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Essentials of Cooking

Essentials of Cooking

List Price: $40.00
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Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: must have book
Review: this is a must have book for every cook. covers basics that a fairly food cook should know. it will be my kitchen bible and i have recommended it to many people. i am getting a second copy today for a bridal shower gift. beats toasters and blenders by long shot

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A real help!
Review: This is book is a definite asset in every kitchen. The steps are explained and shown very well. It focuses on developing your cooking skills.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Highly Recommended Second Book on Cooking
Review: When I make my list of top ten (10) most useful books on food, this volume, 'Essentials of Cooking' by James Peterson will be near the top of my list. The reasons are as simple as they can possibly be. First, the book covers virtually all the really important basic techniques you need to do serious cooking well. Second, the author does a very good job of explaining these techniques in words and pictures. The only other book with which this book can be seriously compared is 'Jaques Pepin's Complete Techniques', which I have not yet read critically and reviewed, but I will point out that while that older volume was done by an extremely talented chef with a flair for teaching, with black and white photographs, the current volume is done by someone who is more of a teacher with a talent for cooking, and it is done with color pictures.

I generally discount the value of photographs of prepared dishes in cookbooks, but I make a huge exception for photographs that demonstrate techniques. The only thing better than a really good set of pictures for explaining a culinary technique may be a really good set of colored drawings, since they can eliminate the distractions and focus one's attention on the important details of the technique. In this book, the photographs range from useful where all the action is done in a saucepan as when you are making a beurre blanc to absolutely essential when you are forming a salmon steak into a medallion for poaching.

The range of techniques covered by this book is truly impressive. As I turn each page to a new method, I find myself thinking 'Of course, there is a right way to do this... and I can never seem to find an authoritative description of the method.' This happened to me just yesterday as I was looking for the method to poach pears in wine. Well, it's in this book along with dozens of other essential techniques.

There are six (6) chapters that roughly correspond to the most typical division of recipes in a French cookbook. These chapters and their salient points are:

Basics - These techniques are commonly done during prep or by the garde manger. It includes preparing fruits and vegetables, making broths and sauces, making pasta doughs, and making gnocchi, blinis, crepes, risottos, and pilafs.

Vegetables and Fruits - This is summarized as the techniques for applying heat to fruits and vegetables. It includes sections on roasting, gratins, glaces, deep-frying, grilling, steaming, sautéing, mashing, flans, soups, and poaches (as in poaching pears in wine).

Fish and Shellfish - This gets into the problems posed by coaxing the best properties out of your most typical shellfish packagings, in addition to the typical methods of applying heat to flesh. This includes methods for cooking en papillote, cooking things with tentacles, shucking oysters, preparing soft-shelled crabs, using anchovies, and making a miso soup.

Poultry and Eggs - This is the chapter on fowl butchery and how to treat eggs with the respect they deserve when boiling, poaching or baking them or in making an omelet or a soufflé. I confess to finding the description of making a classic French omelet to be just a bit thin. There is no mention of the qualities of the best type of pan to use for omelets and no mention of bringing the eggs to room temperature before beating. Compared to many other descriptions, the instructions seem sparse between the point that eggs are added to pan and the cooked omelet is folded.

Meat - Roasting, grilling, sautéing, poaching, braising, and stewing the big red stuff.

Working from Scratch - Butchering things without feathers is the heart of this chapter with techniques for scaling and filleting fish, hot and cold smoking fish, curing, trimming and butchering lamb, cutting up a rabbit, and braising rabbit.

One of the most delightful aspects of this book is how you can run across techniques for things you which on the face of it appear to violate conventional cooking wisdom. My favorite example is the section on making a stew without browning the meat before starting the braise. Not only is this an acceptable technique, but the French have a name, a daube, for this type of dish. The heart of a daube is a long marinade in wine followed by thickening with a beurre manie or cornstarch slurry. The most famous daube is actually a German dish, sauerbraten, but it is common to many areas in western Germany and eastern France such as Provence and Alsace.

A second great virtue of this book is how it can give you the confidence to do things that a simple description in a conventional cookbook may leave you in doubt of your ability. This book shows you how to do it and the pictures assure you that it can be done.

As you consult this book, it may be easy to overlook the Glossary. Don't. This section is easily as useful as any of the chapters mentioned above. The name of the section is even a bit misleading, as the section does not simply define terms used in the book. It contains pictured descriptions of several important procedures such as degreasing a liquid and preparing a mousseline. Even if you are not in the habit of simply reading cookbooks, I strongly suggest you read this glossary. It will easily double your culinary IQ in a single sitting. One example is the article on blanching. Thousands of recipes tell you to blanch food before applying heat in some other way with no indication of why you are doing this. The article reveals at least four different reasons for blanching.

This book is not perfect, but it is very, very good. Highly recommended for turning difficult recipes into routine. And, it is very entertaining to read. Peterson is both a skillful teacher and an entertaining writer. Get this after you buy Julia Child or Patricia Wells.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Highly Recommended Second Book on Cooking
Review: When I make my list of top ten (10) most useful books on food, this volume, `Essentials of Cooking' by James Peterson will be near the top of my list. The reasons are as simple as they can possibly be. First, the book covers virtually all the really important basic techniques you need to do serious cooking well. Second, the author does a very good job of explaining these techniques in words and pictures. The only other book with which this book can be seriously compared is `Jaques Pepin's Complete Techniques', which I have not yet read critically and reviewed, but I will point out that while that older volume was done by an extremely talented chef with a flair for teaching, with black and white photographs, the current volume is done by someone who is more of a teacher with a talent for cooking, and it is done with color pictures.

I generally discount the value of photographs of prepared dishes in cookbooks, but I make a huge exception for photographs that demonstrate techniques. The only thing better than a really good set of pictures for explaining a culinary technique may be a really good set of colored drawings, since they can eliminate the distractions and focus one's attention on the important details of the technique. In this book, the photographs range from useful where all the action is done in a saucepan as when you are making a beurre blanc to absolutely essential when you are forming a salmon steak into a medallion for poaching.

The range of techniques covered by this book is truly impressive. As I turn each page to a new method, I find myself thinking `Of course, there is a right way to do this... and I can never seem to find an authoritative description of the method.' This happened to me just yesterday as I was looking for the method to poach pears in wine. Well, it's in this book along with dozens of other essential techniques.

There are six (6) chapters that roughly correspond to the most typical division of recipes in a French cookbook. These chapters and their salient points are:

Basics - These techniques are commonly done during prep or by the garde manger. It includes preparing fruits and vegetables, making broths and sauces, making pasta doughs, and making gnocchi, blinis, crepes, risottos, and pilafs.

Vegetables and Fruits - This is summarized as the techniques for applying heat to fruits and vegetables. It includes sections on roasting, gratins, glaces, deep-frying, grilling, steaming, sautéing, mashing, flans, soups, and poaches (as in poaching pears in wine).

Fish and Shellfish - This gets into the problems posed by coaxing the best properties out of your most typical shellfish packagings, in addition to the typical methods of applying heat to flesh. This includes methods for cooking en papillote, cooking things with tentacles, shucking oysters, preparing soft-shelled crabs, using anchovies, and making a miso soup.

Poultry and Eggs - This is the chapter on fowl butchery and how to treat eggs with the respect they deserve when boiling, poaching or baking them or in making an omelet or a soufflé. I confess to finding the description of making a classic French omelet to be just a bit thin. There is no mention of the qualities of the best type of pan to use for omelets and no mention of bringing the eggs to room temperature before beating. Compared to many other descriptions, the instructions seem sparse between the point that eggs are added to pan and the cooked omelet is folded.

Meat - Roasting, grilling, sautéing, poaching, braising, and stewing the big red stuff.

Working from Scratch - Butchering things without feathers is the heart of this chapter with techniques for scaling and filleting fish, hot and cold smoking fish, curing, trimming and butchering lamb, cutting up a rabbit, and braising rabbit.

One of the most delightful aspects of this book is how you can run across techniques for things you which on the face of it appear to violate conventional cooking wisdom. My favorite example is the section on making a stew without browning the meat before starting the braise. Not only is this an acceptable technique, but the French have a name, a daube, for this type of dish. The heart of a daube is a long marinade in wine followed by thickening with a beurre manie or cornstarch slurry. The most famous daube is actually a German dish, sauerbraten, but it is common to many areas in western Germany and eastern France such as Provence and Alsace.

A second great virtue of this book is how it can give you the confidence to do things that a simple description in a conventional cookbook may leave you in doubt of your ability. This book shows you how to do it and the pictures assure you that it can be done.

As you consult this book, it may be easy to overlook the Glossary. Don't. This section is easily as useful as any of the chapters mentioned above. The name of the section is even a bit misleading, as the section does not simply define terms used in the book. It contains pictured descriptions of several important procedures such as degreasing a liquid and preparing a mousseline. Even if you are not in the habit of simply reading cookbooks, I strongly suggest you read this glossary. It will easily double your culinary IQ in a single sitting. One example is the article on blanching. Thousands of recipes tell you to blanch food before applying heat in some other way with no indication of why you are doing this. The article reveals at least four different reasons for blanching.

This book is not perfect, but it is very, very good. Highly recommended for turning difficult recipes into routine. And, it is very entertaining to read. Peterson is both a skillful teacher and an entertaining writer. Get this after you buy Julia Child or Patricia Wells.


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