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Hardcover The Minimalist Cooks at Home: Recipes That Give You More Flavor from Fewer Ingredients in Less Time Book

ISBN: 0767903617

ISBN13: 9780767903615

The Minimalist Cooks at Home: Recipes That Give You More Flavor from Fewer Ingredients in Less Time

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

People are hungry for ways to simplify their cooking--without sacrificing quality or taste. Now you can satisfy that hunger with The Minimalist Cooks at Home. Mark Bittman, author of the New York... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

If you just want to cook a few dishes well, buy this book!

`The Minimalist Cooks at Home' is from New York Times culinary columnist, Mark Bittman, who is filling a classic Times role created by the noted French chef, Pierre Franey, who elevated the fast cooking genre over thirty years ago in columns in the very same New York Times and in books compiled from these columns. Since I still see Franey's '60 Minute Gourmet' volumes on the shelves of bookstores, I guess I must keep them on mine at least until I review these two volumes of columns. While Franey is probably a far better cook than his successor, Bittman may be a much better writer or at least better at homing in on things which are important to people wishing to make good food fast. I have reviewed his `How to Cook Everything' and his `Fish' cookbook and have found both of them excellent material for a modest shelf of cookbooks. In this book and others Bittman has done from his Times column, Bittman is playing the thinking man's Rachael Ray. I say that with no disrespect toward Ms. Rachael, as I have favorably reviewed all her books. Rachael's recipe write-ups are great for people with fair kitchen skills who want very good step by step directions on how to get from groceries to dinner as quickly as possible. Bittman, on the other hand, takes a much broader viewpoint. His `minimalist' notion is not simply a matter of doing things quickly. In his words, `...these recipes require a minimum of technique and/or a minimum number of ingredients; most of them are fast as well. The approach is strictly less-is-more', an attempt to repoduce recipes that are so sophisticated, savvy, and fresh that they will inspire even experienced cooks while making them basic and simple enough to tempt novices'. Like Jacques Pepin in both his classic `The Short Cut Cook' and his recent `Fast Food My Way', Bittman begins by selecting recipes which are simple to begin with rather than, like Franey and Ray, modifying recipes to shorten normally long cooking approaches. In Franey's case, a recipe in his book such as his chili has sometimes disappointed me. I believe Frenchman Franey never sensed the essence of chili and produced something which simply does not work very well as `chili', which, I suspect, simply does not make it without a long braise. Franey's collections of columns even go so far as to give us the French names of his dishes. A quick browse of Tony Bourdain's `Les Halle' Cookbook' will demonstrate that lots of classic French recipes are actually pretty easy to make, but a focus on French cuisine is a bit limiting in today's American thinking about food. Bittman improves on Franey by making each recipe a little essay on how to succeed with a very useful and interesting family of dishes. The recipe is simply an exemplar which can serve as a jumping off point for a modest to wide range of variations. Surprisingly, Bittman also improves on Frenchman Franey by providing suggestions for wine pairings. He also covers `Keys to Success', points on ingredients or tec

Bittman's The Bomb! This Book Rocks!

A direct quote from my 9 year old daughter which was repeated with each new dish I prepared from this wonderful book. When I first received the book, I was disappointed in it's size (small/thin) and the enormous amount of words and lack of beautiful colored photos. (The included photos show method and are in black and white, part of the minimalist theme). It just didn't "look" like a cookbook. My opinion quickly changed as I picked up the book and started reading. I was amazed at how simple (easy & fast) all of the dishes were. I bookmarked those I was interested in and soon my book was fat with markers of dishes I wanted to try!That's the best thing about this book, Bittman has simplified each recipe to the point where you want to try it. The short ingredient list and simple cooking methods make each recipe do-able and not daunting.I've tried 8 dishes so far and every one was a hit with my family... Emma's Cod and Potatoes, Paella Fast and Easy and Chicken with Reisling are our favorites so far. Bittman's introduction provides guidance, suggestions, hints and the "whys" of the dish, invaluable information. The suggested variations at the end of each dish make each recipe even more valuable and teach "rigid" cooks that subsitution with good results is indeed possible and in fact encouraged. Bittman gives you the freedom & knowledge to substitue ingredients properly. The works if you'd like a variation or if you just don't have or don't like some ingredients. The recipe for Paella for example calls for chicken broth, but you can substitue shrimp shell stock (he tells you how to make it) or even plain water. The Paella calls for shrimp, but you can substitute most any meat... chicken, beef, pork. A fully stocked pantry/refrigerator is definitely NOT required for this book.I have SHELVES of cookbooks, but this is the one that stays on my counter. I love the simplicity, I love the taste and I love his creative ideas for dishes. The only people I would not recommend this book for are the cooks who believe that more time, ingredients and/or fancy techniques are required to create a good meal.A wonderful addition to any "busy" cooks library. This is a cookbook that you can use to cook with on a daily basis, not just weekends and most amazing of all, you'll still have energy after cooking to enjoy the meal!You go Bittman!

Maximal praise for the Minimalist

I've been a Bittman fan since I first read "Fish." Wednesdays are a special treat because of his Minimalist column in the New York Times. Luckily for those of us who clip the recipes religiously but then misplace them, now the best of the best are in one place--his new book based on his column. Bittman's recipes are easy to understand, easy to follow, are always accompanied by interesting variations, and are typically so simple that anyone can make them. His How to Cook Everything should be on every cook's shelf, far above the stodgy favorites of yesteryear. Bittman's the Best!

Strange and Indispensable

What a strange and wonderful book this is. I started here, and not with Bittman's other book, because I didn't want to be overwhelmed. The recipes are at once more exotic and (even) more simple than I thought they'd be. One can probably learn more about cooking from this slim little book than he would by reading The Joy of Cooking cover to cover. All the same, you won't find here recipes for meat loaf or macaroni and cheese. The book is too urbane and international in its approach for that. A dish has to be both simple and, somehow, elegant. Grown-up. Bittman sees fit to include recipes for things like duck and lemongrass ginger soup with mushrooms in this short primer-not things that, at face value, I'd expect myself to need or even want on a quotidian basis. But there's the rub. The reader quickly learns that, in Bittman's cosmos, virtually any ingredient is interchangeable with any other ingredient. Even a main ingredient-chicken or fish-can be and should be readily and unhesitatingly substituted for what's available in the refrigerator- right now. At the end of every recipe comes a coda called "With Minimal Effort," and it is here that the recipes transcend themselves to inspire and instruct. Here are the substitutions, additions, embellishments, variations and manipulations of the core recipes that transform this from being just a little book to being a little book that can change the way you cook.We shouldn't be running out to buy things. The mantra is making due with only a few high quality items that are already on hand. This is infinitely refreshing vis-a-vis a world of Martha Stewarts - cooks whose recipes seem to me rigidly conceived and which fetishize individual ingredients. Here, it's all about making intelligent substitutions based on a firm grasp of technique and knowing "where the flavor comes from." When I said the book was "strange," what I found so was the juxtaposition of certain recipes that - along with those for duck and lemongrass ginger soup - are so simple as to seem both obvious and antithetical to the book's overall sophistication. Not so. Once you get the hang of it, you learn that simple IS sophisticated. Often, more so than something with 25 different ingredients. Preparing a meal of linguine with olive oil and garlic can be nothing less than learning to cook all over again. I seem to recall making that, years ago, and yet this most pristine dish had fallen out of my repertoire. I had been brainwashed into believing that "more is more." Having reintroduced the dish, I want to make some substitutions with the very same dish tomorrow night: adding an herb here, a vegetable there. But not too many. I won't be making any special trips to the market. Bittman wouldn't want me to. Besides, too many ingredients might muck up the individual flavors, which is want I want to come through.One could probably make a case for the idea that to master all of the recipes in this book would lead o
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