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Mad Hungry - Cookbook Spotlight

mad hungryPhoto: Amazon.com.

"Mad Hungry: Feeding Men & Boys"
By Lucinda Scala Quinn
Artisan - 2009
Buy it on Amazon

Many cookbooks rely on a theme. Sometimes, it's an over-arching concept, like all of French cuisine. Other times, it's a little more niche, like, say, cupcakes or bacon. But Lucinda Scala Quinn went a totally new direction for her latest cookbook, "Mad Hungry: Feeding Men & Boys." More than just a theme, she introduces us to a way of life, one where feeding a ravenous family -- without picking up the phone for takeout -- can be quick, fun and delicious.

As the Executive Director of Food for Martha Stewart, Quinn knows how to deliver impressive meals. But her recipes here come across completely differently than the fussy pages of "Martha Stewart Living." Steps are stripped down; flavors are dialed up. This approach makes for a revolutionary and yet straightforward approach to not just getting dinner on the table, but truly serving something that meets the demands of big appetites with more than just hefty portions.
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Filed under: Books, Cookbook Spotlight

'Beaumont's Kitchen' - Cookbook Spotlight

Beaumont's KitchenPhoto: Amazon.com

'Beaumont's Kitchen: Lessons on food, life, and photography with Beaumont Newhall'
Photographs by Beaumont Newhall, Henri Cartier-Bresson
Radius Books-2009
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A brilliant mix of art book and cookbook, "Beaumont's Kitchen" seduces you with its restrained beauty. Light years from the world of celebrity chefs and megawatt food gods, this book exposes us to the world of a man who was just as at home in the darkroom as he was the kitchen. Known as one of the father's of photographic history, Newhall took up writing a column called the Epicure's Corner for the Brighton-Pittsford Post in 1956. There, he would unravel the mysteries of the kitchen in his warm and instructional voice.

His articles are clipped and laid out into this book. As a collection, they give a historical sense of how much recipe-writing has changed in the last decades. Totally conversational, the recipes are part of the narrative -- no columns of ingredients and curt orders here. Instead, it's the voice of a friend guiding you through a recipe he might have picked up on a trip abroad or in his mother's kitchen.
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Filed under: Books, Cookbook Spotlight

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'Salt to Taste' - Cookbook Spotlight

Photo: Amazon.com

'Salt to Taste: The Keys to Confident, Delicious Cooking'
By Marco Canora with Catherine Young
Photographs by John Kernick
Rodale -- 2009
Buy it on Amazon

If you've never had the experience of eating a meal at Marco Canora's restaurant Hearth in New York's East Village, this book brings that soulful experience to you. If you have eaten there, you'll certainly want to pick up this book to recreate that experience at home. With "Salt to Taste," Canora gives you the skills to fill your kitchen with some of the Tuscan magic he plates at the restaurant.

Canora uses his wisdom at chef to explain what works in restaurant kitchen and what will work in your kitchen at home. He lays out the steps to making pasta at home and gives you three separate recipes for the dough -- each with its own specific use. Although that may sound complicated, it's not at all -- it's actually quite smart. And the chef also shares a variety of red sauces to show the complexity of Italian cuisine.

Filled with straightforward dishes that are the building blocks of wonderful Italian feasts, this cookbook is equal parts cooking inspiration and teacher. As the subtitle implies, there's definitely a level of confident cooking anyone can learn from this book.

See what we tested and whether it's worth buying after the jump.
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Filed under: Cookbook Spotlight, Books, Chefs, Reviews

'Real Cajun' - Cookbook Spotlight

real cajun cookbookPhoto: Clarkson Potter, a division of Random House, Inc.

'Real Cajun: Rustic Home Cooking from Donald Link's Louisiana.'
By Donald Link with Paula Disabrowe
Photographs by Chris Granger
Clarkson Potter 2009
Buy it on Amazon

Although Donald Link's restaurants, Cochon and Herbsaint, are located in New Orleans, these recipes are not the food of that city. Far from the touristy restaurants, his food comes from a place off the highways and byways that run along Louisiana's bayous. The book lives up to its title-serving Cajun food at its simple and rustic best. This collection is filled with family recipes that have been honed and perfected with the skill of chef but without losing site of how people cook at home.

In creating this book Link said he set out to "preserve a way of life and give people an idea of how it really is." He's repairing the misconceptions of Cajun food that came with the blackened craze that swept the country in the '80s, and his recipes demonstrate and explain the wide variations between Cajun and Creole.

Along with the recipes, he shares insight into Cajun traditions and the country cooking that can usually be made in just one pot and never requires any fancy kitchen gadgets. There are plenty of recipes that make wonderful week-night meals, such as the Post-K Meatloaf that separates the flavor base of brown sugar and a generous portion of bacon from the actual meatloaf. But the real magic happens in those recipes that call for hours at the stove-perfect for this time of year when the warmth of a simmering pot keeps away the chill.
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Filed under: Chefs & Restaurants, Books, Restaurants, Reviews, Cookbook Spotlight

Bocuse d'Or Fever Hits American Culinary World

Bocuse d'Or

Have you heard of the Bocuse d'Or? A year or two ago, the answer would probably have been a firm no. But over the last couple of years, it's been popping up in the news and around the dinner tables of foodies more and more frequently.

Maybe you caught the "Top Chef" episode, where contestants competed in a Bocuse d'Or-inspired challenge. Or perhaps you've read about Andrew Friedman's just-released book "Knives at Dawn," which tells the tale of the most recent American team -- from the rigorous training to the big competition, which involves preparing two ridiculously complex dishes served on enormous mirrored platters.

The contest, often described as the Olympics of the culinary world, began in 1987 in Lyon, France, under the leadership of Chef Paul Bocuse, who Tim Ryan of the Culinary Institute of America described as "Elvis Presley and the Beatles rolled into one" at Monday's semifinals announcement. Despite America's recent thirst for cook-offs and throw-downs, the high-end culinary competition has been slow to gain recognition in the United States. But last year, heavy-hitters Daniel Boulud, also from Lyon, and Thomas Keller got behind the American effort to change all that.
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Filed under: Food News, Chefs & Restaurants, Events

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