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Hardcover The 150 Best American Recipes: Indispensable Dishes from Legendary Chefs and Undiscovered Cooks Book

ISBN: 0618718656

ISBN13: 9780618718658

The 150 Best American Recipes: Indispensable Dishes from Legendary Chefs and Undiscovered Cooks

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Book Overview

The Best of the Best from the Last Decade Acclaimed by the critics, The Best American Recipes series has long been the universal choice of home cooks and professional chefs as the one infallible... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

Absolutely indispensable.

Everyone always asks, "If you were stranded on a desert island, what musical band would you be willing to listen to forever?" If applied to cookbooks, this master collection culled from a number of other masterful collections would be my hands-down choice, no question about it. Every single recipe I have tried has not only been a success, but receives the most raves. Whenever I come across this out-of-print volume, I snap it up and give it to a friend who loves to cook. You can't go wrong!

Excellent

Every recipe I have made out of this cookbook has been a winner -- and I have made several of them, from the Kona Inn banana muffins to the chicken with lemon, sage, rosemary and thyme. The chocolate layer cake, originally printed in Gourmet, truly is the best chocolate cake of all time. I highly recommend this book.

An attention to ease of use makes THE 150 BEST AMERICAN RECIPES a top pick.

THE BEST AMERICAN RECIPES has received much acclaim over the decades from both home cooks and pros, so public libraries must have THE 150 BEST AMERICAN RECIPES, put together by two food professionals who gather 'foundation' recipes proven to be huge successes. Such dishes have been culled from the pages of cookbooks, magazines, newspapers, and even the Internet: all were tested in the authors' own kitchens, so they're fail-safe. Sidebars of tips, color photos, and an attention to ease of use makes THE 150 BEST AMERICAN RECIPES a top pick. Diane C. Donovan California Bookwatch

Unlike most, really is filled with the best recipes of the year

So many cookbooks claim to be the "Best of the best", and so many of them fall so short. I picked up this book thinking it would be yet another one of the "Best of the best" cookbooks that had unimpressive recipes. I was really surprised when I picked up this book by Fran McCullough and Molly Stevens. The recipes are truly unique, and are very tasty. You may wonder what makes this book stand out from most cookbooks. They have wonderful photography. The photos make the food not only look tasty, but will have you going to your pantry ready to prepare the dish for yourself. Recipes are noted with notes from the kitchen, and their experiences with cooking the dish. I like that they offer suggestions of other variations, other ingredients you can add, and so much more. They also offer tips about cooking techniques, ingredients, and cooking equipment. You take away that the editors of this book really care about cooking. You can see it in the way the recipes are presented. They add so much text to the recipe than just leaving you with the plain recipe. These are the cookbooks that I enjoy the most, as you can take away so much with these tips, insight, and general information. I feel by reading this book has made my overall cooking better.

Best of 'The Best' so far. Recommended.

`The 150 Best American Recipes' edited by Fran McCullough and Molly Stevens, the editors of the annual `The Best American Recipes' series is, like others in this series, introduced by a leading American `celebrity' chef. In this issue, the honor falls to Chicago Mexican cooking guru, Rick Bayless. I've reviewed at least two earlier volumes in this series and gave each four stars, often crediting the author of the introduction, especially the one by Tony Bourdain, with much of the credit for making it to a second best rating. This volume appears to me to be better than any of the earlier editions, and yet it may not be perfect. (I give it five stars anyway to honor the improvement). By chance, I happen to have just reviewed the cookbook Tyler Florence's `Tyler's Ultimate ` recipes, which, like this volume, presumes to present a `best in class'. And, as in Tyler's book, I sense that what this volume does is really the best variations on common recipe archetypes. In the case of so many of these recipes, the basic idea has been around since the year of the flood. The thing which makes this particular treatment stand out is usually a relatively simple addition which is not necessarily beyond the imagination of a reasonably talented amateur chef. One favorite case in point is Tom Valenti's version of squash soup where our favorite New York City comfort food specialist roasts the squash topped with bacon rather than simply boiling it to soften before whizzing up with the wand blender. The editors make the excellent case that this concentrates and intensifies the flavor, as well as adding a smoky overtone from the bacon. The celebration of this technique overlooks the fact that our Tom discards the seeds and webby stuff in the seed cavity, and uses a chicken stock as the basis for the soup. There is an alternate `best' approach to a squash soup taken by Deborah Madison, who uses the scrapings from the seed cavity in a steaming liquid for the flesh, whereby all flavor which may be lost in wet cooking is captured in the steaming liquid, so nothing is lost. The steaming liquid then becomes the purely vegetarian stock on which the soup is based. The breads chapter illustrates this trend perfectly. Among the seven (7) recipes, there are scones, two biscuit recipes, corn bread, muffins, cinnamon buns, and a cranberry pecan bread. Everyone who bakes often has done scones and biscuits and corn bread and muffins and even cinnamon buns, so what's so special here? Since the scones recipe comes from `The Foster's Market Cookbook' that I have reviewed and admire, I can attest to the virtues of this recipe, but it's still not `out of the ordinary'. The only really new notion is in the Variations, which suggests adding some crystallized ginger. The corn bread recipe has a bit more to offer, in that it includes two really novel ideas for creating a sage leaf pattern on the bottom of the bread and spicing the bread up with feta cheese instead of the more conventional

My favorite cookbook series

The Best American Recipes series of cookbooks is my favorite set of cookbooks. I own every volume from 1999 to the 2005-2006 volume. Every fall I prowl book stores waiting for the new version - but this year I saw "The 150 Best American Recipes" instead of the 2006-2007 edition I was expecting. Well, a junkie has to have her fix, so I bought the book, even though it is a collection of what the authors, Fran McCollough and Molly Stevens, think is the best of the best of the books in the series. I mean, I own all of these recipes already. But I've had the book less than a week, and have discovered Santa Rosa Plum Gallete, missed from the 2001-2002 volume. We agree that Amazing Overnight Waffles (2003-2004) is the best waffle recipe ever, but my favorite salad, Shepherd's Salad with Bulgarian Feta (2003-2004), missed the cut. If you don't own any of these books, this is a great one to start with. I only hope there is a new book on the horizon.
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