Canola Gourmet


Book Description

For your health and good eating--it's time for an oil change! A culinary expert and a health professional team up to show you why canola oil is the best blend of fats for cooking light, flavorful food




Upper Crusts


Book Description

More than 150 creative recipes that transform bread into imaginative (but easy-to-make) new appetizers, soups, salads, entrees, decadent desserts, and more--from hometown favorites to exotic international surprises




Simply Irresistible


Book Description




National Union Catalog


Book Description

Includes entries for maps and atlases.




Soups, Stews, Chowders


Book Description

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 of Thomas Jefferson as pigeons were plentiful around Monticello. In colonial kitchens the predominate utensil was a large kettle. Cooks throughout the centuries have utilized whatever food was available to prepare delicious, invigorating, and warming soups for their families. Sheilah Kaufman assembles over 70 soup recipes including Dill Pickle Soup, Pumpkin Mushroom Soup, Corn Chowder, and Clam Chowder to satisfy your nutritional urges. Some soups are hot and some are cold, but each recipe is elegant yet simple to prepare with easy clean-up. Also included is a concise history of soups, stocks, and broths, notes about the origin of the terms we use today, and helpful hints to make your soup the envy of your neighborhood. Sheilah Kaufman learned to bake at the age of 8, when she craved chocolate desserts like brownies, fudge, chocolate chip cookies, and chocolate cake with chocolate icing. Her mom's version of dessert was either an un-iced sponge cake or vanilla wafers! Teachers from La Varenne in Paris and Le Cordon Bleu gave Sheilah her formal training in French cuisine. In 1966 Sheilah began teaching international cooking classes under the name French Cuisine Plus. Sheilah is the author of more than sixteen cookbooks including her bestselling French Cuisine Plus, More French Cuisine Plus, A Chicken in Every Pot, Easy Ways to Elegant Cooking, and Sheilah's Fearless, Fussless Cooking. Glamour magazine says "If you like to entertain, Sheilah's Fearless Fussless Cookbook should be your best friend." During the 1970s Sheilah began traveling the US lecturing and teaching with appearances on many TV and radio programs. A frequent contributor to many national publications including Modern Bride, International Travel, and Magna, Sheilah is the food editor for Washington Jewish Week, and the gift basket and fancy food editor for Gift & Decorative Accessories Magazine. Sheilah lives with her husband in Potomac, Maryland.




Cooking Jewish


Book Description

Got kugel? Got Kugel with Toffee Walnuts? Now you do. Here's the real homemade Gefilte Fish – and also Salmon en Papillote. Grandma Sera Fritkin’s Russian Brisket and Hazelnut-Crusted Rack of Lamb. Aunt Irene's traditional matzoh balls and Judy's contemporary version with shiitake mushrooms. Cooking Jewish gathers recipes from five generations of a food-obsessed family into a celebratory saga of cousins and kasha, Passover feasts – the holiday has its own chapter – and crossover dishes. And for all cooks who love to get together for coffee and a little something, dozens and dozens of desserts: pies, cakes, cookies, bars, and a multitude of cheesecakes; Rugelach and Hamantaschen, Mandelbrot and Sufganyot (Hanukkah jelly doughnuts). Not to mention Tanta Esther Gittel’s Husband’s Second Wife Lena’s Nut Cake. Blending the recipes with over 160 stories from the Rabinowitz family—by the end of the book you'll have gotten to know the whole wacky clan—and illustrated throughout with more than 500 photographs reaching back to the 19th century, Cooking Jewish invites the reader not just into the kitchen, but into a vibrant world of family and friends. Written and recipe-tested by Judy Bart Kancigor, a food journalist with the Orange County Register, who self-published her first family cookbook as a gift and then went on to sell 11,000 copies, here are 532 recipes from her extended family of outstanding cooks, including the best chicken soup ever – really! – from her mother, Lillian. (Or as the author says, "When you write your cookbook, you can say your mother's is the best.") Every recipe, a joy in the belly.




The Cumulative Book Index


Book Description

A world list of books in the English language.







A Taste of Turkish Cuisine


Book Description

The traditional Turkish dishes featured in this cookbook make use of a variety of beans, grains, fresh fruits, vegetables, herbs, and, of course, yogurt (one of Turkey's most important contributions to international cuisine). A history of Turkey's culinary traditions accompanies the 187 recipes, as well as glossaries of commonly used ingredients and Turkish cooking terms.




The Publishers Weekly


Book Description