Sunday, February 21st, 2010
There are a surfeit of cookbooks on the shelves, everything from pretty books that rattle off lists of ingredients whose duplication in the styled photos is next to impossible, to classic tomes that assume a complete apprenticeship to a master chef and years of professional experience.
I own both kinds.
Having cookbooks is a way to explore worldwide cuisine without leaving your reading chair. It mixes the exotic with the familiar and ignites the imagination. Cookbooks, for me, are a way to kick-start my creativity. I process kosher substitution in my head to see whether milk can be reasonably substituted or whether just plain water will do, or if veal or turkey can stand in for pork. It’s well past the point where I flip past a recipe simply because it’s not intrinsically kosher; anything can be kosherized. (more…)
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Tags: apprenticeship, baking bread, chef, chocolate work, cookbooks, cooking, cooking times, creativity, duplication, everything, experience, imagination, Julia Child, kosher, master, master chef, matter, necessary element, oven, plain water, Preparation, professional experience, reading chair, recipe, semblance, shelves, surfeit, technique, tomes, Understanding, way, world
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Tuesday, January 26th, 2010
There is one cookbook on my shelf that I’ve had for years which is quickly becoming my go-to book for never fail recipes, which surprises me because I have many other cookbooks that are either more specialized or more comprehensive. This recipe is adapted from that book – which I will write about at a future date – and proofed using my foolproof proof box.
Oh. My. Gawd.
(more…)
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Tags: book, caption, cookbook, cookbooks, flavor, flour, gawd, instant yeast, leavening agent, loaf, proportions, recipe, sour flavor, sourdough, sourdough recipe, time, tomato soup, volume
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