Sheet pan suppers meatless 100 surprising vegeterian meals straight from the oven

Raquel Pelzel

Book - 2017

"Sheet Pan Suppers is back! This time, with 100 vegetarian recipes for satisfying, sumptuous full meals--all made on a sheet pan, and all meat-free. It's the one-pot meal reinvented with a healthy twist, and what is sure to become every busy cook's new favorite way of getting dinner on the table. There are recipes for complete meals, snacks, brunch, and even dessert, that require nothing more than a sheet pan, your oven, and Raquel Pelzel's inspired take on satisfying, delectable, vegetarian cooking. Recipes include Orzo with Pan-Roasted Tomatoes, Lemon, and Mozzarella; Loaded Chilaquiles with Baked Eggs; Super Creamy No-Boil Mac and Cheese; and more"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

641.5636/Pelzel
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 641.5636/Pelzel Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Published
New York : Workman Publishing 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Raquel Pelzel (author)
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xiv, 249 pages : color illustrations ; 23 cm
ISBN
9780761189930
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Bits, Bites, and Snacks
  • BBT Bites
  • Chili Nachos
  • Any-Way-You-Like Veggie Turnovers
  • Cheesy Stuffed Potato Skins
  • Roasted Pepper, Olive, and Feta Burekas
  • Charred Tomatillo Salsa
  • Babaghanouj
  • Caramelized Onion Dip
  • Oven-Roasted Okra Chips with Dill Pickle Dip
  • Sesame-Miso Kale Chips
  • Super Seedy Power Bars
  • Chapter 2. Soups and Salads
  • Roasted Tomato Gazpacho with Toasty Croutons
  • Cucumber Soup with Roasted Beets and Potatoes
  • Chilled Avocado and Roasted Garlic Soup
  • Marlon's Chickpea and Winter Squash Stew with Crispy Tofu
  • Barbecued Tempeh and Roasted Potato Salad
  • Spiced Carrot Salad with Creamy Basil Dressing
  • Spinach, Roasted Root "Petals," Pistachios, and Honey Vinaigrette
  • Sweet Potato, Blue Cheese, and Pecan Salad
  • Moroccan Couscous Salad with Olives, Chickpeas, and Roasted Tomatoes
  • Roasted Plum Salad with Fresh Grapefruit and Cardamom Syrup
  • A Good Cheese Salad with Roasted Pears and Candied Walnuts
  • Chapter 3. Veggies with a Side of Vegetables
  • Blissed-Out Crispy Cheesy Broccoli Gratin
  • Hoisin Eggplant, Spicy Brussels Sprouts, and Tofu
  • Carrots with Garam Masala, Cauliflower "Couscous," and Peanut Vinaigrette
  • Indian Creamed Spinach over Potatoes with Tofu
  • "Braised" Cabbage with Sherry Vinaigrette
  • Spicy Thai Green Curry Potpie
  • Spice-Roasted Cauliflower and Cashew-Miso Banh Mi
  • Three-Cheese Crispy Mushroom-Parm Sandwich
  • Roasted Potato and Poblano Tacos
  • Tortilla Rojo Bake
  • Tofu Puttanesca with Garlic Bread
  • Summer Tomato Slab Pie with Flaky Sage Crust
  • Zucchini Ribbons Aglio e Olio
  • Chapter 4. Grain Bowls and Beyond
  • My Go-To Rice and Beans with Pico de Gallo
  • Quinoa and Sweet Potato Bowl with Tahini-Miso Dressing and Sunflower Seeds
  • Quinoa and Tofu Bowl with Arugula and Creamy Cilantro Dressing
  • Forbidden Rice Bowl with Beets and Goat Cheese-Dill Vinaigrette
  • Brown Rice Bowl with Maple-Roasted Parsnips, Fennel, Dates, and Spicy Pumpkin Seeds
  • I Can't Believe It's Mushroom Risottol
  • Bulgur Bowl with Napa Cabbage, Melted Red Onions, and Almonds
  • Herby Singed-Tomato Tabouli
  • Creamy Carrot Polenta with Winter Squash Ragu
  • Green Rice with Charred Broccoli
  • Chapter 5. Beans and Legumes
  • Lentil- and Spinach-Stuffed Squash Halves
  • Sheet Pan Chili
  • Black Bean and Quinoa Veggie Burgers
  • White Bean Ratatouille over Roasted Eggplant
  • Eggplant and White Bean Meatballs
  • Meatball, Pepper, and Onion Grinders
  • Crispy Roasted Shallot and Lentil Mujadara
  • Indian Lentils (Daal)
  • Barbecue Baked Beans with Mushroom "Lardons"
  • Hoisin Glazed Beet Loaf
  • Chapter 6. Pasta, Bread, and Pizza
  • Large Pearl Couscous with Fresh Corn, Zucchini, and Basil
  • No-Boil Mac and Cheese
  • Orzo with Pan-Roasted Tomatoes, Lemon, and Mozzarella
  • Bok Choy and Portobellos over Rice Vermicelli
  • Tuscan Kale and White Bean Ribollita
  • Roasted Vegetable Lasagna
  • Fresh Corn Cornbread
  • Smoky Eggplant and Provolone Pizza
  • Broccoli Vodka Pizza
  • Shaved Zucchini and Minty Pesto Pizza
  • Bean, Cheese, and Pickled Jalapeño Burritza
  • Cheesy Pizza Twists with Roasted Pepper Marmara
  • Potato, Rosemary, and Roasted Garlic Focaccia
  • Chapter 7. Breakfasts and Brunches
  • A Perfect Avocado Toast
  • Gingered Apple and Almond Butter Toast
  • Roasted Strawberry Danish
  • Roasted Fruit, Pumpkin Seed, and Yogurt Bowls
  • Loaded Chilaquiles with Baked Eggs
  • Eggs in Guajillo Chile Sauce
  • Slab Frittata with Leeks, Mushrooms, and Ricotta Cheese
  • Slab Quiche with Spinach, Goat Cheese, and Caramelized Onions
  • Breakfast Rice Bowl with Raisins and Almonds
  • Baked Oatmeal with Dates, Bananas, and Tahini Syrup
  • Zucchini Breakfast Cake with Pecan-Coconut Streusel
  • Granola Banana Bread
  • Pumpkin Seed-Apple Granola
  • Thai Peanut Granola
  • Chocolate Brownie Scones
  • Vegan (Say What?) Biscuits
  • Vegan Poutine
  • Chapter 8. Desserts
  • Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake with Quickest Chocolate Buttercream Frosting
  • Honey-Glazed Spice Cake
  • Plum Cake with Walnut Streusel
  • Rustic Pear Galette
  • Cinnamon-Sugar Palmiers
  • Citrus-Almond Shortbars
  • Kitchen Sink Cookies
  • Chocolate-Chocolate Sparklers
  • Cherry Bomb Bars
  • Dulce de Leche Pumpkin Pie Squares
  • Chocolate Cream Pie Squares
  • No-Bake Choco-Fudge Bars
  • Roasted Fall Fruit over Mascarpone Cream
  • Vegan Sticky Toffee Pudding
  • Conversion Tables
  • Index
  • About The Author
Review by New York Times Review

WHERE ELSE TO START, but with the San Francisco chef Chris Cosentino and his co-author, Michael Harlan, whose inclusion of cow udders sets them apart, as does their book's title: OFFAL GOOD: Cooking From the Heart, With Guts (Clarkson Potter, $40). Maybe it appeals to me because 1 have more than a passing familiarity with the cow udder - even if not as an ingredient. My ignorance of its culinary potential, and yours, can be forgiven. As Cosentino notes, outside Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil, udders have never been given their due, on menus or in cookbooks. But Cosentino's enticing description ("fatty like bacon and loaded with protein") makes me wonder why the udder remains a ghost in the nose-to-tail wars. (Sure, anyone who has eaten a hot dog has eaten processed udder, but 1 wanted one in its pristine state.) Determined as 1 was to taste his Milk-Braised Cow's Udder and Spicy Broccoli Rabe, maybe it's just as well that 1 failed. The prospect of cleaning a lactating udder by "pressing firmly until it's empty" while taking care to "do this in a pan so the milk doesn't squirt everywhere" would be a macabre repetition of the twice-daily milking of cows that was one of my chores as a kid. Why does it not surprise me that prepping testicles is a cinch in comparison? Simply blanch (twice) to remove the double-membrane and poach until "just firm," at which point they can be "sliced, seared, breaded, and/or fried." My effort to locate cockscombs also met with failure. 1 want to experience the gummy-bear-like appearance and texture in Cosentino's Candied Cockscombs, Rice Pudding and Pomegranate. N ext time 1 have a real dinner party, 1 'm determined to source well in advance. I'm thinking of a menu that starts with his Lamb Brain on Toast with Creamed Nettles and Morels followed by a main course of Duck Brodo, Unformed Eggs, Duck Fries and Masutake, a dish he calls "sex soup: man, woman and child, all in one dish." For dessert, I'll be sure to locate those cockscombs. Cosentino's writing and recipes are playful, irreverent and inspired. 1 want to cook them all - and 1 don't even worship offal, especially the subtleties of fries versus stones. But the disparity did get me wondering: Could the inequality of male and female organs in culinary history offer a clue to the gender divide between savory and sweet food? To stretch the argument a bit, if testicles are the main course then udders are, at best, dessert. Sure, Gaston Lenôtre was one of many legendary French bakers, and two of this year's big baking books are by men, both of whom learned their trade in Europe: Jim Lahey's Sullivan STREET BAKERY COOKBOOK (Norton, $35), written with his wife, Maya Joseph, and Eric Kayser's maison kayser'S FRENCH PASTRY WORKSHOP (Black Dog & Leventhal, $29.99), translated by Zachary R. Townsend. Professional baking of the kind that creates Kayser's Tarte aux Abricots et Creme Amande-Pistache (Apricot-Almond-Pistachio Tart) and Mille-Feuille aux Fruits Rouge (Layered CreamFilled Pastry With Berries) has long been presided over by men in white chef's coats, just as bread, as in the case of Lahey at Sullivan Street Bakery, has long leaned toward the masculine sphere. As this fall's crop of books testify, women, particularly in America, are often relegated to the realm of popular "homemade" sweets. fn THE FEARLESS BAKER: Simple Secrets for Baking Like a Pro (Rux Martin / Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $30), Erin Jeanne McDowell tries to crack a few of the barriers that keep this sort of activity in a feminized category by debunking the idea that baking is rigid and unforgiving - as if female bakers need plenty of rules to succeed, even at such a modest level. As most cooks regularly do, she asks, why not when baking "add a pinch of this, a splash of that," like it's nothing? 1 couldn't agree more. She vows to emancipate home bakers by explaining why to do something, not simply how. To this end, she follows her recipes with explanations of "Why ft Works" and "Pro Tips." As a lover of science in the kitchen â la Harold McGee, 1 only wish McDowell's explanations of recipes were driven by chemistry rather than general logic, as in the advice for her Blueberry Cream Roulade: "If you overwork the batter at any stage, you'll end up with a tough cake that will likely tear when you roll it up." If liberating yourself to bake the way most of us cook savory food isn't your goal, the volume of what I'll call home baking books will not leave you staring listlessly at your "Joy of Cooking" amid the holiday baking flurry. Choose from Jessica Siskin's treat yourself: how to Make 93 Ridiculously Fun No-Bake Rice Crispy Treats (Workman, paper, $14.95); America's Test Kitchen's the perfect cookie: Your Ultimate Guide to Foolproof Cookies, Brownies & Bars (America's Test Kitchen, $35); Stella Parks's BRAVETART: Iconic American Desserts (Norton, $35); Naomi Robinson's BAKER'S ROYALE: 75 Twists on All Your Favorite Sweets (Running Press, $28); Roxanne Wyss and Kathy Moore's delicious poke cakes (St. Martin's Griffin, paper, $19.99) and Jocelyn Brubaker's cheesecake LOVE: Inventive, Irresistible, and Super-Easy Cheesecake Desserts for Every Day (Thomas Dunne / St. Martin's Griffin, $27.99). This is far from an exhaustive list. The book you like best will depend on your skill, ambition and taste. If cheesecake is your obsession, Brubaker's single-minded preoccupation with that rich custard will leap right out at you. 1 gravitated toward "Baker's Royale" for its delicate and very pretty Chocolate Affogato Mousse Cake and for the Banana Upside-Down Cake. Why is Robinson's perfectly caramelized cake not a classic? (And how did the abominable pineapple find its way to the bottom of a cake pan in the first place?) For the more ambitious, you can impress yourself with Raspberry Eclairs with Vanilla Bean Cream - finished with edible gold leaf, no less. The autumn baking book 1 most admire is Parks's "BraveTart." While I'm not sure if 1 like it in spite of or because of the title, the book's layout, photographs and scope pulled me in. 1 stayed and kept reading because Parks has done her homework as earnestly as a grad student, having spent five years in the primary-source trenches, with pages of source notes to prove it. If this sort of scholarly effort puts you off, don't let it. You'll find tasty homemade takes on the Girl Scouts' Thin Mint cookies, as well as Twinkies and Wonder Bread, each accompanied by the product's back story, right next to classics like Magic Key Lime Pie and One-Bowl Devil's Food Layer Cake With Milk Chocolate Frosting. By taking the evolution of American baking's cultural and commercial history seriously, Parks challenges those who might consider it dowdy when compared with serious European pastry. Fair enough. But it takes a book as smart, thorough and creative as "BraveTart" to persuade me to put women's work and the goods they produce in proper perspective - and 1 consider myself an ardent-feminist home baker. 1 promise not to call this kind of baking dowdy again. Having had my dessert before my meal, I'll press beyond the gluttony of butter and sugar. If you're aiming for virtuous good health, you'll certainly find a book to fuel your preoccupation. Choose from Pearl Barrett and Serene Allison's TRIM HEALTHY MAMATRIM HEALTHY TABLE: More Than 300 All-New Healthy and Delicious Recipes From Our Homes to Yours (Harmony, paper, $32.50); Dr. Mehmet Oz'S FOOD CAN FIX IT: The Superfood Switch to Fight Fat, Defy Aging, and Eat Your Way Healthy (Scribner, $29.99); Jennifer Esposito and Eve Adamson's JENNIFER'S WAY KITCHEN: Easy Allergen-Free, Anti-Incree flammatory Recipes for a Delicious Life (Grand Central, $30); MAYO CLINIC: The Integrative Guide to Good Health (Oxmoor, paper, $26.99), by Brent A. Bauer, M.D., Cindy A. Kermott, M.D., and Martha P. Millman, M.D.; Marie W. Lawrence's the organic lunchbox: 125 Yummy, Quick, and Healthy Recipes for Kids (Skyhorse, $22.99); THE TURMERIC COOKBOOK (Aster, $12.99); Ella Mills's NATURAL FEASTS: 100+ Healthy, Plant-Based Recipes to Share and Enjoy With Friends and Family (Scribner, $24); Amanda Hamilton and Hannah Ebelthite's THE GUT PLAN DIET: The Revolutionary Diet for Gut-Healthy Weight Loss (Aster, paper, $16.99); FOOD, HEALTH AND HAPPINESS: 115 On-Point Recipes for Great Meals and a Better Life (Flatiron, $35), by Oprah Winfrey, with Lisa Kogan ; THE KETO RESET DIET: Reboot Your Metabolism in 21 Days and Burn Fat Forever (Harmony, $27.99), by Mark Sisson, with Brad Kearns - O.K., I'll stop. But not before I mention my favorite, Dr. Michael Greger and Gene Stone's THE HOW NOT TO DIE COOKBOOK (Flatiron, $29.99), with recipes by Robin Robertson. Although, if forced to eat their Mac and Cheese again, I might. It contains no cheese - only broccoli, miso paste, almond butter and a list of unmentionables that have never had any right to attach themselves to the dish we've collectively agreed to call macaroni and cheese. Perhaps I should forgive Dr. Greger. As Vir Sanghvi observed in his 2004 collection "Rude Food," "the food world is nothing if not trendy. Once a cuisine catches on then everybody is doing it: Sichuan one year, Thai the next and Mediterranean after that. It's much the same with ingredients - from foie gras to rocket." And, I would add, it's much the same with health trends and cooking methods. We once had low-fat, then we had low-carb and now we have "clean" food and gut books and oh so many remedies for inflammation. Where once there was the microwave so came the pressure cooker, wok and hot pot. Perhaps you don't have much time to cook, so you've turned to the one-pot method, making it possible to arrive home after a long day to a ready meal. A worthy and necessary goal. But, given all the flavor-gilding browning before the ingredients go in the pot, I prefer the sheet pan. So if you're determined to save time and eat well, have a look at Raquel Pelzel's sheet PAN SUPPERS MEATLESS: 100 Surprising Vegetarian Meals Straight From the Oven (Workman, paper, $16.95). Pelzel offers recipes that call for no advance work other than a bit of chopping and mixing. By extracting flavor through browning rather than stewing, her recipes allow for distinctive flavors while rescuing the one pot's dearest sacrifice to method: texture. Whether chewy, crispy or crunchy, her unassuming recipes appeal. She even manages to make a tasty No-Boil Mac and Cheese on a sheet pan. Her Moroccan Couscous Salad With Olives, Chickpeas and Roasted Tomatoes takes all of half an hour - most of it oven time. It's fresh and lively, thanks to the finishing touch of feta and chopped fresh mint. Her Lentil-and-Spinach-Stuffed Squash Halves, hearty and filling, are brought to the table with ribbons of Parmigiano-Reggiano and a squeeze of lemon juice. I don't buy cookbooks to not-die, nor do I buy them to save myself from really cooking at all - if that's what the one-pot promise is selling. What do I want to find on the glossy pages of a newly acquired collection of recipes? Sometimes it's inspired reinventions of classics with novel twists. For this I'll take Christopher Kimball's MILK STREET: The New Home Cooking (Little, Brown, $40), written with Matthew Card, J. M. Hirsch, Michelle Locke and Jennifer Baldino Cox. Why? For the Skillet-Braised Brussels Sprouts With Garlic, Anchovy and Chili and the Apple, Celery Root and Fennel Salad With Hazel Nuts. When I want full-gloss photo spreads that almost convince me I'm chopping shallots on a rough-hewed farm table while sporting rosy cheeks and barnyardmucked Wellies, I'll take Brent Ridge and Josh Kilmer-Purcell's a seat at the table: Recipes to Nourish Your Family, Friends, and Community (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $30), written with Rose Marie Trapani. I choose it for the lifestyle fantasy, not for the recipes, which are pretty standard farm-to-table fare: Tomato, Olive and Caper Sauce; Bacon-Wrapped Stuffed Dates and Grilled Summer Vegetables. If I want a new book of the aspirational recipes I'll cook when the queen shows up for dinner (otherwise known as intimidating recipes to remind me what a lazy cook I am) I'll hold onto Stuart Brioza and Nicole Krasinski's STATE BIRD PROVISIONS (Ten Speed, $40), written with JJ Goode. Did I adore their daunting Cast-Iron Quail Eggs With Summer Vegetable Condiments and Garlic Chips? Unquestionably. (Almost as much as I adored the lush photograph of the dish with its tiny glistening yolks, dots of vinaigrette, sunny cherry tomatoes still on their vines and scattered precious microgreens, microherbs and edible flowers.) As self-congratulatory as I felt delivering the food to the table, I was certain I didn't need the two separate vinaigrettes, the garlic chips and the fussy little creoja - a sort of micro pickled vegetable condiment. My real reward? A neat trick they do cooking the quail eggs in the cast-iron pan that I'll take for a spin of my own - maybe even with a handful of microgreens. Whatever I do will be derivative, which is how cooking works. As Jonathan Meades writes in his irreverent Cookbook, THE PLAGIARIST IN THE KITCHEN: A Lifetime's Culinary Thefts (Random House U.K., $29.95), "in the kitchen there is nothing new and nor can there be anything new. It's all theft. Anyone who claims to have 'invented' a dish is dishonest, or delusional or foaming." It's not originality we seek. The greatest pleasure of acquiring a new cookbook is simple: surprise. Maybe it's the idea of udder braised in milk that's new to me but surely not original. Maybe it's the discovery of the advertising history of Wonder Bread. Or a reminder of the underappreciated utility of a single sheet pan. I adore Meades's book, but not because I'll be doing much cooking from it. I love it because I want more of his rule-breaking irreverence in my kitchen. We've become painfully earnest about what we eat - at least when we're not being cheekily ironic. In the spirit of keeping it all in good, honest fun, I'll end with Meades's "original" recipe for Fig and Ham Tart. The result of this "wreck of a dish" pleases me more than any recipe I've read in quite some time: "Bake at 200° C for 20 minutes. Leave to cool. Taste. Chuck in bin." ? lefavour is the author of four cookbooks. Her most recent book is a memoir, "Lights On, Rats Out." Cooking With The Times Readers of The Times's Food section will recognize some familiar names on bookstore shelves this season. Which means that it might be a good time to throw out that bulging clip file and find your favorite recipes preserved between the covers of three new books. In DINNER IN AN INSTANT (Clarkson Potter, $22), Melissa Clark delivers just what the cover promises, "75 modern recipes for your pressure cooker, multicooker and instant pot." DAVID TANIS MARKET COOKING (Artisan, $40) showcases the City Kitchen columnist's "recipes and revelations ingredient by ingredient." And what better way to finish up than with Yotam Ottolenghi and Helen Goh's SWEET (Ten Speed, $35), a wide-ranging celebration of baking and desserts?

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [December 3, 2017]
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Pelzel's new cookbook (after Eggplant), about the seemingly simple sheet pan, is decadent and full of surprises. She demonstrates the versatility of sheet pans with recipes that don't appear to be flat-surface friendly, such as a caramelized onion dip made with fresh chives, a chilled avocado and roasted-garlic soup, and even a mushroom risotto that doesn't require nearly as much attention as the stove-top variety. Readers will enjoy the ease of execution when making these recipes for kids, and Pelzel provides tips for incorporating veggies into the meals of young eaters, such as the earthy roasted red peppers she adds to a marinara. She also encourages creativity and adventure in the kitchen by offering flavor combinations and options that can be swapped out for other complementary ingredients. Pelzel tackles pasta and grains with a sheet pan covered in aluminum foil, creating such dishes as an herby singed-tomato tabbouleh and orzo with pan-roasted tomatoes, lemon, and mozzarella. Among the fresh and homey recipes included here are recipes for baba ghanoush, roasted plum salad with fresh grapefruit and cardamom syrup, shaved zucchini and minty-pesto pizza, smoky eggplant and provolone pizza, a three-cheese crispy mushroom-parm sandwich, and vegan biscuits. With recipes perfect for entertaining or even just cooking for one, there is no end to what Pelzel, this cookbook, and a sheet pan can do. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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

Veteran food writer Pelzel (Toast: The Cookbook) takes the reins from Molly Gilbert (One Pan & Done) for this second, meat-free installment of Workman's best-selling "Sheet Pan Suppers" series. Featuring more than 100 new recipes (e.g., chili nachos, summer tomato slab pie with flaky sage crust, dulce de leche pumpkin pie squares), this book offers exciting choices for vegetarian, flexitarian, vegan, and gluten-free eaters. Most cooking happens in the oven, but some recipes require a turn on the stove or in a food processor. Helpful sidebars present tips such as how to pick the perfect cheese, keep grains from sticking, and prepare fruit for freezing. VERDICT Pelzel's take on sheet pan suppers will appeal to fans of this efficient approach. Be advised, however, that it involves slightly more active cooking and cleanup than similar titles. © Copyright 2017. 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.