
150 Best Recipes: The Best American Recipes 1999 : The Year's Top Picks from Books, Magazine, Newspapers and the Internet (Hardcover)
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Publishers Weekly,In order to create this mixed bag of the year's 100 best recipes from books, magazines, newspapers and the Internet, McCullough (Great Food Without Fuss) and Hamlin (New York Times contributor) tested more than 500. The dishes include such intriguing concoctions as Niloufer Ichaporia King's Parsi Deviled Eggs with jalape�o and lime juice, selected from the San Francisco Examiner. Notes in the margin accompany each recipe, listing serving suggestions, beverage recommendations and cross-referenced companion recipes. In an entertaining introduction, McCullough and Hamlin break down their choices (some recipes were chosen because they add a twist to a classic, while others introduce a new ingredient) and offer a clever rundown of the year's top-10 developments in food ("Comeback of the Year: Cheese"). The best recipes reflect one of these categories or trends (Perfect Brownies are an example of a perfected classic, and Dried Fruit and Pomegranate Seed Upside-Down Cake stars pomegranates, nominated "fruit of the year"). Readers may question some of the selections, however. Do home cooks really need two recipes for dog food (including French Country Soup for Dogs)? Meanwhile, old standbys (Frozen Margaritas from KitchenAid and Linguine con Vongole, Fort Hill Style) nicely round out the selection. $100,000 ad/promo; 9-city author tour; BOMC/ Good Cook selection. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved,Publishers Weekly,Publishers Weekly,In order to create this mixed bag of the year's 100 best recipes from books, magazines, newspapers and the Internet, McCullough (Great Food Without Fuss) and Hamlin (New York Times contributor) tested more than 500. The dishes include such intriguing concoctions as Niloufer Ichaporia King's Parsi Deviled Eggs with jalape�o and lime juice, selected from the San Francisco Examiner. Notes in the margin accompany each recipe, listing serving suggestions, beverage recommendations and cross-referenced companion recipes. In an entertaining introduction, McCullough and Hamlin break down their choices (some recipes were chosen because they add a twist to a classic, while others introduce a new ingredient) and offer a clever rundown of the year's top-10 developments in food ("Comeback of the Year: Cheese"). The best recipes reflect one of these categories or trends (Perfect Brownies are an example of a perfected classic, and Dried Fruit and Pomegranate Seed Upside-Down Cake stars pomegranates, nominated "fruit of the year"). Readers may question some of the selections, however. Do home cooks really need two recipes for dog food (including French Country Soup for Dogs)? Meanwhile, old standbys (Frozen Margaritas from KitchenAid and Linguine con Vongole, Fort Hill Style) nicely round out the selection. $100,000 ad/promo; 9-city author tour; BOMC/ Good Cook selection. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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- Book formatHardcover
- Fiction/nonfictionNon-Fiction
- Pages209
- Reading levelGeneral Adult
- Series title150 Best Recipes
- Edition1999
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Two culinary leaders turn the food world upside down to find the year's best recipes--a first-ever collection of 100 recipes culled from books, magazines, newspapers, and other sources. 8 color photos. For this ground-breaking collection, two leading food authorities scoured every conceivable printed source for the year's great recipes: cookbooks, magazines of every kind, national and regional newspapers, press releases, newsletters, the Internet -- even the backs of boxes. From literally thousands of possibilities, they narrowed the field to 500 for testing, before choosing 111 of the very best. Many of their discoveries are brilliantly simple, like the delightfully retro meatball appetizer that's making the rounds of Manhattan cocktail parties and the supremely easy Moroccan-inspired weeknight chicken supper that won its creator a million dollars in a cooking contest. The roast chicken recipe that's currently considered by food insiders to be one of the two best in the world is revealed here, as is the recipe for luscious black-bean burgers, a favorite of the food editor of a major women's magazine. And gone public at last is a well-known novelist's provocative spin on linguine with clam sauce, which food lovers have been excitedly e-mailing all over the country, as is the latest update from one of the nation's most talented pastry chefs, a new twist on her definitive hot fudge sauce. You'll find memorable dishes for holidays and other special occasions: a cider-cured turkey, an exceptional wild rice soup from Minnesota that solves the problem of what to do with the leftover bird, a trick to make a cheap supermarket ham taste exceptionally elegant, and the formula for a basic cookie dough that can be easily varied to produce fifty different kinds of cookies. You'll find breakfasts and brunches, starters and drinks (both alcoholic and non-) and salads and side dishes. There's even a recipe for banana biscotti for dogs. Throughout, the editors have added cooking notes, tips, and serving suggestions based on the results of their extensive testing. Whether the source is a virtuoso chef or an obscure home cook, a famous movie star or a fireman in a small town, each dish is perfectly calibrated to produce a single reaction among all those who taste it: "I must have that recipe!"
Publishers Weekly,In order to create this mixed bag of the year's 100 best recipes from books, magazines, newspapers and the Internet, McCullough (Great Food Without Fuss) and Hamlin (New York Times contributor) tested more than 500. The dishes include such intriguing concoctions as Niloufer Ichaporia King's Parsi Deviled Eggs with jalape�o and lime juice, selected from the San Francisco Examiner. Notes in the margin accompany each recipe, listing serving suggestions, beverage recommendations and cross-referenced companion recipes. In an entertaining introduction, McCullough and Hamlin break down their choices (some recipes were chosen because they add a twist to a classic, while others introduce a new ingredient) and offer a clever rundown of the year's top-10 developments in food ("Comeback of the Year: Cheese"). The best recipes reflect one of these categories or trends (Perfect Brownies are an example of a perfected classic, and Dried Fruit and Pomegranate Seed Upside-Down Cake stars pomegranates, nominated "fruit of the year"). Readers may question some of the selections, however. Do home cooks really need two recipes for dog food (including French Country Soup for Dogs)? Meanwhile, old standbys (Frozen Margaritas from KitchenAid and Linguine con Vongole, Fort Hill Style) nicely round out the selection. $100,000 ad/promo; 9-city author tour; BOMC/ Good Cook selection. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved,Publishers Weekly,Publishers Weekly,In order to create this mixed bag of the year's 100 best recipes from books, magazines, newspapers and the Internet, McCullough (Great Food Without Fuss) and Hamlin (New York Times contributor) tested more than 500. The dishes include such intriguing concoctions as Niloufer Ichaporia King's Parsi Deviled Eggs with jalape�o and lime juice, selected from the San Francisco Examiner. Notes in the margin accompany each recipe, listing serving suggestions, beverage recommendations and cross-referenced companion recipes. In an entertaining introduction, McCullough and Hamlin break down their choices (some recipes were chosen because they add a twist to a classic, while others introduce a new ingredient) and offer a clever rundown of the year's top-10 developments in food ("Comeback of the Year: Cheese"). The best recipes reflect one of these categories or trends (Perfect Brownies are an example of a perfected classic, and Dried Fruit and Pomegranate Seed Upside-Down Cake stars pomegranates, nominated "fruit of the year"). Readers may question some of the selections, however. Do home cooks really need two recipes for dog food (including French Country Soup for Dogs)? Meanwhile, old standbys (Frozen Margaritas from KitchenAid and Linguine con Vongole, Fort Hill Style) nicely round out the selection. $100,000 ad/promo; 9-city author tour; BOMC/ Good Cook selection. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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Specifications
Book format
Hardcover
Fiction/nonfiction
Non-Fiction
Genre
Cooking/Regional & Ethnic - American - General
Pages
209
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