spain's diverse regions and recipes, this latest book from Clarissa Hyman celebrates the flavor of Spanish life and food.

Publishers Weekly

Part cookbook, part travelogue and part history lesson-albeit an engaging one-this volume offers an epicure's tour of Spain, with recipes. It's divided into chapters by region, each focusing on a specific ingredient (or two) that is a source of local pride and providing a brief, food-oriented history. In the chapter on Castile-Madrid, for example, Chinch n garlic is the ingredient of choice, and recipes include Garlic and Chile Shrimp, and Spicy Monkfish with Saffron and Chilies. Other chapters go from savory to sweet, as in the La Rioja chapter, which features pears in Duck Breast with Honey-Spiced Pears, Pears Poached in Moscatel and Spices, and Rioja Pear Cake. The Valencia chapter showcases oranges in Toasted Bread with Garlic and Orange, Hake in Orange and Saffron Sauce, and Delicias (an almond and chocolate confection). Recipes are generally simple and often rustic; there just aren't enough of them (only 75). The color photos by Peter Cassidy are honest; they don't try too hard to make things look modern or slick when they simply are not. Together with the text, they provide an authentic look into Spanish cuisine and the areas where it is prepared. (Aug.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

British author and 2002 Glenfiddich Food Writer of the Year, Hyman explores the varied regions and ingredients of Spain in her third book. Similar in format to her previous work, Cucina Siciliana, this book is divided into chapters, each dedicated to one of the 17 regions of Spain, complete with histories, stories, and recipes. Highlighting foods and spices such as sobrassada, pimenton de la Vera, and bonito del norte, the narrative and 75 recipes illustrate how interaction with many cultures over the centuries has affected Spanish cuisine. While this is a lively introduction to the regional diversity of Spanish food, it may be intimidating for beginning cooks. Most of the recipes rely on using a unique ingredient not readily found in most supermarkets (although some substitutions are suggested, no source list is given), and cooking times and temperatures are not consistently provided. Penelope Casas's Delicioso! and Tapas have more detailed instructions, and for a more exhaustive survey Janet Mendel's My Kitchen in Spain has over 200 recipes. Recommended for public libraries with larger collections.-Kimberly Bartosz, Univ. of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.



Go to: RoxioEasy Media Creator 8 For Dummies or The Practice of System and Network Administration

Chef Robert Presents Romantic Dinners for Two (Book and DVD)

Author: Robert Catherin

Impress your Lover with the gift of fine dining in your own home. Chef Robйrt guides you with easy step by step instructions on how to prepare and cook these Romantic Dinners For Two. Choose a Rendezvous, set the atmosphere and follow his Cookbook and DVD.

Sheila Intner - Library Journal

This pretentious book-DVD combo suffers from a number of amateurish features, but it has some surprisingly good points. First, the good: chef Robért Catherine is deft at demonstrating cooking techniques, and some of his recipes are original and interesting. The cost is reasonable for the set. Now the bad: the DVD demonstrates most, but not all, steps in preparing the dishes; some key visuals are missing. Some of the recipes are so laden with fat and calories that their consumption poses serious health risks. The lighting is poor, and much of the time the screen is too dark. Catherine tends to repeat himself, his delivery lacks verve, and his innuendoes fall flat. He should stick to cookery and menus and leave the romance to others. The bottom line: libraries shouldn't waste their money on this title unless they're aiming for exhaustive coverage of the cooking-class genre.



Monday, January 26, 2009

Heartland Cooking Crockery Favorites or Day by Day Gourmet Cookbook

Heartland Cooking Crockery Favorites: Traditional American Recipes

Author: Frances Towner Giedt

Delicious, robust dishes from the bounty of America's heartland.Over 75 original recipes for soups, stews, poultry, meats, vegetables, and dessertsall fabulous foods, all prepared in the crockery slowcooker. Nutritional analysis for all recipes.



Interesting book: Refined To Real Food or Bordeaux

Day-by-Day Gourmet Cookbook

Author: Graham Kerr

Eat better, live smarter. help others. That’s the powerful message inside legendary chef Graham Kerr’s Day-by-Day Gourmet Cookbook.
Kerr, formerly known as “The Galloping Gourmet,” presents more than one hundred recipes here that show how to use nutrient-dense foods
(fruits and vegetables) to replace calorie-dense foods (fats, salts, carbohydrates).
In addition, he expounds on the benefits of this diet such as increased restful sleep and overall healing, and increased mobility and emotional stability.
Throughout, Kerr also shares his popular “double benefit” concept that applies to mind, body, and soul: replace harmful habits with healthy ones while reaching out to others in need, and everybody wins.



Sunday, January 25, 2009

Wine into Words or Secrets of Healthy Middle Eastern Cuisine

Wine into Words: A History and Bibliography of Wine Books in the English Language

Author: James M Gabler

Wine into Words, 2nd edition, contains nearly 8,000 bibliographical entries, thousands of historical annotations covering everything wine has touched: art, literature, music, history, food, winemaking, grape growing, poetry, politics, religion, war, and hundreds of biographical sketche of the men and women who pioneered wine's development and recorded its history. As the nearly 8000 entries attest, there are many books in English that contribute to the aura, mystery and interest of wine. The second edition of Wine into Words contains thousands of historical annotations covering everything wine has touched: art, literature, history, music, food, winemaking, grape growing, poetry, politics, religion, war, and hundreds of biographical sketches of prominent wine writers.

As one might expect, many of these wine writers were famous characters in history that expressed their love of wine by writing about it. As Dr. Kevin Starr observes in the Introduction, "What a gathering of greats, each of them with something to say about wine, in certain cases, in fact, saying some of the best things that have ever been said about wine in human history." Pliny the Elder, Omar Khayyam, Rabelais, Samuel Pepys, John Locke, James Boswell, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Philip Mazzei, Edgar Allen Poe, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Robert Louis Stevenson, Andre L. Simon, Maynard Amerine are but a few of the men who loved wine and wrote about its epicurean and hedonistic pleasures. But Wine into Words is about much more than just the famous; it is about all the men and women throughout history who pioneered wine's development and recorded its history. In addition to the Author Index, the second edition contains an alphabetically arranged Short-Title Index of all the titles, and a Subject Index (new to this edition), that allows for easy access to its store of information.

Library Journal

This unique bibliography lists approximately 3200 books that are primarily about wine and wine-related subjects (corkscrews, medical applications, viticulture, gastronomy, varietals, etc.). Historical information is given in some entries, and biographical sketches of the most prominent wine writers are included, along with occasional brief book reviews and notes. Entries are reasonably easy to find, since authors and titles are listed in alphabetical order and the organization is consistent with standard bibliographical format. Short title and publication year (for years 1572-1900) indexes are also helpful. This will be particularly useful to enology students and researchers; for more specialized wine collections. Carolyn I. Alexander, USACDEC Technical Information Ctr., Fort Ord, Cal.



Table of Contents:
List of Illustrationsvi
Introductionvii
Forewordxi
Author's Commentsxiii
Notes on the Bibliographyxv
Acknowledgmentsxix
Author Index1
Short-Title Index421
Subject Index483

Look this: Rescuing the Emotional Lives of Overweight Children or To Be Met as a Person

Secrets of Healthy Middle Eastern Cuisine

Author: Sanaa M Abourezk

The eastern Mediterranean countries of the Levant - Lebanon, Jordan, Palestine and Syria - share a love of toothsome breads and grains, fresh fruits and vegetables, fish plucked from the sea, and ripe olives from hillside groves. Meat is used sparingly; aromatic olive oil supplants butter. But reducing these cholesterol-laden foods does not leave the Levantine plate lacking for taste - their absence allows the subtle flavors of herbs and spices to shine. This is the secret of the deliciously healthful diet that Middle Eastern cooks have long understood, and that the West is just beginning to appreciate.

Internet Book Watch

In Secrets Of Healthy Middle Eastern Cuisine, Sanaa Abourezk offers savory Levantine recipes as interpreted by an accomplished chef and nutritionist. The kitchen cook will appreciate her extensive information on basic nutrition, the nutritional labeling system, healthy cooking tips, and detailed information on the selection and use of spices. From Bulgur Wheat Salad, Eggplant Stew, and Stuffed Zucchini in Yogurt Soup, to Roasted Potatoes, Sweet Peas with Chicken, and Pancakes stuffed with Ricotta, Secrets Of Healthy Middle Eastern Cuisine showcases 150 delicious recipes that range from appetizers to salads to main dishes to desserts. Exotic, nutritious, and highly recommended.



Friday, January 23, 2009

Healing Cuisine of China or Salt

Healing Cuisine of China: 300 Recipes for Vibrant Health & Longevity

Author: Zhuo Zhao

A comprehensive guide to the Chinese art of healing with food 

• Provides more than 300 authentic Chinese recipes for curing specific ailments and for promoting happiness and vitality 

• Explains the theories behind traditional Chinese beliefs about health and diet and reconciles these beliefs with contemporary Western medical knowledge 

• Includes a complete fitness program centered on the popular Chinese qi gong exercises 

Through 5,000 years of recorded history the Chinese have developed an unequaled pharmacopoeia of food remedies and have turned this knowledge into a delicious cuisine that is simple to prepare. This cuisine has little in common with the dishes on the menus of many Chinese restaurants--which have sacrificed traditional Chinese principles to appeal to high-fat Western tastes. Instead, it emphasizes all-natural ingredients eaten in season and in the most beneficial combinations. 

The Healing Cuisine of China features more than 300 authentic Chinese recipes, ranging from simple preparations to cure specific ailments to traditional "longevity banquets." The authors also explain the underlying theories behind traditional Chinese beliefs about health and reconcile these ancient beliefs with Western medical knowledge about bacteria, viruses, and other causes of disease. A complete fitness program, centered on the popular Chinese qi gong exercises, and a questionnaire to help readers discover their individual body requirements make this the most comprehensive guide to the healthy lifestyle of China ever published.



Interesting textbook: Marketing Research or Class Struggle or Family Struggle

Salt: Grain of Life

Author: Pierre Laszlo

For the sake of salt, Rome created a system of remuneration (from which we get the word "salary"), nomads domesticated the camel, the Low Countries revolted against their Spanish oppressors, and Gandhi marched against the tyranny of the British. Through the ages, salt has conferred status, preserved foods, and mingled in the blood, sweat, and tears of humanity. Today, chefs of haute cuisine covet it in its most exotic forms -- underground salt deposits, Hawaiian black lava salt, glittery African crystals, and pink Peruvian salt from the sea carried in bricks on the backs of llamas.

From proverbs to technical arguments, from anecdotes to examples of folklore, chemist and philosopher Pierre Laszlo takes us through the kingdom of "white gold." With "enthusiasm and freshness" ( Le Monde) he mixes literary analysis, history, anthropology, biology, physics, economics, art history, political science, chemistry, ethnology, and linguistics to create a full body of knowledge about the everyday substance that rocked the world and brings zest to the ordinary. Laszlo explains the history behind Morton Salt's slogan "When it rains, it pours!" and looks into the plight of the salt miner, as well as spectroscopy and nuclear magnetic resonance. Salt is a tour de force about a chemical compound that is one of the very foundations of civilization.

Oliver Sacks

I have been darting, delightedly, from one section to another -from Salting Herring to extreme halophiles, to Spectroscopy. It is a marvellous mosaic leavened with great charm and lightness.

Betty Fussell

Laszlo takes something ordinary, looks at it through his dazzling prism of knowledge, and allows the reader to experience its extraordinariness in the process.

Choice

History, chemistry, physics, economics, anthropology, technology . . . linguistics, art history . . . and culinary arts are all explored in this wonderful, multicultural Renaissance approach to the subject of salt. This approach, like salt itself, spices the ordinary and makes a topic that might on the surface seem bland be anything but. . . . Salt is not just plain, and this book is a pleasure to read.

Houston Chronicle

A breathless read. . . because of the suprising appeal and importance of the subject itself.

Roy Herbert

Takes us through the astonishing history of this substance with lightness as well as learning... [his] observations are fascinating.

Washington Post Book World

Readers will never again think of salt . . . in the same simple way.

Globe and Mail

A slender, impish concoction. . . . To say this is a quirky book is like saying Rita Hayworth was an okay-looking gal. . . . Calvinoesque in many ways -filled with lightness, delightful tangents, postmodernist hijinks.

London Review of Books

Offers a rich pickle barrel of facts and anecdotes about salt.

Le Monde

The distinction between the scientific and the nonscientific blurs. One becomes astonished that every day one samples a chemical with such a rich cultural aura -which is to say the wager by the author is a success.

Teresa Weaver

A weirdly compelling blend of chemical analysis and anecdotal history.

Publishers Weekly

If this book's organization gracefully accommodated the breadth of its subjects, it would be a small masterpiece. Unfortunately, a scattershot structure and an awkward translation mar this project, which includes portions that did not appear in the original French edition. Clearly extremely learned, Laszlo writes knowledgeably about everything from a Japanese adage meaning "to salt the greens" to the history of Venetian salt production. These brief sections are linked only in the most cursory way, however, and his tangents frequently carry him far afield, as when he moves from discussing the gabelle, or French salt tax, to addressing taxation in general. The fact that salt is used to create chlorine and can be transformed into PVC or vinyl leads to a rumination on Howard Johnson's motel-restaurants and his wonder at air-conditioning when he moved stateside in the 1960s. He prefaces each chapter of this appealing but frustrating work with a preview of the coming material rather than an effective introduction. While Laszlo's style is rambling and conversational, the translation is jarringly formal, with such clunky language as "this astute way of combining salt preservation with the beginnings of a digestion process using proteolytic enzymes was a revolutionary technique." Much of Laszlo's material is intriguing, and his literacy about everything from chemistry to philosophy provides a helpful perspective on this basic element, but ultimately these choppy pieces never cohere. (Aug.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

French chemist Laszlo here contributes to the seemingly endless flow of histories of various victuals. The author approaches the subject from a multidisciplinary perspective and has written this book "for the public at large but also as a pedagogical utopia." He writes in a verbose and ostentatious style with a profligacy of four- and five-syllable words. Salt has had a far-reaching effect on human history with an impact on politics, language, trade, and taxes, just to name a few. The author explains this by parsing Eastern proverbs and drawing complex analogies. For example, the opening of Balzac's Beatrix takes place on the Guernade peninsula (where salt is harvested). This invokes an almost three-page meditation in which Laszlo concludes that the novelist creates a "fortiori beyond the social." Salt has many such digressions, meanderings, and asides. Salt may be essential for human survival, but this is not an essential purchase. [In the fall, Walker is publishing a history of salt by Mark Kurlansky. Ed.] Tom Vincent, Wake Cty. P.L., Raleigh, NC Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Booknews

Laszlo (chemistry, U. of Li<'e>ge, Belgium and the <'E>cole polytechnique near Paris) offers a set of vignettes on the various aspects of the vital mineral. They include salt-cured food, nomads, harvesting, abuse of power, biology, other science insights, myths, and ethics and politics. was published in 1998 by Hachette Litt<'e>ratures; in the translation, by Mary Beth Mader, he has added some material for American readers. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Kirkus Reviews

A chemist constructs a cultural history of sodium chloride and reveals its magnitude in human affairs. In a volume burdened with a plethora of introductory material (there's a foreword, preface, acknowledgments, and introduction-and each short chapter begins with an old-fashioned argument, as well), Laszlo makes it plain that salt is no ordinary white powder. (In fact, he reveals, pure salt is colorless.) He begins with a sort of pedagogical manifesto, declaring that all education, like his study, ought to be multidisciplinary, and then moves into some engaging chapters dealing with various uses (and abuses) of salt. Sailors once used it to disinfect wounds. It was one of the earliest means of preserving food. Many ancient trade routes involved the transportation of salt. The word (and concept of) salary has its origins in salt. We learn how seawater is desalinated, how salt was important in the history of Venice, how Gandhi employed it as a powerful symbol to rally his followers; we learn why the sea is salty (a puzzle: after all, only fresh water flows into it), why salt will clear a wine spill on a tablecloth, why salty foods make you thirsty, why salt will dispatch a slug and will both freeze ice cream and thaw an icy highway. Toward the end, he even waxes metaphysical. Although the volume for the most part is highly readable, Laszlo occasionally allows his erudition to obfuscate, as in one sentence that includes all the following: "mitochondrial RNA sequences," "lipid bilayer," "glycerol," "ether bonds," "RNA-polymerases," "prokaryotes," and "eukaryotes." Yet he can also decline into the lowest puns-e.g., he follows a comment about Morton's attempts to prevent the problemof the hardening of salt with this: "It being salt, they licked it." Readers may also find annoying the editorial decision to permit the translator's numerous notes to appear in the text instead of in unobtrusive footnotes. Displays broad interests and a wide-ranging intellect, but the style-often bland or dully didactic-could use a bit of seasoning.



Table of Contents:
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1salt-cured foods1
2nomads21
3harvesting41
4abuse of power57
5biology91
6other science insights105
7myths143
conclusion: ethics ad politics165
afterword: the union of earth and sea171
Notes173

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Essential Eating or Legendary Watering Holes

Essential Eating: A Cookbook: Discover how to Eat, Not Diet (Essential Living)

Author: Janie Quinn

These programs are fully functional 120-day limited editions of ESRI software that require a licensed version of ArcView GIS 3.1, or higher, running on Windows 95/98/NT. There is currently no version available for Windows 2000/ME/XP.


Author Biography: Janie Quinn is the founder of Essential Lifestyle Companies headquartered in Waverly, PA.

Vegetarian Times

"A weight-loss guide that teaches people to eat real food."

The Bloomsbury Review

"Whole and organic foods for promoting better health and well-being without the difficulty of calorie counting and extreme food choices."

Martin S. Karpeh

This book is a practical eating and cooking guide to the kind of nutritional intelligence our country needs. For those seeking to improve their diet, Essential Eating, A Cookbook is a common sense approach to eating that focuses on maximizing your health and minimizing your risk of disease. (Martin S. Karpeh, M.D., F.A.C.S.Gastric & Mixed Tumor Surgeon Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY)

Mary Ann Tosca

What an overwhelming relief to finally know what to eat. Essential Eating, A Cookbook is a realistic and productive personal lifestyle that saved my life. Because of this eating plan I can maintain my ideal weight and be healthy. This book is about me. This book is about you. (Mary Ann Tosca Recovering Food Addict, San Diego, CA)

Gerald Reisinger

Listening and responding to your body's needs can be the most rewarding experience. Essential Eating, A Cookbook shows you how to harvest health and happiness through the application of nutritional intelligence. The recipes are easy to follow and the food tastes great.(Gerald Reisinger, M.D. Specializing in Preventative Medicine, Kingston, PA.)

Mary Elaine Southard

In the attempt to locate a common sense approach to nutrition, Essential Eating, A Cookbook provides a detailed road map. It addresses how to reverse our deteriorating national health on a personal level. I highly recommend it!(Mary Elaine Southard, R.N., M.S.N. Mercy Health Partners, Scranton, PA.)

What People Are Saying

Deepak Chopra
"A wonderful guide to permanent weight loss with no gimmicks."
—author, The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success




Read also Microsoft Office Project 2003 Bible or Microsoft Office 2000 9 in 1 for Dummies Desk Reference

Legendary Watering Holes: The Saloons That Made Texas Famous

Author: Richard F Selcer

Saloons, barrooms, honky-tonks, or watering holes—by whatever name, they are part of the mythology of the American West, and their stories are cocktails of legend and fact, as Richard Selcer, David Bowser, Nancy Hamilton, and Chuck Parsons demonstrate in these accounts of four legendary Texas establishments.

In most Western communities, the first saloon was built before the first church, and the drinking establishments far outnumbered the religious ones. Beyond their obvious functions, saloons served as community centers, polling places, impromptu courtrooms, and public meeting halls.

Here, the spotlight is thrown on four celebrated saloons:

  • Jack Harris's Saloon and Vaudeville Theater San Antonio
  • Ben Dowell's Saloon El Paso
  • The Iron Front Austin
  • The White Elephant Fort Worth

Selcer and his coauthors start with the origins of each establishment and follow their stories until the last drink was served and the places closed down for good. They discuss all aspects of the business: the owners, the liquor provided, the entertainment, the troubling issues of segregation by race and gender, and the way order was maintained—if it was at all.

Along the way they consider the ornate bar construction, old floor plans, the liquor suppliers, the attire of the gentlemen gamblers, the variety of casino games that emptied men's pockets, fatal shootings that occurred, and more. Vintage photos of the establishments, along with some of their more famous customers, further take the reader back to the Old West.


About the Editors:
Richard Selcer, a long-time adjunct professor of history at Cedar Valley College in Dallas, Texas, and at the InternationalUniversity in Vienna, Austria, lives in Fort Worth, Texas.
David Bowser is now known as the "historical detective" of San Antonio, where he has lived for more than twenty-five years.
Nancy Hamilton, a past president of Western Writers of America, lives in El Paso, Texas.
Chuck Parsons is the author of Captain L. H. McNelly—Texas Ranger. He lives in Luling, Texas.



Table of Contents:
Introduction : "Set 'em up!"3
Ch. 1The fine art of mixology43
Ch. 2Jack Harris's Vaudeville and San Antonio's "fatal corner"53
Ch. 3Ben Dowell's Saloon and the "Monte Carlo of the west" (El Paso)123
Ch. 4The "free-hearted fellows" of the Iron Front (Austin)169
Ch. 5The White Elephant : Fort Worth's saloon par excellence227
Epilogue : "last call"291

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Gourmet Gringo or Telemundo Presenta Celebraciones

Gourmet Gringo

Author: Mari Meyers

"Gourmet Gringo" introduces "Gringo-Mex", traditional Mexican cooking for the American kitchen. "Gourmet Gringo" runs a wide gamut: fast-food favorites, tempting appetizers, festive dips and salads, one-dish meals and dinner casseroles, spicy entrees, and some thoroughly "gringoized" foods, as well as the trendy and sweet innovations. Includes generous insider information on Mexico including culture, fiestas, foods, and more.



Read also Business Communication or Human Relations for Career and Personal Success

Telemundo Presenta, Celebraciones: En casa con las estrellas de Telemundo

Author: Maria Alecia Izturriaga

Cuando las luces del estudio se apagan, la vida de las estrellas comienza.

Acompáñenos a descubrir, a través de estas páginas, los recuerdos más íntimos de sus estrellas favoritas, los momentos preciados de su infancia, los días compartidos en familia que jamás olvidarán y aquellos memorables instantes que les inspiran alegría, nostalgia, ternura y les hacen brotar lágrimas en sus ojos.

Este es el momento de entrar en sus hogares, compartir un espacio en sus mesas, ver sus fotografías familiares y probar sus deliciosas recetas caseras. Es una travesía colmada de colores, olores, música, tradiciones, sentimientos y reflexiones que nos llevan, desde cada uno de sus caminos, a un mismo destino: el corazón. En este conmovedor libro, las estrellas de Telemundo -- Jorge Bernal, María Antonieta Collins, Leticia Coo, Alfonso Poncho de Anda, José Díaz-Balart, Erick Elías, Candela Ferro, Alejandro Felipe Flores, Vanessa Hauc, Mauricio Islas, Natasha Klauss, Jeannette Lehr, Jessi Losada, Christian Meier, Penélope Menchaca, Aylín Mujica, Mónica Noguera, Mauricio Ochmann, Ana María Polo, Catherine Siachoque, Natalia Streignard y Miguel Varoni -- les abren las puertas de su hogar para ofrecerles inspiración, diversión y mucho sabor.

Entren en estas páginas ¡y celebren con nosotros!



Table of Contents:

ÍNDICE

Prólogo xi

Jorge Bernal 1

María Antonieta Collins 11

Leti Coo 25

Alfonso "Poncho" de Anda 35

José Díaz-Balart 49

Erick Elías 61

Candela Ferro 75

Alejandro Felipe Flores, "El Frijolito" 91

Vanessa Hauc 107

Mauricio Islas 123

Natasha Klauss 135

Jeannette Lehr 151

Jessi Losada 175

Christian Meier 187

Penélope Menchaca 197

Aylín Mujica 213

Mónica Noguera 227

Mauricio Ochmann 235

Dra. Ana María Polo 247

Catherine Siachoque y Miguel Varoni 259

Natalia Streignard 281

Sobre la editora 297

Agradecimientos 301

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Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Cancer Prevention Cooking or Lemongrass and Limes

Cancer Prevention Cooking: Over 50 Healthy and Revitalizing Recipes to Reduce the Risk of Cancer

Author: Beatrice Heywood Taylor

This book has been compiled to help change eating patterns for the better. It combines tasty and energizing recipes with essential information on the impact of diet on cancer.



See also: Sex Power Conflict Evolutionary and Feminist Perspectives or Understanding Organizational Culture

Lemongrass and Limes: Thai Flavors with Naam Pruitt

Author: Naam Pruitt

Discover the secrets of exotic Thai cooking with this collection of authentic, easy-to-follow recipes. With its exquisite photographs, extensive glossary, garnishing guide, and fun facts about Thailand, Lemongrass & Limes will be a big hit with both expert cooks and new beginners. Join Naam Pruitt on this wonderful journey of spices, herbs, and flavorful feasts.



Sunday, January 18, 2009

Complete Cocktail Maker or Best of France

Complete Cocktail Maker

Author: Stuart Walton

Clear step-by-step instructions cover more spcialist techniques, such as making flavored syrups and spirits and steeping spirits.



See also: Marketing

Best of France, Vol. 1

Author: Evie Righter

Of all the world's cuisines, none endures so well as that of the French. From the boulevards of Paris to the farmhouse kitchens of Provence, these classic foods bring elegance and sophistication to tables around the world.With The Best of France,food editor Evie Righter has carefully assembled the very finest examples of French culinary techniques in a single, memorable volume. From haute and novelle cuisine to country and bistro fare, she shares the recipes and the secrets of France's chefs de cuisine in a fresh and accessible style that assures perfect results every time.Here are the simple yet fundamental beef, chicken, and fish stocks used every day of the year; the familiar favorites like Onion Soup, Cheese Soufflé and Ratatouille; distinguished classics including Rack of Lamb and Cré me Brulée; even the healthful new preparationssuch as Fish in Parchment Paper, Grilled Vegetables, and Fruit Sorbet. Each is the best of its kind.Color photographs throughout feature both the dishes themselves and the unforgettable French settings from which they emerge. An essential reference for any cook,The Best of France helps turn an ordinary meal into an event.



Saturday, January 17, 2009

Ultimate Cocktail Book or Keos Thai Cuisine

Ultimate Cocktail Book

Author: Bill Reavell

Once again the epitome of glamour in America, cocktails are both taste-bud-tingling treats and superbly stylish. Sophisticated, cool, and appealing to the eye, just like the beverages it presents, this ultimate book on the ultimate libation is itself a recipe for the perfect cocktail party. Begin with the basics--essential equipment, decorating and serving tips, unassailable bartending advice. Mix in hundreds of spectacular color photographs and a full range of fabulous concoctions, from the classic Martini to the treacherous Knockout, from elegant slow sippers to deadly Scorpions, from a Cool Wind to a Sirocco. Garnish with a chapter on alcohol-free cocktails too delicious and good-looking to limit to the drivers. The result? A subtle and harmonious blend of information stirred, not shaken, into a book with a powerful kick.

Go to: George Foremans Big Book of Grilling Barbecue and Rotisserie or Ultimate Chocolate Cookie Book

Keo's Thai Cuisine

Author: Keo Sananikon

With over 80,000 books in print, "Keo's Thai Cuisine" continues to be the definitive source for home cooks serious about Thai cooking. Full color.



Design for Tea or Fruit

Design for Tea: Tea Wares from the Dragon Court to Afternoon Tea

Author: Jane Pettigrew

Why did polite society lift its little finger along when raising the tea-cup to the mouth? What is a mote spoon? What is the origin of the word "caddy"? This book takes readers through the various groups of tea equipage used over the past 350 years. The story behind the development of the various pieces of tea brewing and drinking equipment all have a tale to tell - sometimes an extraordinary one. Learn why Cruickshank's poor Frenchman was compelled to drink 14 cups of tea because he didn't understand the custom of standing the spoon in the cup to indicate that one had had enough. The book contains lively and pithy contemporary quotes from literature, diaries, trade catalogues and historical documents together with a selection of illustrations.



Read also Les Principes de Règlement de Banque

Fruit

Author: Kate Whiteman

A comprehensive guide to the fruits of the world, with over 100 delectable recipes and a photographic identification guide to every kind of fruit, with information about history, varieties and nutritional value.



Friday, January 16, 2009

Bread of Three Rivers or Rare Bits

Bread of Three Rivers: The Story of a French Loaf

Author: Sara Mansfield Taber

In the spirit of A Year in Provence comes the romantic tale of a woman, a baker, and their loaf

"[T]he printed page alone will evoke the crackling noises and the toasty aroma of cooling loaves in Jean-Claude Choquet's boulangerie."
—William Castle, The Boston Globe

Overcome by a passion for French bread, Sara Mansfield Taber travels to Brittany in search of a loaf that, like the lifestyle which must surely accompany it, is perfect in its simplicity. After many months of seeking, she tears off a hunk of pain trois rivières made by Gold Medal Baker Monsieur Jean-Claude Choquet of Blain, Loire-Atlantique. It "smelled like heaven and
tasted a mile deep." It tasted honest. Here was her loaf.

A deliciously satisfying mixture of history, science, travel narrative, and romance (could anything be more powerful than bread love?), Bread of Three Rivers reminds us that nothing, no matter how basic, is as simple as it would
seem.

"Bread of Three Rivers . . . is a work dripping with charm and more importantly is a homage to artisan French baking and the culture that
sustains it."
—Sophie Herron, Slow Food

Sara Mansfield Taber has taught at the University of Minnesota and the graduate writing program at Johns Hopkins University. In 1996 she earned a William B. Sloane Fellowship in Nonfiction to the Bread Loaf Writer's Conference. She lives in France and Washington, D.C.

Boston Globe, 12/5/2001 - William Castle

The zealots will want this book. I think of my cousin Ellen, who would sooner have starved her children than her yeast, or my colleague Paul, who still longs insatiably for the sourdough of his San Francisco childhood. These readers will supply any poetry or technique that may be missing from Sara Mansfield Taber's ''Bread of Three Rivers,'' and for them the printed page alone will evoke the crackling noises and the toasty aroma of cooling loaves in Jean-Claude Choquet's Loire Valley boulangerie.

Booklist - Mark Knoblauch

Nothing epitomizes the French lifestyle more than a loaf of bread fresh from the local bakery. How can something so distinctive be made from only flour, water, salt, and yeast? Taber assesses the state of contemporary French bread by visiting an artisanal bakery and some producers of those four ingredients. She spends days at a celebrated Breton boulangerie, uncovering the traditions and techniques of producing an incomparable, crusty loaf. She proceeds to the miller of the bakery's flour and, to her surprise, discovers that much of the wheat comes from the U.S. She visits the pumping station that supplies the bakery with water from the local aquifer. She tours the factory that grows the high-quality yeasts used by the bakery. Her most extensive investigations occur where generations of workers employ elaborate series of sluices and ponds to extract the finest salts from seawater. The ingredients and the baking of French bread are threatened by technological advances and the nascent world economy, whose effects on the foundation of the French diet may be profound.

Library Journal

Frustrated with the hectic Washington, DC, lifestyle and disappointed with the perpetually busy lives of Americans, Taber attempts to find delight in a simple, honest loaf of French bread. As many others before her, she flees to France to immerse herself in the cuisine of the country and to write about it. Unlike others, she concentrates solely on the search for "a wonderful French loaf" and the story behind it. Traveling across France to research each ingredient salt, wheat, water, and yeast she interviews the individuals who provide each ingredient to the baker of her perfect loaf. What results is a romanticized book that is equal parts history, travel narrative, and culinary scientific process. A former university professor and participant in the 1996 Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, Taber has written a literary title filled with metaphor, but her irritation with the American way of life and its global influence detracts from what is an otherwise fascinating look into the complexities of seemingly mundane ingredients. Readers interested in food writing are more likely to be entertained by Peter Mayle's French Lessons (Knopf, 2001). Recommended for larger collections. Pauline Baughman, Multnomah Cty. Lib., Portland, OR Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

An American writer details her infatuation with French bread, in a part-reportage and part-earnest attempt to understand national differences and obsessions. When her husband's job transplanted them from Minnesota to Washington, D.C., Taber, the mother of two young children, found herself in a place that prized work more than community and free time. She took long drives to find bakeries that made good French bread and tried making loaves on her own, but that didn't lessen her feelings of loneliness. She decided to write the story of a loaf of French bread. She would go to France and there find all that was missing in her American life: a nourishing community, balanced lives, and more time; France, unlike the US, would be "the repository of quality." So Taber travels to the village of Blain in Brittany, where she meets Gold Medal baker Jean-Claude Choquet. She learns how bread is made, the process still lengthy and energy-consuming although it has been helped by the modern invention of a cooling chamber in which the dough can be left to rise for longer periods than in the past. Taber goes to the marshes of Guerande, where the salt Choquet uses is harvested from the sea in an elaborate process involving channels and a sequence of pans. At a mill she learns that the French have six categories of flour. Since they fortify their bread flour with American wheat, she next visits an organic wheat farmer, then the water company that serves Blain, and finally the yeast manufacturer, whose largest client is China. The author is chagrined to learn that the French enjoy the convenience of American sandwich loaves and McDonald's fast food; she also discovers that all the people she meets work as hardand as long as any Washington bureaucrat. Informative, comprehensive-but burdened by gee-whiz insights into the ways of the world.



See also: UML for the IT Business Analyst or C

Rare Bits: Unusual Origins of Popular Recipes

Author: Patricia Bunning Stevens

Rare Bits is an account of humankind's progression from skewering meat to whipping up a batch of Strawberries Sarah Bernhardt. Ranging from Bismarcks to Green Goddess dressing, Rare Bits provides much food for thought. Stevens delves always deeper into the stories behind the familiar recipes, brushing aside spurious anecdotes to find the truth. This is culinary history at its most appetizing. Stevens's lively and dedicated search reminds us that cooking may be one of the most civilized and civilizing of human activities. Understanding the serendipitous, eccentric, or historic origins of famous recipes deepens appreciation for the living gestures they represent.

Library Journal

This is primarily a culinary history and only secondarily a cookbook--not surprisingly, since the author is a historian. The stories of how particular recipes developed and were named are extremely interesting and well written, particularly regarding baked goods. The preparations of cakes, pies, breads, and cookies are clear and easy to follow, and the stories behind them are fascinating. Recipes for savory foods are not as well presented. A bibliography covering culinary and more general historical sources is included. Other titles, such as John Mariani's The Dictionary of American Food and Drink (LJ 2/15/94) are more comprehensive though not as much fun to read. Recommended for collections with a strong interest in food history. Index not seen.--Mary Martin, CAPCON Lib. Network, Washington, DC

Booknews

A historian and avid cook gathers lore, stories and, of course, recipes associated with some 150 well-known dishes and drinks from Apple Charlotte to Zuppa Inglese. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.



Table of Contents:
Prefaceix
The Staff of Life
Chapter 1 Bread2
Chapter 2 Sandwiches30
Soups and Salads
Chapter 3 Soups40
Chapter 4 Salads and Salad Dressings56
Entrées and Extras
Chapter 5 Seafood72
Chapter 6 Meats and Poultry88
Chapter 7 Supper Dishes and Side Dishes123
Chapter 8 Sauces144
Sweets
Chapter 9 Candy and Cookies160
Chapter 10 The Dessert Course186
Chapter 11 Cakes225
Chapter 12 Pies and Tarts254
Stirred or Shaken
Chapter 13 Beverages280
A Note about Eggs307
Selected Bibliography309
Index313

Little Book of Scottish Baking or Nothing More Comforting

Little Book of Scottish Baking

Author: Marion Maxwell

Scotland has long enjoyed a rich baking tradition among hardworking farmers, upper-class aristocrats, and everyone in between. The influence of Scottish baking can be felt during a visit to almost any bakery in the United States. The common Yankee cruller doughnuts can trace their roots to the Scottish Aberdeen Crullas, the recipe for which is included in this delightful little book of delicious recipes.

Easy-to-follow recipes that produce scrumptious treats make this book a must for those who love baking, or for those who just love eating baked goods.

Scan A Book

Any reader with a Scottish background, or an interest in Scotia history and culture, will love this mini-sized cookbook... An excellent gift for cooks of any age and skill level.



Look this: Flavors of Bon Appetit or Garlic and Sapphires

Nothing More Comforting: Canada's Heritage Food

Author: Dorothy Duncan

Nothing More Comforting is a reflection of our society: an eclectic mix of many different cultures and traditions. Dorothy Duncan - with her extensive knowledge of heritage foods - has chosen her favourite "Country Fare" columns from the popular Century Home magazine for this wonderful book on Canada's heritage cuisine. Each chapter focuses on one particular food or ingredient followed by historical facts and traditional recipes for you to try at home. Fast food restaurants and instant foods will never replace our seasonal and regional specialties: maple syrup, fiddleheads, rhubarb (pie plant to our ancestors), asparagus, corn on the cob, Saskatoon berries and McIntosh apples. The recipes in this book take advantage of Canada's unique foods, creating a taste that is distinctly Canadian. Nothing More Comforting will provide the avid as well as the armchair cook with interesting food facts and new recipes to try.



Thursday, January 15, 2009

Whole Food Facts or Kava

Whole Food Facts: The Complete Reference Guide

Author: Evelyn Roehl

This easy-to-read compendium is an indispensable guide to meal planning, cooking, and shopping for both the beginning and the experienced whole food cook. From amazake and arugula to shiitake and teff, Evelyn Roehl offers the most up-to-date information on buying and cooking with whole foods. The familiar as well as the exotic in fruits and vegetables, dairy products, grains and legumes, oils, and sweeteners are discussed in detail in this A-Z reference guide no kitchen should be without. 

Updated and enlarged edition.

With more natural foods and organic produce in supermarkets, the new USDA Food Pyramid Guide, and recently published information on the value of nutrients and specialty diets, more health-conscious consumers are seeking information on selecting, preparing, and storing whole foods. 

The author provides comprehensive nutritional charts and a complete discussion of diets, including vegetarian, macrobiotic, and the new USDA-recommended diet. 

A special chapter on nutrients answers the frequently-asked questions What is it?, How do I use it?, How nutritious is it?, and Where does it come from?. 



Table of Contents:

Whole Food Facts
The Complete Reference Guide

Introduction
Dairy Products
Fats and Oils
Fruits
Grains
Legumes
Nuts and Seeds
Sweeteners
Vegetables
Other Foods
Diets
Nutrients
Appendix: Nutritive Values of Foods
Suggested Reading
Index 

Evelyn Roehl, researcher and writer, was co-founder and director of the Food Learning Center in Seattle, Washington. 

Book review: Automated Information Retrieval or International Financial Market Investment

Kava: Medicine Hunting in Paradise: The Pursuit of a Natural Alternative to Anti-Anxiety Drugs and Sleeping Pills

Author: Chris Kilram

Kava, Piper Methysticum, is the most effective relaxing and stress-relieving plant in all of nature. This book is the tale of plant researcher Chris Kilham's investigations into this plant and his far-ranging explorations deep in the South Pacific in search of a source of kava. Kilham takes the reader on an adventurous journey through the mystical native legends, outlandish history, and exciting science surrounding this potent plant. A story replete with pulpit-pounding missionaries, kava-drinking natives, sorcerers, a mysterious Tahitian prince, and the author's own humorous outlook amidst difficult and perilous circumstances, Kava is a must-read for those who love tales of travel and adventure and those interested in plant medicine.

Kava is poised to become an important and now readily available natural alternative to stress-relieving drugs. 



Lets Dish up a Dinner Party or The Essential Kitchen

Let's Dish up a Dinner Party !: A Fab Guide to Entertaining with Style

Author: Nelson Aspen

Throwing a dinner party but feeling fabulous-impaired? Step away from the microwave and let Nelson Aspen, showbiz and lifestyle guru, walk you through the steps to putting together a special evening that's fun, gorgeous, delicious, and 100% you. From stocking the pantry and composing the ideal guest list to setting the stage; creating ambiance; putting together mouth-watering appetizers, soups, salads, entrees, and desserts; keeping the conversation lively; avoiding potential disasters; saying goodnight, and much more, Nelson gives you everything you need to host a party stylishly. Along the way, Hollywood's well-seasoned "Host with the Most" serves up more than a few choice mouthfuls of insider Hollywood buzz - Who's naughty? Who's nice? Who's psycho? - that will keep you laughing and give you plenty of great dish to share at your own table. It's the ultimate how-to for entertaining with gaiety:

  • Make 'em swoon with recipes for A Star Is Born Caviar, Fab Frittata Au Gratin, Chicken? Dump Him Darling!, and Oatmeal Raisin d'Etre Cookies.
  • Feng shui your way to success with darling details - put out cherished pictures of friends, create novel place settings, add comfy pillows, lighting design, and personalize your music playlist.
  • Make it flow - appoint a designated "mingler," turn off cell phones, add party games, choose a theme, laugh off mishaps...and pour the wine.
  • Sidestep trouble - put a critic in his place, deal with drunken or inappropriate behavior, get killjoys off your guest list, and turn trouble into triumph!

Hilarious, gossipy, and practical, Let's Dish Up a Dinner Party! is the essential style book for the host who knows what being truly fabulous is all about - extending hospitality, serving great food, opening your heart and home, and opting for panache and laughter whenever possible. After all, that's what your lucky guests will remember long after the party's over!



Read also Impuestos Corporativos (Ejemplos y Serie de Explicaciones)

The Essential Kitchen: Basic Tools, Recipes, and Tips for Equipping a Classic Kitchen

Author: Christine McFadden

A must-have reference for those setting up their first kitchen, updating a kitchen, or just learning to cook, The Essential Kitchen provides expert guidance on topics such as the advantages of using copper, cast iron, or nonstick pots and pans; the purposes of different types of knives, and techniques for chopping herbs. As an added bonus, recipes from some of the world's best-known chefs are featured throughout. The plastic cover and wire binding make the format unique and practical for constant reference and guidance.



Recipes from Our Front Porch or Vintage Vicksburg

Recipes from Our Front Porch

Author: Ella Jo Shell

This beautiful book contains recipes from the historic Hemlock Inn in North Carolina which opened in 1952. Designed for use at 2,300 feet above sea level, the recipes are favorites at the Inn.



Read also ¿clásicos de Teoría de Organización (¿con InfoTrac?)

Vintage Vicksburg

Author: Junior Auxiliary of Vicksburg

A tour through Vicksburg's past and present with beautiful color photographs of tempting dishes and local historic scenes. the recipes reflect Vicksburg's southern heritage with 21 sections to please the palate.



Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Taste of Indonesia or Cal A Vie Living

Taste of Indonesia: Recipes from the Spice Islands

Author: Helena Soedjak

Indonesian cuisine has developed from a blend of Indian, Chinese, Arabic, and Dutch influences. Now American cooks can prepare authentic Indonesian food using 93 easy-to-follow recipes. A 32-page color spread displays prepared recipes in traditional table settings.



See also: How to Photograph Absolutely Everything or Rick Steves Greece Turkey Israel and Egypt DVD 2000 2007

Cal-A-Vie Living: Gourmet Spa Cuisine

Author: Cal A Vie Health Spa

Award-winning Cal-A-Vie Health Spa has done it again! Enjoy their second cookbook, which is a larger, more colorful volume, including interesting spa information and healthy cooking tips. Healthy never tasted so good.



400 Rush Hour Recipes or Checkered Flag Cooking

400 Rush Hour Recipes: Recipes, Tips and Wisdom For Every Day of the Year

Author: Brook Noel

Easy and simple mealtime solutions are within reach of every busy family with the Rush Hour Cook's latest collection. Each day of the year features a new recipe along with a personal challenge, kitchen tip or words of wisdom. For those who want to reduce their grocery bills, save time, and enjoy incredibly delicious recipes with simple ingredients, the Rush Hour Cook will become a one-stop solution. Like all of the books in the Rush Hour Series, this ultimate collection follows the five Rush Hour Rules: All ingredients are pronounceable through the phonetic use of the English language. Each ingredient can be found in the market without engaging in a full scale scavenger hunt. No list of ingredients shall be longer than the instructions. Each recipe has to be durable enough to survive the "Queen-of-Incapable-Cooking." The Rush Hour Cook's finicky child will eat it or some portion of it.



Go to: Direzione d'esplorazione: Per gli studenti di college che vogliono fare una differenza

Checkered Flag Cooking: An Insider's Guide to Tailgating at the Races

Author: Kent Whitaker

From NASCAR to your local dirt track, Kent "The Deck Chef" Whitaker has combined his love for great cooking with his passion for motor sports to bring you this complete insider's guide to tailgating, grilling, race day cookouts and more. Kent combines his weekend, race-day-party-at-home recipes with his tried and true onsite tailgate tricks to bring to bring every race fan the ultimate guide to STOCKCAR tailgating and cooking. The Deck Chef gives you the inside track on easy cooking in a cookbook that will hang tight in turn four so you can power your way down the front stretch to the checkered flag---deliciously!

Recipes:
From the Starting Grid to the Final Lap, the recipes cover a full day at the track. Honey Pecan French Toast and Zip Close Messy Omelets start the day...Bristol Beef Bites and Speedway Cheese Ball make great snacks to munch on before, during and after the race. Oven-Style Beef Ribs, Grilled Meatloaf, and Pit Stop Bratwurst take you through the Green Flag, or Hit the Pits with French Fried Carrots, Corn Chili and a Homey Pork Chop Sandwich. Pancake Mix Cookie Bars, Pina Colada Cake and Wacky Cake will make the final lap even sweeter.

The book will include:
­ Recipes from tracks across the country from everyone who is anyone in the racing industry including sponsors, track chefs, team chefs, even engine builders, and, of course, the fans
­ Page profiles on drivers, teams, crew members, officials, tracks, and race fans.
­ Tailgating tips, tricks from the racing industry, & info on the best tracks to tailgate
­ Top Ten lists on the Best Tracks to Tailgate, Best Foods for Tailgating, Tailgating Essentials, and more
­ Fun information on select tracks-from dirt tracks to Super Speedways-and on the major Stock racing series including NASCAR, BUSCH, ARCA, ASA, SAS and CASCAR.
­ LOTS of great photos of cars, fans, food, races and more
­ Plus, more fun stuff like: Race Words to Know, Track Facts, Blurbs from fans, and tailgating tips from Jake



Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Fine French Wines or Great Tiki Drink Book

Fine French Wines

Author: James Turnbull

Presented here are 220 extraordinary wines of three types: first the classic prestige wines generally from Bordeaux, Burgundy, or Champagne; regional wines produced on smaller vineyards that reflect the "new class" of French winemakers, and so-called "rebellious" wines produced by truly creative winemakers who explore the options in wine-making beyond the constraints of appellation regulations. These are vintages left out of the roundups of classic wines (even the annuals) from Robert Parker and Oz Clarke. Each of the 200 wines presented include a history of the vineyard and its owner; details on vine growing and wine-making techniques; suggestions for food and wine pairings; wine tasting pointers to ensure the richest sensual experience; reference guides to the best vintages and pricing. Each is illustrated by a full page photograph of the wine bottle and contact details on the winemaker.



Read also Essence Beauty Basics and Beyond or Mind Over Body

Great Tiki Drink Book

Author: Jennifer Trainer Thompson

Welcome to the exotic world of tiki: legends, lore, mystique-and drinks and appetizers, of course! Polynesian pop culture and the spirit of the islands abound in full color from the pages of THE GREAT TIKI DRINK BOOK. Step into this tropical paradise and imbibe potent concoctions; prepare spicy, succulent appetizers like Tamarind-Glazed Beef Skewers and Tuna Thai Rolls; and brush up on the intricate and ornate history of tiki traditions and customs. Learn tips from expert mixologists on how to make great tiki drinks that will have you beelining to the blender with the expertise required to mix your own outstanding tropical beverages. Whether a beachcomber by nature or a city dweller in a tenth-floor apartment, let THE GREAT TIKI DRINK BOOK transport you to your own tropical paradise.

About the Author: Jennifer Trainer Thompson is an accomplished cook, a James Beard Award nominee, and author or coauthor of seven cookbooks and two nonfiction books. Her articles have appeared in the New York Times, Travel & Leisure, Diversion, Omni, and Harvard. The owner and chef of the Jump Up & Kiss Me brand of food products and hot sauces, an avid sailor, and prolific Ten Speed poster producer, Thompson lives with her family in rural Massachusetts.



Vegetables by 40 Great French Chefs or Martha Stewarts Gardening

Vegetables by 40 Great French Chefs

Author: Lyndsay Mikanowski

Thirty-five of France's most prominent chefs share recipes that will make even the most resistant vegetable snubber reach for a fork. The chefs' including pastry god Pierre Hermé, l'Arpège's elegant Alain Passard, and grande dame of Parisian cuisine Hélène Darroze, create eye-catching and satisfying recipes with vegetables ranging from spinach and broccoli to rhubarb and sweet peas, from leeks and beets to fennel and artichokes. Vegetables offers a fresh, new view of French culinary trends. Vegetables opens with a vegetable patch tour featuring Joël Thiébault, a respected French farmer who delivers his amazing produce to the doorsteps of prominent French foodies including cookbook maven Patricia Wells. Joël offers tips for growing your own produce or selecting the best vegetables at market, along with the history and nutritional properties of the featured vegetables.



Go to: Information Systems Programming with Java or Survey of Accounting

Martha Stewart's Gardening: Month by Month

Author: Martha Stewart

Having helped her readers to enjoy to the fullest their kitchens, homes, and friends, Martha Stewart now goes outdoors to teach them about creating and managing a garden that is both beautiful and bountiful. Martha Stewart's Gardening is the perfect book for longtime gardeners, new gardeners—and everyone looking for a thoughtful and useful gift. Illustrations.

Publishers Weekly

There's no doubt about it: Stewart ( Weddings ), from all appearances, has lushly productive gardens. With the help of Zeschin, an award-winning magazine photographer, she has produced an equally lush book. It's lovely to look at, but it isn't going to teach gardeners--novice or experienced--anything new or fill their minds with information they couldn't get more easily (and less expensively) in extant volumes. Chapters treat the months of the year consecutively and tell us what to do, horticulturally, with them: February, for example, is a good time to prune fruit trees, while December is best spent doting on houseplants and holiday preparations. Interspersed throughout are directions for drying flowers, gilding pumpkins, painting urns and then some; the book authentically reflects the author's wide-ranging domestic interests. Considering all the acreage, and the hours, represented by the fruits of her labor, Stewart's assiduously picturesque tome may leave readers rather breathless. 250,000 first printing; ad/promo; Better Homes and Gardens main , BOMC HomeStyle alternate; author tour; (Nov.)

Library Journal

This is the ultimate garden journal and, as typical of its kind, is intensely personal. It illustrates the gardening year on Stewart's six acres at Westport, Connecticut, and is filled with photographs of Stewart pruning, raking, digging, transplanting, as well as recipes and monthly lists. Some information is probably found nowhere else (how to antique a cement planter, how to gild a pumpkin); however, the cultural information will be duplicated in any basic gardening guide. The main interest is in Zeschin's photographs; Stewart's strong visual sense shows on every page, whether of a sweep of perennial border or a shelf of empty vases in the workshop. Buy where interest in the Stewart lifestyle is high and budgets are deep. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 7/91.-- Molly Newling, Piscataway P.L., N.J.

Booknews

Another slick product put together by the corporate entity which masquerades behind the persona of Martha Stewart--cook, hostess, and gardener nonpareil. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)



Monday, January 12, 2009

Brunello to Zibibbo or Dutch Ovens Chronicled

Brunello to Zibibbo: The Wines of Tuscany, Central and Southern Italy (Mitchell Beazley Classic Wine Library)

Author: Nicolas Belfrag

Nicolas Belfrage concludes his two-volume tour of Italian wine with a look at the outstanding varieties from Tuscany to the south.

In Barolo to Valpolicella, Nicolas Belfrage demystified northern Italian viticulture, discussing dozens of wines ranging from the highest-quality vintages to affordable selections that can be enjoyed every day. Now, with Brunello to Zibibbo, the second of his two-volume survey of Italian wine, Belfrage considers the wines from Tuscany to the south, again concentrating on the regions' indigenous vines and the unique grapes that make Italy's wines so exceptional.

The book offers extensive coverage of the vines and wines of Tuscany but also assesses the emerging wines of the south, on which, to date, little has been written. From the Sangiovese, or Brunello, of Tuscany, to the Zibibbo, or Alexandrian Muscat, of the island of Pantelleria off the Tunisian coast south of Sicily, this book is an authoritative primer on the wealth of Italy's vineyards and a discerning guide to the regions' best bottles.

David Gleave

[Belfrage's] knowledge of Italy and her wines . . . is unrivalled . . . [He is] the ideal person to write a much needed book on Italian wines.



Books about: Managing Information Technology or Oracle 10G Programming

Dutch Ovens Chronicled: Their Use in the United States

Author: John G Ragsdal

In Dutch Ovens Chronicled, John G. Ragsdale, a leading expert on the development, care, and use of Dutch ovens, now offers a condensed history of the technological advancements that resulted in these versatile utensils. With over twenty photos, several recipes, references to earlier works, and observations and recommendations based on his own familiarity with these ovens, Ragsdale offers an authoritative, informative, and eminently readable guide for all age groups.



Table of Contents:
1Pots from the past1
2The hearth at home7
3Dutch ovens, then and now11
4From east to west24
5At home on the range29
6Campers52
7The iron makers57
8Ovens in action68
9Recent experiences75

Rise and Dine or Crab

Rise and Dine: Breakfast in Denver and Boulder

Author: Porcelli

A handy, inexpensive guide to eggs Benedict with Breton ham and granola sundaes. The best breakfast eats in Denver and Boulder can be found here with insightful and often witty accounts of the food and ambience of each restaurant. Step off Main Street and enter the quaint neighborhoods of Denver and Boulder and the Epicurean treasures they have to offer. Includes information on more than 100 restaurants, including hours of operation, addresses, and specialties of the house.

Author Bio
Joey Porcelli is a freelance writer and editor. She has written for Mangia, SouthwestArt, The Denver Post, Colorado Homes and Lifestyles, Mountain Living, Log and Timber Style, Colorado Expression, and Confetti magazines. Ms. Porcelli has won several awards for her writing including three Top Hand awards from the prestigious Colorado Authors' League. She lives in Golden, Colorado.

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Guide to the Guide
Denver
20th St. Cafй
Aix
Annie's Cafй
Benny's Restaurant & Cantina
Bistro Jou Jou
Bistro Vendфme
Bogey's on the Park
Breakfast Inn, Dinner Too
Breakfast King
Breakfast Queen
Bump & Grind
Cafй Bisque
Cafй Cafй
Cafй Europa
Charlie Brown's Bar and Grill
Chef Zorba's Cuisine
Cherokee Dining on 12th Avenue
Colfax Center Deli
Davies Chuck Wagon Diner
D'Eggo's
Delectable Egg
Deli Tech
Dixon's Downtown Grill
Dozens
Dumitri's Family Restaurant
East Side Kosher Deli
EggCeption Eatery
The Eggshell Cafe
Eggshell of Cherry Creek
El Taco de Mexico
Ellyngton's
Fourth Story
Grace's Home Cooking
Handlebar &Grill
The Hornet
Hotcakes
J&C Diner
JacknGrill
Julia Blackbird's New Mexican Cafй
Kate's at 35th Avenue
King's Land
La Praviana
Le Central
Le Delice
Lienzo Charro
Little Anita's
The Market
McCormick's Fish House & Bar
McCoy's
McGuire's
Edgewater Cafй
Mercury Cafй
Mesa Bar and Grill
Michelle at Arapahoe Station
Mom's Cafй
My Big Fat Greek Cafй
Nectar
Newbarrys
New York Deli News
Ogden St. South
Original Pancake House
Palettes
Panzano
Park Tavern & Restaurant
Perfect Landing
Pete's Kitchen
Pho 99
Ralston Road Cafй
Randolph's
Rialto Cafй
Sam's No. 3
Seven 30 South
Sunrise Cafй
Sunrise Sunset
Swifts #4
Symposium Cafй
Tuscany
Velocity
Vincenza's Italian Bakery & Deli
Walnut Cafй
Watercourse Foods
Zaidy's Deli of Cherry Creek
Boulder Belgian Bakery
Boulder Cafй
Boulder Dushanbe Teahouse
Burnt Toast
Chautauqua Dining Hall
Crosswalk Cafй and Deli
Delish
Dot's Diner on the Hill
Foolish Craig's
Greenbriar Inn
The Huckleberry
Le Peep
Lucile's Creole Cafй
Marie's
North Boulder Cafй
Q's
Sol Azteca
Sunflower
Turleys
Village Coffee Shop
Walnut Cafй

Sample Chapters
20th St. Cafй
1123 20th St. Denver, CO 80202 (303) 2959041
Hours: Mon.Fri. 6:00 a.m.11:00 a.m.
Sat. 7:00 a.m.1:30 p.m. Closed Sunday
No Checks
Ed, one of 20th St. Cafй's venerable regulars, has eaten a Japanese American breakfast here almost every week for 50 years. You'd expect this downtown eatery to have its share of longtimers, since it opened in 1946. What you don't expect is how one of the darker episodes in American history impacted the cafй. The late Harry D. Okuno left his pearldiving village in Japan to immigrate to California, where he entered the restaurant business as a dishwasher. Harry moved to Colorado, but Pearl Harbor shattered his dreams of restaurant ownership. He and his family, relocated to Colorado's Japanese internment camps, remained there throughout World War II. Upon release, the Okunos opened the 20th St. Cafй in what was known as Denver's Japanese town.
Grandson Rod took over the restaurant from his parents in 2000. Proud of his heritage, he cooks with Harry's original recipes. Rice is a staple in many of Rod's dishes. Moco loco, a derivative of the Hawaiian plate lunch, fills you up with gravied white rice, two eggs, and a juicy hamburger steak with chopped green onions. Breakfast fried rice gives a classic Asian recipe some American moxie with crunchy bacon, scrambled eggs, and fried onions in sticky white rice.
Rod and his wife, Karen, refuse to use artificial ingredients in their gravies, green chile, or chickenfried steak. "We make homemade everything," Karen proudly says. The 20th St. Cafй caters to customers like Ed. When someone on the Atkins diet asked for high protein, the Okunos cooked up a ham, sausage, egg, and cottage cheese plate. But modern diet fads haven't stopped Rod from making his Big Breakfasttwo eggs, two sausages, two pieces of bacon, hash browns, and toastfor the rest of us. The 20th St. Cafй is a haven for working people. A waitress wearing a "One Day Big Butts Will Be in Style" button serves federal judges and cops on the beat. The Okunos know them all. If any regulars go missing, Karen becomes concerned. "The only way we lose a customer is if they die," she says, but quickly adds, "it's not because of the food!"

Aix
719 E. 17th Ave. Denver, CO 80203 (303) 8311296
Hours: Brunch Sun. 10:00 a.m.2:00 p.m.
Say oui to Sunday brunch at Aix. Decorated in the burnt orange shades of Provence, this elegant restaurant serves American fare with rusticFrench influence. Classical sauces such as hollandaise are light, ingredients fresh and simple. To support Colorado businesses, Aix buys their produce, beef, and game meat from local purveyors. French cheeses come from nearby Marczyk Fine Foods. On Saturday, owners and chefs Cyd Anderson and Rachel Woolcott bake traditional brioche, pecan crumble coffee cake, peach and cherry muffins, and zucchini bread made from fresh produce. Sunday morning, guests enjoy the fruits of their labor.
Aix's changing menu follows the seasons and the chefs' creative whims. In winter, a dish of warm polenta drizzled with maple syrup or cornmeal mush might warm your day. Fresh fruit and eggs with fines herbes are more a summer's delight. Eggs Benedict, the spйcialitй de la maison, with baked brioche, ham, poached eggs, and the creamiest of hollandaise, is available any season. The Provenзal omelet, a mix of tomatoes, baby cipolline onions, olives, chives, and a light Gruyиre that refuses to dominate, is a sure thing. Aix adds lemon zest, cream cheese, capers, and red onion to the housecured gravlax for another tasty choice. Anderson describes each ingredient with love, but says, "Aix is all about the potatoes." She's right. These spuds don't come flying off a greasy grill. They're individually spiced with paprika, onion, and a blend of herbs, then cooked to perfection.
Cocktails at brunch include peach and orange mimosas, Paulaner HefeWeizen beer, and the Aix martini: a blood orange juice and vodka wakeup call. The Bloody Frenchman sneaks a touch of Pernod and crisp fennel into the customary tomato juice and vodka drink.
Whether you order strawberry crepes, lamb and eggs, or a tenderloin benedict, Aix est bon for brunch.



Read also Great Country Inns of America Cookbook or Williams Sonoma

Crab

Author: Cynthia Nims

This elegantly packaged cookbook includes delicious crab dishes for every course, from Crab Benedict to Chilled Tomato Soup with Crab, from Crab and Sesame Noodle Salad to Beer-Steamed Crab with Mustard Butter. And if you can't find Dungeness, snow, or king crab in your market, Nims offers great ideas for substitutions. Readers will also learn about the history of Northwest crabbing, differences among species, time-saving techniques, details on crab festivals, and where to find more information.

Watch for upcoming books in this great series as Nims celebrates the foods that the Northwest does bes—-the specialties that have broken the boundaries of regional cooking. And in the meantime, think Crab!

Author Biography: Well known among "foodies" of the western United States, Cynthia Nims has written and edited numerous cookbooks. Former food editor for Simply Seafood magazine and Spa magazine, Cynthia is now the food editor of Seattle magazine.



Table of Contents:
Introduction8
The Story of Northwest Crab11
A Brief History11
Species Information11
Seasonality13
About the Recipes15
Breakfast/Brunch17
Crab Benedict18
Fines Herbes Omelet with Crab19
Crab and Goat Cheese Breakfast Bruschetta21
Savory Crab Blintzes with Dill22
Crab and Artichoke Frittata with Fontina23
Crab and Leek Quiche26
Sourdough Bread Pudding with Crab28
Appetizers29
Fresh Spring Rolls with Crab and Hoisin Dipping Sauce30
Crab and Avocado Tostadas32
Firecracker Crab Cocktail33
Crab Pizza with Arugula and Fresh Mozzarella36
Crab and Corn Souffle37
Crab Cornmeal Fritters with Lime Aioli39
Phyllo Tartlets with Curried Crab40
Sushi Roll with Crab and Daikon Sprouts41
Sherried Crab and Mushrooms on Toast44
Soups and Sandwiches45
Spring Pea Soup with Crab Mousse46
Chilled Tomato Soup with Crab47
Whiskey Crab Soup48
Lemongrass Broth with Crab Wontons52
Green Goddess Crab and Watercress Sandwiches53
Crab and Tillamook Cheddar Sandwiches55
Crab Club Sandwich56
Salads57
Crab Louis58
Rice Salad with Crab and Asparagus59
Crab and Sesame Noodle Salad60
Spinach Salad with Crab Toasts and Roasted Onion Vinaigrette62
Shaved Fennel Salad with Crab and Blood Oranges63
Cucumber and Daikon Sunomono with Crab64
Main Courses65
Northwest Crab Boil66
The Best Crab Cakes with Three Sauces67
Crab and Italian Sausage Cioppino72
Crab and Chanterelle Risotto73
Steamed King Crab with Garlic74
Beer-Steamed Crab with Mustard Butter76
Wokked Pea Vines with Crab and Ginger77
Salt and Pepper Crab78
Fresh Noodles with Crab and Cilantro79
Cold Cracked Crab with Lemon Mayonnaise82
Stir-Fried Crab with Asian Black Bean Sauce84
Rosemary Roasted Crab85
Cooking with Crab86
Buying and Storing Crab86
Boiling and Steaming Crab87
Cleaning and Portioning Crab88
Crab Calendar and Field Trips90
Crab Resources92
Index94

Beef Veal or Bordeaux and Its Wines

Beef & Veal

Author: Williams Sonoma

Beautifully prepared beef -- elegant Bacon-Wrapped Filets Mignons, tender Herb-Rubbed Veal Loin, old-fashioned Pot-Roast -- can be the showpiece of any meal. The idea of making such well-known dishes intimidates many cooks, however. But you will soon master these classic beef and veal recipes and many more with this book.

Williams-Sonoma Mastering Beef & Veal is a complete cooking course in single volume. The opening describes the different cuts of beef and veal, how to buy them, and how to trim them. You will also learn how to cook, season, and serve beef and veal, from readying your mise en place to expertly carving a bone-in roast.

Basic recipes and key techniques then illustrate dozens of indispensable culinary building blocks, such as how to prepare a stock or how to chop fresh herbs. Troubleshooting tips show you what can go wrong and how to fix it without having to start all over again. Next the master recipes lead you step-by-step, with friendly text and instructive photographs, through every step of preparation. These recipes include helpful advice other cookbooks assume you already know, and explain how to test beef and veal for doneness -- one of the most valuable kitchen skills any cook can master. The shorter recipes and variations in each chapter encourage you to continue practicing your newfound skills, building your repertory and confidence at the same time. Finally, a guide to equipment and a glossary of ingredients will help you stock your kitchen with all the essentials.

In these pages, you will find more than fifty classic recipes that tell you, in both pictures and words, how every dish you make should look and taste from beginning toend. Whether you are an aspiring novice or an experienced home cook, Mastering Beef & Veal will teach you all you need to know to prepare any beef or veal recipe with ease.



See also: Welcome to the Table or Gourmet Herbs

Bordeaux and Its Wines

Author: Robert Joseph

Travel with Robert Joseph, best-selling and award-winning wine author as he recounts the history and ambience of a place where wine has been produced for more than 1,000 years. This personal tour through varied regions of Bordeaux describes the individual characters of the wines and wine-making hotspots (such as Margaux and St. Émilion), as well as the role played by the region’s climate, soil, and landscape. More than 100 evocative, specially commissioned photographs convey the region’s flavor and diversity. Visit the châteaux, villages, and vineyards, and meet the men and women who, every year, turn baskets of grapes into the bottles of wine that are sought after and savored throughout the world.

Table of Contents:
Foreword6
Author's introduction8
About Bordeaux12
Chapter 1The City of Bordeaux18
Chapter 2The Medoc30
Chapter 3Graves and Pessac-Leognan52
Chapter 4Sauternes and Barsac74
Chapter 5Entre-Deux-Mers82
Chapter 6Libourne, St Emilion and Pomerol96
Chapter 7Northward from Pomerol118
Practical Reference
Choosing wine in Bordeaux130
Le terroir133
Directory of recommended chateaux136
Acknowledgments144

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Where Flavor Was Born or Year of Eating Dangerously

Where Flavor Was Born: Recipes and Culinary Travels along the Indian Ocean Spice Route

Author: Andreas Viestad

This extraordinary cookbook from celebrated author Andreas Viestad explores the culinary wonders along the legendary spice route, from Zanzibar to India to Bali and everywhere in between. Part travelogue, part cookbook, this colorful volume captures the spirit of each region and reveals the origins of the spices now used in everyday cooking across the globe. Nearly 100 recipes, a glossary of spices, source list, and unforgettable color photographs document the people, places, and best of all the irresistible cuisine at every stop on the journey. Where Flavor Was Born brings the exotic flavors and cultures of the Indian Ocean into the home kitchen.



Interesting textbook: Holy Simplicity or Walden or Life in the Woods

Year of Eating Dangerously: A Global Adventure in Search of Culinary Extremes

Author: Tom Parker Bowles

Fugu. Dog. Cobra. Bees. Spleen.  A 600,000 SCU chili pepper.
All considered foods by millions of people around the world.  And all objects of great fascination to Tom Parker Bowles, a food journalist who grew up eating his mother’s considerably safer roast chicken, shepherd’s pie and mushy peas.  Intrigued by the food phobias of two friends, Parker Bowles became inspired to examine the cultural divides that make some foods verboten or “dangerous” in the culture he grew up with while being seen as lip-smacking delicacies in others. So began a year-long odyssey through Asia, Europe and America in search of the world’s most thrilling, terrifying and odd foods.
 
Parker Bowles is always witty and sometimes downright hilarious in recounting his quest for envelope-pushing meals, ranging from the potentially lethal to the outright disgusting to the merely gluttonous—and he proves in this book that an open mouth and an open mind are the only passports a man needs to truly discover the world .  
 
 

Kirkus Reviews

One gastronome's worldwide pursuit of perfect-and perfectly awful-cuisine. A veritable culinary Odysseus, food critic Bowles (E is for Eating: An Alphabet of Greed, 2004) set out from and returned to his native London to regale foodies and common omnivores alike with tales of exotic specimens from all ranges of the food spectrum. Over the course of "twelve months, four continents, 20,000 air miles and two inches on [his] waist," he managed to shove a lot into his thrill-seeking maw. Yet his project was "not so much about picaresque derring-do (although there's a little of that, albeit rather windy)," claims the author, "but a fascination with the world's diverse cuisines." As his adventure took shape, he "started to think about the relativity of dangerous foods, how one man's pea is another man's tripe," and ended up concluding, "it's our perception . . . that's usually the biggest obstacle to trying new things, not the taste itself." In some cases, however, as with the elvers (baby eels) of Gloucestershire or the gooseneck barnacles (percebes) dotting Spain's Atlantic-pummeled coast, Bowles found that the harvesting of these unlikely delicacies could be as dangerous as consuming them. By and large, though, many of the foods he tasted-from Japan's potentially lethal fugu (blowfish) to the merely unsavory silkworm pupae and posintang (dog soup) of Korea, to the bon waan (wood stew) of Laos and "bowel-shattering" American hot sauce-simply push the envelope of the Western palate and invite us to admire the author's gastronomic courage. But while Bowles may fancy himself a professional eater with a penchant for risky man-food, he wins over his audience as a writer, describing dishes andsensations with the zeal of the recently famished, and his own hedonistic acts in delightful passages of unabashed bravado and self-deprecating humor. In the spirit of Anthony Bourdain but without the sensationalistic glitz. Agent: Grainne Fox/Ed Victor Ltd.