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Paperback Some Like It Hot: Spicy Favorites from the World's Hot Zones Book

ISBN: 1558322698

ISBN13: 9781558322691

Some Like It Hot: Spicy Favorites from the World's Hot Zones

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

300 spicy recipes from some of the most flavorful and piquant cuisines.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

One of the "Some"

I'm far from tabloid or Google-search notoriety, but my friends know that I have a scandalous reputation for a tough love of chiles. I've studied them, grown them, and cook up a storm with them. I have a warning sign posted on my door, and the folks who are brave enough to cross my shameful threshold are guaranteed a unique and delicious meal. I prided myself in being a hot food expert ... until I found "Some Like It Hot", by Clifford A. Wright. How can one man, who is apparently also an authority on many other subjects (James Beard Cookbook of the Year Award winner for his A Mediterranean Feast and author of 11 other cookbooks) find the time to become a better chile expert than I? Well, I don't know the answer to how ... but he has. You tap into the spicy vein of the world with this book. Mr. Wright's charming and informative introductions to each recipe are vivid travel logs ... including history and serving suggestions. I found the whimsical HOTNESS Scale to be very helpful in choosing my dinner guests (Piquant, Incendiary, Blistering, Molten, and Thermonuclear). A few of Clifford's recipes include authentic ingredients, and could be challenging for the average American palate, and although I can't say I loved them all, I enjoyed the experience ... similar to how I felt about my first (and last) bungee jump. Stimulating and exhilarating! The recipes I DO love include: a very satisfying Pumpkin Stew with Chiles and Cheese (Incendiary), the tangy Mango Rice (Blistering), rich and luscious Chicken in Green Coconut Sauce (Thermonuclear), and the feisty Spicy Shrimp with Aji Sauce (Molten). Some Like It Hot includes a good selection of vegetarian dishes, as well as a section filled with Cool Accompaniments. I strongly recommend this book, certainly for my fellow chile heads out there, but also for meat-and-potato sector. Mr. Wright guides the "tender mouths" very gently. He notes that you "... can no more plunge into chile-hot food than you can a swimming pool without knowing how to swim. You must start slowly and build up your tolerance for hot foods." Of course ... I didn't bother with that advice. I jumped right in, and so glad I did ... but, I'm an expert, remember?

Excellent Condition

We ordered the book thinking it would show some wear and tear. It came in excellent condition. In fact you couldn't tell that it was a used book.

Piquant Passion

Simply put this book is our house Bible. We're Anglos with a hunger for hot & spicy food. We have our local library to thank for showing us this tremendous guide. Originally borrowed, it soon became apparent that we must own the book to truly benefit from it. It's both a pleasure to read about the history and science behind these spicy foods and to learn how to prepare them. Once you get the ingredients from your supermarket's ethnic section, local ethnic markets, or online most dishes can be made in about 1/2 - 1 hour. Some are even easier than that and all pack a colossal flavor. One of the books best features is the 1 - 5 spice rating scale, cleverly noted above each recipe. Don't be afraid to try a recipe rated 5. This is usually given because it calls for some ridiculous amount of peppers, which can be halved or quartered. If you find you like the dish and can handle more spice, you can up the (pic-)ante the next time you make it. There are a few recipes that I find daunting (i.e. Dora Wat). I want to make them but am turned off by the fact that I have to make specialty spice combinations (i.e. niter kebbeh or berbere) in advance. While the author gives suggestions for substitutions I'd prefer the real thing or nothing at all. One of these days, I'll get around to doing the pre-work and have a reserve of the stuff on hand. Note: Fans of Sichuan must have this book. It makes Sichuan cooking easy and the creative cook can make it healthy by minimizing the amount of oil used. WARNING! If you are new to cooking with chilies, take extra CARE. I always wear gloves when handling chilies. Perhaps a real chef with chew me out for this but there's nothing worse than discovering you have pepper juice on your finger and rub your eye. Finally, I just can't say enough great things about this book. It's a jewel for cooks the world over!

My 'book of the month'.......period!

It might even be my book of the year. This is the book for spice lovers and 'chile-heads' who want a truly GLOBAL appreciation of their passion. The recipes I've tried are superb and easy to follow. More importantly, the anecdotes, sidebars, historical notes, and especially the internet listings are indispensible to fully appreciating the beauty of spiced cuisine. I never dreamed I would be making my own HARISA (it's fairly easy) and applying it to homemade Algerian dishes. Thankyou Clifford! BTW this is my first book review hence the handle :)

Great Read and Hot Recipes. Buy It!

`Some Like It Hot' by noted culinary writer, Clifford A. Wright is a real gem. I was surprised to find such a book written by Wright, who is one of the leading scholarly experts on food of the Mediterranean, and, as he so elegantly illustrates himself, the Mediterranean is hot a hotbed of spicy foods. Therefore, Wright's primary focus is on the various world spicy cuisines. He identifies the following centers of spicy food culture: Western South America, primarily Peru and Bolivia. Mexico and Southwestern U.S. Cajun Cuisine Jamaica Western coast of Africa, primarily Senegal, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Ghana, and Nigeria North Africa (the Madgreb) of Algeria and Tunesia Eastern Africa, especially Ethopia Yemen India and Pakistan Thailand Sichuan and Hunan provinces in China Korea These cuisines are discussed in detail in sidebars scattered throughout the recipe chapters. The very odd thing about this list is how widely separate these regions are, especially since the single plant genus, the chile, grows so easily in all sorts of tropical, subtropical, and temperate climates. I am quite happy to see Wright confirm a hunch I had about capsicum genus (composed of five different species from the very mild bell pepper to the thermonuclear Habanero) that it's arrival in Europe and Asia simply blew away all piquant competion by its being so much stronger and so cheap to grow. The most important `academic' study Wright covers is why some groups of people like hot food. He reviews and dismisses fourteen different common and not so common hypotheses, reaching the one that simply says people like the way they taste. What Wright does not do is explain why these particular regions embraced hot food and so many other regions did not. Why, for example, is Spanish cuisine so in love with the sweet bell pepper (capsicum annuum) which came from Mexico (note all those red pimentos, which are pickled sweet peppers) yet they do not embrace the chiles with high heat. It is easy to understand South America, Mexico, and Jamaica, as genus capsicum is native to these lands. It is also easy to understand India and Pakistan and Sichuan and Hunan, as both cuisines have a history of creating spicy dishes based on the pre-chile spices of black pepper, cloves, cinnamon, ginger, galangal, and tamarind. But what about the west coast of Africa, Ethopia, and Yemen? Wright never gets around to answering this question, but we quickly loose interest in the academic questions when the Professor gets down to the recipes. While Wright claims to not be a chile head, he cannot escape the fact that the capsicum chile is by far the strongest source of culinary heat. Therefore, virtually all recipes include one or more varieties of chile in the ingredients. The recipes are all organized by type of dish, with chapters on: Startling Starters Sexy Salads Searing Soups Electrifying Eggs Hot Chicks, Wicked Ducks, and One Killer Rabbit (with apologies to Monty Python) Blazing Beef and In
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