Sunday, November 29, 2009

Hot Cuisine or Incredibly Easy Italian

Hot Cuisine: Recipes to Excite

Author: Philippa Sklaar

One hundred tantalizing recipes are included in this spicy personal cookbook that combines the allure of food with the pleasures of sex. Smart, sexy, and sometimes naughty, this book includes taste-tested recipes with telling titles for the multicourse seduction, beginning with attractive appetizers, sensuous salads, fiery loins of meat, and climaxing with a luscious array of tempting desserts. Also included are international recipes and personal anecdotes.


About the Author:
Philippa Sklaar ran a cooking school and catering business for 15 years in her native Johannesburg, South Africa. She currently caters lavish affairs for Hollywood's hottest stars and manufactures the cookie line Love Smacks. She lives in Santa Monica, California.



Book about: The Ayatollah Begs to Differ or How to Get Rich

Incredibly Easy Italian

Author: Publications International

Italians know the truth--simple food is best. Discover great Italian dishes that you can make for family and friends any time--in no time. More than 85 easy-to-make recipes for appetizers, salads, soups, sandwiches, pizza, pasta, entrйes and side dishes.



Saturday, November 28, 2009

Quickies for Couples or You Are What You Are Cookbook

Quickies for Couples: Fast and Fresh Recipes for Two

Author: Katy Scott

Written with the busy professional couple in mind, Quickies for Couples: Fast, Fresh Recipes for Two is filled with savory appetizers, entrees, side dishes, and desserts as well as a wealth of culinary ideas such as recommended staples and kitchen equipment and menu-planning suggestions.



Look this: Nickel and Dimed or Working with You Is Killing Me

You Are What You Are Cookbook

Author: Loosmor

Celebrity cookbook including Michael Caine, John Travolta, Tony Blair, and Emma Thompson among others.



Friday, November 27, 2009

Camembert or Galley Collection

Camembert: A National Myth

Author: Pierre Boisard

Camembert--delectably fragrant, creamy-centered, neatly boxed--is the most popular and most famous French cheese. Originally made by hand in the Norman countryside, it is now mass-produced internationally, yet Camembert remains a national symbol for France, emblematic of its cultural identity. In this witty and entertaining book, Pierre Boisard investigates the history of Camembert and its legend. He considers the transformation of France's cheese-making industry and along the way gives a highly selective, yet richly detailed history of France--from the Revolution to the European Union. Camembert: A National Myth weaves together culinary and social history in a fascinating tale about the changing nature of food with implications for every modern consumer.
As the legend goes, by coincidence, grand design, or clever marketing, the birth of Camembert corresponds almost exactly in time with the birth of the French republic. In this book, republicans and Bonapartists, revolutionaries and priests are reconciled over the contents of a little round box, originating a great myth and a great nation. The story of the cheese's growing fame features Napoleon, Louis Pasteur, the soldiers of the First World War, and many others.
Beneath this intriguing story, however, runs a grittier tale about the history of food production. We learn, for example, how Camembert became white--a topic that becomes a metaphor for the sanitation of the countryside--and how Americans discovered the secrets of its production. As he describes the transformation of the Camembert industry and the changing quality of the cheese itself, Boisard reveals what we stand to lose from industrialization, the hallmark ofthe past century.
Today, small producers of raw-milk, ladle-molded Camembert are fighting to keep their tradition alive. Boisard brings us to a new appreciation of the sensual appeal of a lovely cheese and whets the appetite for a taste of the authentic product.

Library Journal

Boisard, a social sciences professor at the Centre d'Etudes de l'emploi in Noisy-le-Grand, France, has written a book ostensibly about a cheese: Camembert. The text accordingly discusses its production, from gathering the milk to aging the cheese. A brief chapter further discusses the sensual aspects of Camembert-its taste, aroma, and softness. Boisard's real topic, however, is what the growing ubiquity of the cheese in contemporary France tells us about French society. This renders his book both a little dry and speculative. Boisard is not above shaky generalizations based on his observations, and though he notes archival records and interviews with elderly cheesemakers, he occasionally forces the story of the cheese to fit the cultural history of a nation. Non-French readers may more readily associate Brie with Gaul, and had Boisard somehow accommodated such a foreign view of his topic, he might have written a more interesting book that would have appealed to a broader readership. Suitable only for academic food and French studies collections.-Peter Hepburn, Univ. of Illinois at Chicago Lib. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.



Interesting book: The Laws of Cool or The Economics of Information Technology

Galley Collection: Vittles and Drinks for All Boats

Author: Ann Wilson

This guide to "vittles and drinks" offering tried-and-true recipes to enhance the nautical experience as well as practical tips on creating menus and recipes, makings lists, outfitting the galley, and provisioning, this guide contains everything for good eating at sea.



Thursday, November 26, 2009

From the Heart and Other Safe Places or Soups Stews Chowders

From the Heart and Other Safe Places

Author: Pamela E Johnson

A feast for your body and spirit. The author's passions have always included entertaining. Whether it was writing letters about her adventures or entertaining in her home; she attributes her love of cooking to years of family gatherings full of love and sharing of ideas and experiences.
This is truly a cookbook with a twist. We invite you to read her letters about life experiences and social issues. Please consider experimenting with some of the age old family recipes. Above all, let the book inspire you to reconnect with your friends and relatives. Start corresponding, become a pen pal to just one youth and let life's blessings continue.



See also: Grammar Connection 1 or The Clinicians Guide to Managed Behavioral Care

Soups, Stews, Chowders

Author: Sheila Kaufman

Soups, Stews, and Chowders bring credibility to the idea that America is a great melting pot. Philadelphia Pepper Pot Soup has its origins in George Washington's kitchen at Valley Forge during the winter encampment. Pigeon Soup was a particular favorite



Wednesday, November 25, 2009

French Leave or More than Salt and Pepper

French Leave: A Wonderful Year of Escape and Discovery

Author: John Burton Rac

Escaping the stresses and strains of everyday life is something many of us can only dream of. But for two Michelin star chef John Burton Race the dream became a reality when he swapped the pressures of running a highly successful London restaurant for a farmhouse in south-west France.

Based on the highly acclaimed Channel Four television series of the same name, French Leave is a memoir of this year. The result is a warm and witty portrayal of the French and their way of life and the fantastic collection of recipes developed and discovered while there. But it is also a highly personal journey of discovery as Burton Race faces the challenge of helping his large family adjust to their new lifestyle and embarks on his own quest for a new kind of life. One of Britain's finest chefs, Burton Race's biggest challenge is taking on the French — at their own game, in their own backyard — as he samples the pleasures and pitfalls of truffle-hunting, cheese-making and becoming a chocolatier.

Lavishly photographed, with over 100 recipes created exclusively for the book, French Leave captures the true essence of France — and the author's passion for its beauty, people, food and wines. Entertaining, informative and thought-provoking, it is an indispensable companion for Francophiles the world over. And most of all, to all lovers of good food — and life.



Go to: Energía, Ambiente, y Cambio climático

More than Salt and Pepper: 25 Years of Spicing Up the Kitchen

Author: Caren McSherry


Caren McSherry, owner of the Gourmet Warehouse, is one of the original stars of Canada's culinary scene and she has been an integral part of the popular The Girls Who Dish Series. This time Caren is back with her own book. Her famous cooking school, appropriately named Caren's Cooking School, is celebrating its 25th anniversary. This book is an overview of those 25 years, including Caren's favorite recipes along with those of some of the visiting celebrity chefs who have taught at her school, famous Vancouverites, and long time students. Caren's combination of experience as a chef and an instructor shines through in this collection of easy-to-follow recipes. "The Truth About" section reveals all you need to know about ingredients, such as the difference between extra virgin olive oil and olive oil. Let Caren take the fear out of the kitchen and turn you into a knowledgeable and skilled chef!