More is more Get loose in the kitchen

Molly Baz

Book - 2023

"Sharpen your knives and culinary instincts with Molly Baz's no-nonsense maximalist approach to making delicious food. In her debut cookbook, Cook This Book, Molly inspired home chefs to get comfortable with the essentials; and in More Is More, she offers an indispensable guide to encouraging cooks to take more risks and cook with abandon"--

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2nd Floor 641.5/Baz Due Dec 15, 2024
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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Recipes
Published
New York : Clarkson Potter/Publishers [2023]
Language
English
Corporate Author
Peden + Munk
Main Author
Molly Baz (author)
Corporate Author
Peden + Munk (photographer)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
304 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 27 cm
ISBN
9780593578841
  • Intro
  • Play by the Rules
  • Istill Love Salt
  • Set Up Shop
  • Cook Smarter, Not Harder
  • Raid My Pantry
  • Use This Book
  • Recipes
  • - Recipes with Video Cook-Alongs
  • - Recipes with Audio Cook-Alongs
  • A Couple Snick-Snacks Never Killed Nobody
  • Mortadella-Wrapped Grissini
  • Sizzled Dolmas with Yogurt & Brown-Buttered Pine Nuts
  • Bring Back Bruschetta
  • Crick-Cracks!
  • Caesar-ed Oeuf Mayo
  • Mashed Potato Arancini
  • Pickle-Marinated Feta
  • Be The Salad You Wish To See In The World
  • Peach & Pickled Pepper Panzanella
  • Purple Salad
  • Brussels Sprouts with Shallots & Sticky Fish Sauce
  • Sizzled Seedy Tomato Salad
  • Crispy, Crunchy Brocc & Grains with So. Much. Mint.
  • Halloumi, Cuke & Walnut Spoon Salad
  • Raw & Roasted Cauli Salad with Creamy, Dreamy Vegan Ranch
  • Monochromatic Melon Salad
  • Chicken Salad with Coconut Crunch
  • Drink Break (ft. Piñacillin)
  • Marinated Zucch & Mozz with Fried Sunflower Seeds
  • Cucumber Bag Salad with Miso-Poppy Dressing
  • My Interests Include But Are Not Limited To Carbs
  • Drunken Cacio e Pepe
  • Triple Threat Garlic Bread
  • Grandma Pie with Morty-d & Peperoncini Pesto
  • Pepperoni Fried Rice
  • Shells, Peas & Buttermilk
  • Broken Noodle Bolognese
  • Rigatoni with Creamed Leeks & Chive-y Bread Crumbs
  • Crispy Orecchiette with Spicy Sausage & Collard Ragu
  • Kedgeree with Jammy Eggs & Smoked Fish
  • Cold Noodles with Grated Tomato Sauce & Chili Oil
  • Umam Lasagn!
  • Tangled Leek 'Za
  • Rarebit Mac 'n' Greens
  • Crispy Rice Egg-in-a-Hole
  • Ramen Noodles with Shrooms & Soy Butter
  • Cozy Bowl
  • Put the Lime in the Coconut Corn Bread with Salty Coconut Jam
  • Stuffed Focaccia with Spicy Greens & Cheese
  • Where There's Surf There Is Turf
  • Skirt Steak with Juicy Tomatoes & Salsa Macha
  • Mollz Ballz
  • Drink Break! (ft. Martini Thrice)
  • Crispy Salmon with Coconut Rice & Crackle Sauce
  • Hot Sauce-Braised Short Ribs with Winter Squash
  • Crispy Cornmeal Calamari with Fried Basil & Other Yummy Stuff
  • The Only Meat Loaf That Matters
  • Crispy Cutlets with Giardiniera Slaw
  • Lamb Chops Scottadito with Minty Beans & Artichokes
  • The Flakiest Fish with Shingled Potatoes & Walnut Gremolata
  • Surf & Turf with Gochujang Black Pepper Butter
  • Kielbasa & Cabbage Pitas with Curry Mustard
  • Gingery Clams with Chili Crisp & Tofu
  • Tableside Tartare
  • A Last Meal for the Living
  • Last-Meal Scallops
  • Don't Be A Chicken
  • Miso-Braised Chicken & Leeks
  • Chicken Piccata with Sweet Corn, Chiles & Buttermilk
  • Chile-Basted Half Chicken with Caper Chimichurri
  • Party Chix
  • Drink Break (ft. Yummy Juice)
  • Chicky Chicky Bread Bread
  • Red Curry Hot Wings Rolled in Peanuts
  • One-Pot Chicken Mujadara
  • Green Chicken Soup with Chickpeas & Sizzled Coriander
  • Benny's Tender Tenders
  • The USDA Recommends 9 Serving Of Veg Per Day
  • Curried Lentil a Sweet Potato Potpie
  • Spicy Green Fregola with Salty Yog
  • Faux French Onion Soup
  • Saucy, Glossy Spanish Eggs
  • Blistered Pepps with Torn Halloumi & Warm Shallot Dressing
  • Fennel on Fennel on Fennel Tortilla
  • Shoestring Onion Rings with Peperoncini & Yummy Dust
  • Dilly Beans & Burrata with Frizzled Shallots
  • Le Grand Green Grilled Aioli
  • Olive Oil-Drowned Potatoes with Lemony Onions & Herbs
  • Spicy Coconut-Smothered Green Beans
  • Crispy Potato Skins with Fried Herb Aioli
  • Drink Break! (ft. Salted Citrus Shandy)
  • Big-Ass Latke
  • If You Show Me Your Sando I'll Show You Mine
  • Cold Fried Chicken Sando with Chili Crisp Mayo
  • Not So Basic B Turkey Sando
  • The One & Only Hoagie
  • Fried Morty-d Sando
  • Spiced Lentil Burger with a Very Special Sauce
  • Arty Reuben
  • I Thought You Should Know That I Rarely Eat Breakfast
  • SmashPatty™ Breakfast Sando
  • Sweet Cotija & Sesame Pancakes
  • Earl Grey & Apricot Jam Scones
  • Griddled Chorizo & Egg Stuffed Pitas
  • Drink Break! (ft. Bloody Molly a Meechy Mary)
  • Sesame Biscuits with Black Pepper-Miso Gravy
  • Molten Omelet
  • Peach Halva Bostock
  • Dilly Matzo Brei Pancakes
  • Smoo Break! (ft. Bloo Smoo & Tahini Date Shake Smoo)
  • Sweets For Salt Tooths
  • Salty Coffee a Peanut Slice Cream
  • Sunken Drunken Apple Cake
  • Black Sesame Rice Pudding Brûlée
  • Maple Ricotta Munchkins
  • Pistachio, Brown Butter a Halva Chocolate Chunk Cookies
  • Spiced Peanut Shortbread
  • Ooey-Gooey Carrot Cake
  • Baklava Ruffle Pie
  • Salted Malted Banoffee Trifle
  • Orange Creamsicle Poppy Cake
  • Pumpkin-Cannoli Cheesecake Cake
  • Big Fat Thanks
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Bestseller Baz (Cook this Book) lays out an infectious ideology of "boldness in the kitchen" in this boisterous guide to cooking "passionately, fearlessly, and, as always, in pursuit of something yumz." She aims to inspire home chefs to "have the nerve to go for bigger, bolder, more explosive flavor"--and succeeds in spades through well-constructed, confidence-boosting recipes. The collection opens with a set of rules that resonate all the way through. "If you're gonna use it, use it," for example, comes to bear in the pepperoni fried rice, which calls for a whopping 10 cloves of garlic. "Turn ya burners up (let's burn some shit)" applies to the spicy coconut smothered green beans ("We want to blister these babies!"). "One ingredient many ways" challenges home chefs to "look at an ingredient's potential for both flavor and texture," something Baz demonstrates in the raw and roasted cauliflower salad and the fennel on fennel on fennel tortilla. Recipes range from simple "snick-snacks" (sizzled dolmas with yogurt and brown-buttered pine nuts) to show-stopping surf and turf, with gorgeous photos and helpful tips throughout. The result is an invigorating guide to having fun in the kitchen. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Intro It was a completely insignificant Saturday in September. The year was 2021. It was 9:30 a.m. and my husband, Ben, had dragged me to a dive bar off of Sunset Boulevard to watch a *very important* English Premier League soccer match. Don't be fooled. This isn't a story about sports (I have very little to say on the matter); it's a story about calamari. . . . Cut to the top of the second half, an hour-ish or so later. It was far too early for lunch, I hadn't had breakfast, and there was nary a pancake in sight. The menu featured all the classic bar food hits, that magnificent category of rich and delicious foods you crave when you're at a dive--loaded nachos, Buffalo wings, potato skins, and, my personal weakness, fried calamari. I may or may not also have been two Bloody Marys deep at this point, though that is relevant to this story only insofar as to paint a picture of who I am. The game plan was clear: I was having calamari for breakfast. Ten minutes and half a Bloody later, the calamari arrived. The diagnosis: golden brown, craggy crisp, unadorned, and served in a paper-lined red plastic basket, just as you'd expect. It looked like . . . calamari. Taste-wise, it wasn't bad, not rancid or anything--far from it. It was simply very whatevs. Underseasoned and just kinda plain. For most people, that's where this story would end. They'd eat their perfectly fine breakfast squid and life would go on as it always does. Well, as I am about to make clear, I am not most people, and I happened to have some time on my hands. I took a look around me to see how I might remedy the sitch: right away I noticed a pepper grinder and a bottle of hot sauce on the table. There were lemon wedges perched on the rims of our Bloodys (I knew I'd ordered two for a reason). I always carry a tiny tin of Maldon flaky sea salt in my bag, so the seasoning element was on lock. I politely asked my server for a side of mayo and then determinedly got to work. Within minutes, I had successfully transformed a perfectly fine and absolutely forgettable plate of fried calamari into a meal that will stick with me forever (just don't ask me who won the match or, for that matter, who was playing). Here's how it went: 1. Squeeze the juice of 4 lemon wedges over the basket of calamari. 2. Season the calamari liberally with flaky sea salt. 3. Stir together a quick tableside spicy mayo for dipping by combining mayonnaise, hot sauce, a touch more lemon juice, salt, and pepper. 4. Wash down with another Bloody and enjoy one of the greatest plates of calamari of my life. Willett (that's Ben) sat across from me eating his breakfast burger (a very delicious one, I will add), slightly horrified and yet entirely unfazed because, of course, he'd seen this whole on-the-fly doctoring routine go down at least a thousand times before. But it was right then, in that seemingly insignificant moment, that this book was born. Sitting in that bar, I realized that what the calamari had needed was just a little more. Suddenly, everything became clear. What sets apart a good cook from a great one, an amateur chef from a professional, a true pursuer of good food from an apathetic one, can be summarized in a single phrase: MORE IS MORE. When it comes to cooking, More Is More is an ideology to live by. It is a guiding principle to embrace boldness in the kitchen (or, in this case, at the table) in order to level up your food. It's a commitment to doing anything and everything in our power to land a delicious meal. It's about refusing to settle for something mediocre and instead figuring out how to transform that mediocrity into something stupendous. If your first reaction is to think I mean "more bacon, more salt, more cheese"--gluttonous excess is not what this book is about. It's about finding more confidence in the kitchen, gaining more trust in our own cooking ability, and having the nerve to go for bigger, bolder, more explosive flavor. When I was a fine-dining line cook, I spent years being drilled with the mindset that less is always more. Single dots of sauce on a plate, a whopping two-ounce portion of fish, and three perfectly placed chive batons as garnish. But then I became a home cook and realized that in my kitchen, I am in charge. I call the shots. And what I actually crave is just the opposite. I don't know about you, but I want to cook and eat with ABANDON. We're on this planet only once, and gustatorily speaking (it's a word--trust me), I see no reason we shouldn't make the most of that time. I want to cook and eat BOLD food with BIG personality, especially if I'm going to go to the trouble of making it myself. Restraint, my friends, is overrated. So what does this all mean, practically? It means I want you to crank up the dang heat! To grab a big-ass pinch of salt! To use every part of every ingredient to its fullest potential and then some. To cook with gumption, and personality, all in the service of building confidence and boldness and taking control of your home kitchen! I've seen the way my friends and fam reluctantly turn their heat to medium-high when a recipe calls for it and then instinctively turn it down to medium-low for fear of burning. (We need that good browning!!) I've seen the way an amateur cook gingerly seasons a steak. (Nothin' worse than a bland piece of meat!) I've seen all of it and then some, and through my observations I've deduced that a little confidence, good technique, and a better understanding of ingredients can be the difference between the forgettable and the memorable--my calamari zhoozhing being just one everyday example. "More is more" is that moment you recognize your salad needs an extra glug of vinegar, or your roasted carrots could really use a handful of chopped peanuts for texture. It's that first time you drizzle chili crisp on a fried egg and the stars suddenly align. It's about trusting yourself enough to leave the chicken thighs skin-side down on the heat, undisturbed, for fifteen whole minutes, only to then enjoy the crispiest dang chicken skin of your life. It's all the adjustments, big and small, that take your food from good to lights-out GREAT. The recipes in this book will encourage you to break out of your comfort zone, to learn how to cook passionately, fearlessly, and, as always, in pursuit of something yumz. They'll leave some ingredients open-ended so that you can pick your fave [insert herb here] for a salad, and quantities like generous handfuls, glugs, and pinches will be encouraged so you reach less for the tangled-up set of measuring spoons and connect more with the ones you've got attached to your body. To cook with a "more is more" mentality is to identify what the right amount of any given ingredient means to you, and the only way to gain that self-assuredness is to cook more--and more--and then probably a little more. Through some trial and error, and, I hope, a lil' help from this book, you'll soon become a cook who knows exactly when the "more" becomes "it's perfect, let's eat." Okay! Enough preaching, you get the point. It's time to pick up your knives and clear your cutting boards. We're MORE IS MORE people, and we've got cooking to do. I promise it's going to be f***ing delicious. Excerpted from More Is More: Get Loose in the Kitchen: a Cookbook by Molly Baz 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.