How to cook everything 2,000 simple recipes for great food

Mark Bittman

Book - 2008

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

641.5/Bittman
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 641.5/Bittman Checked In
Subjects
Published
Hoboken, N.J. : Wiley c2008.
Language
English
Main Author
Mark Bittman (-)
Edition
Completely rev. 10th anniversary ed
Physical Description
xii, 1044 p. : ill. ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes index.
ISBN
9780764578656
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Kitchen Basics
  • Sauces, Condiments, Herbs, and Spices
  • Appetizers
  • Soups
  • Sandwiches and Pizza
  • Salads
  • Vegetables and Fruit
  • Beans
  • Grains
  • Pasta, Noodles, and Dumplings
  • Fish and Shellfish
  • Poultry
  • Meat
  • Eggs, Breakfast, and Dairy
  • Bread
  • Desserts
  • Menus
  • The 102 Essential Recipes in This Book
  • My Top 100 Fast Recipes
  • My Top 100 Make-Ahead Recipes
  • My Top 100 Vegetarian Recipes
  • Sources
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Bittman's first edition of How to Cook Everything (1998) has become the go-to cooking bible for millions of home cooks. It won James Beard and IACP awards and sold two million copies. This new edition includes a greatly revised and expanded selection of recipes, and it also represents a fundamental shift in approach. In his inspiring introduction, Bittman writes, In the original edition I made some attempts to address the needs of those who like to replicate restaurant food as a hobby; here I'm leaving most of that behind. Home cooking is best when it's simple, straightforward, unpretentious, and easy. In addition to this return to basics, the recipes reflect Americans' growing familiarity with, and preference for, global cuisine, and Bittman offers multiple variations of building-block standards that represent world flavors, from Asia to South America. As in Sally Schneider's A New Way to Cook (2001), this employs charts, lists, and other helpful reference tools throughout the book to inspire cooks to improvise, experiment, and create their own recipes from a few simple ingredients. Further improvements include a highlighted list of Essential Recipes, which will form the core of a home cook's repertoire. If possible, this timely, outstanding title is even more essential than its predecessor. Precise, encouraging, thoughtful, and exhaustive in its range of clearly articulated dishes and techniques, this is the one resource no home cook should be without.--Engberg, Gillian Copyright 2008 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Ten years have brought many changes to the U.S. culinary landscape, and Bittman's new edition of his contemporary classic reflects that, with hundreds of recipes added, out-of-date ones banished and few lines from the holdovers left untouched. The opening chapter offers invaluable new tips on basic kitchen equipment and techniques, and in the wake of the recent vegetarian version of the book, produce and legumes are now featured earlier and with more inspired meatless recipes. Overall, Bittman's globe-trotting palate shows even better than it did in the already quite international first edition, with intriguing recipes from every corner of the world. Considering these expansions, the most important change has been to the book's user-friendliness: a proliferation of charts, lists and boxes makes much more information immediately available--hardly a page goes by without an eye-catching sidebar about technique, a handy table organizing the basics of an ingredient or dish or the myriad suggestions of variations and new ways to think about a recipe that make it the best-value all-in-one volume available. At-a-glance coding to indicate what is fast to make, what can be made ahead and what is vegetarian, plus highlighted recipes that Bittman considers essential, help ensure that even with more of everything to cook, this massive tome is navigable. Whether the first edition is on their shelves or not, home cooks of all skill levels will want to get this one. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Bittman's How To Cook Everything, originally published in 1998, became an almost instant classic and has sold close to two million copies. This new edition has been reorganized and includes 500 new recipes and many more step-by-step illustrations. Each chapter now opens with "essential recipes" that should be in every cook's repertoire, and there are dozens of new charts and lists throughout. Vegetarian recipes are marked with a special icon, and quick recipes--Bittman also writes "The Minimalist" column for the New York Times--and those that can be made ahead are similarly denoted; prep times are also given for all recipes. Since he wrote the first edition, Bittman has published The Best Recipes in the World and How To Cook Everything Vegetarian; in this tenth anniversary edition, there are more recipes from cuisines around the world and more vegetarian recipes than in the original. Valuable as both a reference and a cookbook, this is an essential purchase. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.