The Honeysuckle cookbook 100 healthy, feel-good recipes to live deliciously

Dzung Lewis

Book - 2020

"The Honeysuckle Cookbook is stuffed with new ideas for easy, approachable Asian-influenced cooking at home. With 90 recipes, from the breakfast favorites that consistently rate the highest in views on the author's YouTube channel (like her Overnight Oats, 6 Ways) to original twists on one-pan and pressure-cooker meals, this book is for seriously busy young professionals who want crave-worthy Asian meals made simple. Her food takes the familiar and turns it ever-so-slightly on its head : marinara sauce gets extra umami with the addition of fish sauce, while mac and cheese becomes much more than an out-of-the-box staple when made fresh with kimchi. Dzung also teaches readers how to stretch groceries so they spend a little less mone...y, how to plan meals seasonally, and shows new cooks how to match main courses with sides, so plates look impressive and taste great. With time-saving snack ideas, recipe hacks, foolproof instructions, and genius tips for pretty presentation, The Honeysuckle Cookbook will be the friendly hand busy young cooks need to hold in the kitchen"--

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Recipes
Published
New York : Rodale Books, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Dzung Lewis (author)
Other Authors
Jess Thomson (author), Eva Kolenko (photographer)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
239 pages : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9780593135600
  • Introduction
  • In Dzung's kitchen
  • Morning rituals: must include coffee and tea!
  • Breakfast: the MVP of meals
  • Salads and soups: a seasonal take
  • New favorites: noodles and grains
  • Give me an hour: weeknight mains
  • Multipot magic: low and slow or pressure-cooking
  • Sidekicks: we all need them
  • #mixmixmix: your favorite desserts.
Review by Booklist Review

Honeysuckle, Lewis' popular YouTube channel and blog, has come to life in this collection of recipes that reflect her Vietnamese roots and her California vibe. Recipes and photos are bright and vibrant, providing the eye candy that will send readers right to their kitchens. Clever uses of ingredients and imaginative pairings in recipes such as kimchi mac and cheese and quinoa pilaf with curry-miso dressing deliver a delicious meld of flavors. Richly written recipe introductions and sidebars ("Take it from me" and "Tips for busy lives") share the unique voice Lewis' fans love, and provide relevant hints and tricks for even the most avid home cook. She covers all the recipe bases, with robust entries for breakfast and coffee, multi-pot dishes, and weeknight mains, among others. The inclusion of menu ideas alongside these delicious, well-conceived recipes makes this book even more functional. Honeysuckle is both a pleasure to read and an inspiration for kitchen exploration. Readers who aren't Lewis' followers yet, will be once they pick up this book.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

YouTube culinary and lifestyle star Lewis draws on her philosophy of healthy and streamlined gourmet cooking in her debut cookbook. A California native, Lewis grew up learning classic Vietnamese techniques and dishes from her immigrant parents, and she presents many of these beloved family recipes here. The author is also a fan of fusion cooking, and many of her recipes draw on the culinary traditions of Hawaii, Mexico, India, Japan, and Korea to offer fresh takes on classic American food (think Kimchi Mac & Cheese, Udon Carbonara, and Lychee Rose Cheesecakes). Also present are some of the most popular recipes from her Honeysuckle YouTube channel, such as quicker beef pho and cold buster tea. Recipes incorporate many current food trends including matcha, bubble tea, grain bowls, and multipot cooking, and will appeal to home cooks seeking innovative contemporary fare that fits a variety of dietary needs. VERDICT The array of fresh and lively dishes in this collection is perfectly suited to entertaining. Lewis has a massive fan base, and her first foray into print is sure to win her plenty of new devotees. This will be an in-demand title.--Kelsy Peterson, Forest Hill Coll., Melbourne, Australia

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

Introduction I was born and raised in Santa Clara, California. My parents were Vietnamese immigrants, and our house was always filled with the aroma of food cooking. My sister and I were usually assigned tasks in the kitchen; it was my parents' way of keeping two rambunctious little girls occupied on weekends when we didn't have homework or school activities. My grandmother also lived with us throughout much of my childhood. She came of age in French-accented Saigon, Vietnam, and her influence and presence played a big role in my early culinary development. I was exposed to a combination of French classics (think duck à l'orange) and Vietnamese staples (i.e., clay pot caramelized catfish). Together we watched television chefs Jacques Pèpin and Martin Yan, and I soon began dreaming of a life devoted to creating delicious meals to share with people in an inviting, loving way. Among the first dishes I cooked, around age eight or nine, were simple ones like Tomatoes Provençale (page 184) and Mom's Famous Flan (page 223). In seventh grade, I began cooking family meals, often asking my dad, who also loved being in the kitchen, to seek out ingredients for me well before I could drive myself to the store. When my dad cooked, I was there by his side, learning how everyday Vietnamese dishes like Lemongrass Chicken Stir-Fry (Gà Xào Sà Ot, page 131) come together. Throughout college in Santa Clara, I worked as a server in a few restaurants, and I always enjoyed watching and learning how the chefs played with flavor. The restaurant work made me curious about attending culinary school, but coming from an academics-first Asian-American household, my parents guided me toward a more "stable" and prestigious career in corporate America. They didn't want to see me "labor" like they did to make ends meet. So, I ended up graduating college with a business degree in finance, a total last-possible-minute decision, and probably the most polar opposite of my passion. I didn't want to be stuck in a cubicle, so I continued working in restaurants on the side (for fun). Even though finance wasn't the most ideal career for me, I'm thankful for the business experience I gained. Still, when I progressed into a full-time job as a financial analyst in the Bay Area, I couldn't help but notice the lack of creativity and stimulation that I naturally craved from a career. I had zero passion for crunching numbers all day long (and some weekends and holidays, too). Often, to flex my creative muscles, I began baking in earnest after work, starting by making my way through all of The Complete Magnolia Bakery Cookbook . (My coworkers loved me for bringing in all the goodies.) This was all-new territory for me because I'd grown up baking only from boxed mixes. Baking from scratch was an interesting daily challenge and led me to discover new techniques and flavors--and I found so much inspiration from cookbooks and television cooking shows. Eventually, I even took on a weekend gig at Sur la Table, the cookware store, as an assistant where I would prep all the ingredients before students arrived for cooking classes. While most other assistants dreaded the mundane labor of chopping vegetables and carefully measuring items, I found it gave me a level of peace. It became my way to escape the more banal confines of a gray cubicle. I loved the energetic environment of the kitchen, and the proximity to food it gave me new life. Fast-forward a few years to when I met Nate, now my husband, who tried to charm me with what he refers to as his "culinary genius." (You'll learn more about that later.) He also happens to be half-Korean, which was definitely a plus because I love Korean food! Through him, I inherited a new family of flavors and culture, and Korean food has become a mainstay in my dietary repertoire. Nate also encouraged me to start the Honeysuckle YouTube channel as a way to find my voice through food. Now after ten years of uploading a video or two a week, and nearly six hundred cooking videos about everything from baking to easy weeknight meals, I've finally understood how truly varied my background is. I am immersed in an American and Californian melting pot where cultures from all corners are somehow mixed in new ways. I consider myself lucky to have been exposed to everything from authentic Mexican flavors to exotic Burmese cuisine, from Ethiopian spreads to Pakistani dishes. And especially now, living in Los Angeles, where the culinary rules always seem to be rewritten, I am continually motivated to play and experiment with flavors. So I might heighten the umami character of a good marinara with a splash of fish sauce--a trick my dad relied on--or amp up the flavor of an ordinary quick bread with Japanese matcha powder. If you watch my YouTube videos, you already know that I call these little tweaks my "Honeysuckle twists." As my interest in cooking and experimenting grew, so did our family. We now are raising two young children (and a curious border collie) with growing appetites. Our oldest, Erisy, has developed into a little foodie herself, with discerning taste buds and strong opinions. (She does not tolerate leftovers.) With each new phase in life, my culinary interests are always expanding, and for everything that food has taught me, my goal is to share that knowledge and inspiration with all of you. This has always been the point of my cooking channel: to create a place to interact with other food lovers and build a community, so I can also draw inspiration from viewers' unique perspectives. That community has been the biggest catalyst in my development as a cook and really encouraged me to follow my dream of creating a cookbook. So here it is: The Honeysuckle Cookbook . It's a compilation of some of my family's best Vietnamese recipes, plenty of easy, everyday meals with those Honeysuckle twists, and a few time-tested favorites from the Honeysuckle channel I know you wouldn't let me leave out, like the beloved Cold Buster Tea (page 22) and Quicker Beef Pho (page 91). Since I'm a busy mom, I know a mix of fast, delicious, and healthy options that can be whipped up on a weeknight is needed. You'll find lots of those but also a few longer projects for weekends or holidays, when you might have a bit more time in the kitchen. I hope this inspires you to cook and then to share what you make with your family and friends. Enjoy! Excerpted from The Honeysuckle Cookbook: 100 Healthy, Feel-Good Recipes to Live Deliciously by Dzung Lewis All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.