2024 the best way to cook review


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(as of Nov 17, 2024 16:55:17 UTC - Details)

In her most creative and instructive cookbook, Julia Child distills a lifetime of cooking into 800 recipes emphasizing lightness, freshness, and simplicity. Chapters are structured around master recipes, followed by innumerable variations that are easily made once the basics are understood. For example, make Julia’s simple but impeccably prepared sauté of chicken, and before long you're easily whipping up Chicken with Mushrooms and Cream, Chicken Provençale, Chicken Pipérade, or Chicken Marengo. Or master her perfect broiled butterflied chicken, and you’ll soon be including Deviled Rabbit or Split Cornish Game Hens Broiled with Cheese on your menu. Here home cooks will find a treasure trove of poultry and fish recipes, as well as a vast array of fresh vegetables prepared in new ways, along with bread doughs and delicious indulgences, such as Caramel Apple Mountain or a Queen of Sheba Chocolate Almond Cake with Chocolate Leaves. And if you want to know how a finished dish should look or how to angle your knife or to fashion a pretty rosette on a cake, there are more than 600 color photographs to entice and instruct you along the way. A brilliant, inspiring, one-of-a-kind, book from the incomparable Julia Child, The Way to Cook is a testament to the satisfactions of good home cooking.

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Knopf; 1st edition (September 18, 1989)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 528 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0394532643
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0394532646
Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 5.35 pounds
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 9.53 x 1.35 x 11.22 inches
Reviewer: B. Marold
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Julia Child for Everyday Cooking. Excellent Teaching Source
Review: `The Way to Cook' was written by Julia Child and published by Knopf about 27 years after the first publication of `Mastering the Art of French Cooking' which established Child's reputation. So, it was published when Julia Child was a household name for over two decades. It was meant to be her most important culinary work. It has never replaced Child's first book in the hearts and minds of America's foodies, in spite of the fact that the book opens with a statement that the book means to address Americans' new health consciousness and their diminishing time available to cook.This is still a very, very good book. Unlike the more famous `French Cooking', this book is much more concerned with teaching the art of cooking. In fact, Ms. Child originates an idea here that has reached its fullest fruition in the style of Rachael Ray's 30-Minute Meal rubric. Ray succeeds in putting out fast meals not by using a lot of processed supermarket preparations, but by using knowledge of cooking to make the best of basic ingredients. This is not to say Ms. Child is doing fast cooking. Many recipes are pretty involved. I can still remember doing Julia's take on a barbecue recipe which involved making both a sauce and a rub from a goodly number of ingredients and a substantial amount of time required to slow cook the ribs. I got pretty hungary by the time I was finally finished.Teaching is so important to the object of this book that it is one of the very few books I know which could easily serve as a good textbook for a course on cooking. The only other book I know in this category would be Madeline Kammen's `The New Making of a Cook'. It is important to distinguish both of these books from the `how to cook everything' titles such as the `Joy of Cooking', `James Beard's American Cookery' or Mark Bittman's `How to Cook Everything'. The purpose of these books is to give detailed coverage to a wide range of methods rather than simply be a repository of a large number of recipes.The most distinctive feature in this book which supports it's object to teach cooking is the notion of the master recipe. A classic example of this approach is the master recipe for `Ragout of Chicken and Onions in Red Wine'. If this dish doesn't sound familiar to experienced cooks, it should be, because the very famous French recipe `Coq au Vin' is a variation of this master recipe. The classic simply adds lardons, mushrooms, and brandy and replaces sliced onions with `brown braized white onions'.In addition to master recipes and variations, there is a wealth of notes on techniques to improve your results. In discussing the use of lardons, there is a note which recommends blanching bacon and salt pork before adding it to a recipe to remove salt and smoky flavor. I am certain this is an optional step, but it is welcome to me as I often avoid recipes using salt pork to avoid the somewhat noisome smell of smoked fatty tissue which may come from cooking smoked pork.Another feature of the book which fits the master recipe model is that variations on the ragout master recipe are not limited to recipes for chicken. Rather, the same section includes ragouts of turkey and rabbit. The same principle is used throughout the book where foods are grouped by method of preparation rather than by source (pig, cow, lamb, calf, fowl).Still, the chapters are true to a fairly classic organization, with some topics you may not find in the usual work. The chapters are: Soups, Breads, Eggs, Fin Fish & Shellfish, Poultry, Meat, Vegetables, Salads, Pastry Doughs, Desserts, Cakes & Cookies.The chapter on Breads covers just four master recipes, but it will give you a thorough and satisfying experience which will tell you if you have the kind of love for baking which warrents exploring specialized works by such experts as Peter Reinhart or Nancy Silverton.The chapter on Pastry Doughs also just covers four master recipes, Pate Brisee, Puff Pastry, Pate a Choux, and Crepes. I may not be willing to take on puff pastry any time soon, but I would expect that the other three master recipes should be enticing enough to remove a cooks fears about making pies, crepes, and eclairs. Crepes especially should be an entertainer's best friend in that the batter can be made well in advance and, if necessary, the crepes themselves can be made in advance and reheated. If you want them fresh, it takes but a minute or two to cook a crepe, and it makes great kitchen theater, especially if you master the technique of flipping the crepe.I suspect the must useful chapter may be the one on eggs. Knowing ones way around egg cookery will take you a goodly distance toward being able to prepare really great dishes from standard pantry. I find that an author's discussion of how to make an omelette is often a good test of the quality of their book as a whole. I can say that Julia comes through for me by citing an omelette technique I have seen nowhere else. That is, the warning to limit oneself to two eggs when you have only a typical household burner available.As the book is published by Knopf, the layout, editing, and photography are first rate. I was just a little surprised when I could not find `barbecue' in the index, yet there is clearly a master recipe for barbecue in the chapter on meats. The very best feature of the book is Julia's very familiar voice and attitude which carries you on with reassurances that you can do it and these techniques will do you great service in your life.Very highly recommended. Lots of French recipes and lots of modern appliances put to good use.

Reviewer: Flamingo Mannia
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: A wonderful TEACHING cookbook with great recipes.
Review: If you love the older PBS show: The French Chef with Julia Child, this is a perfect companion. The book includes all of those recipes plus several more from Julia Child's other shows. It is organized by skills needed. A basic recipe with the in detailed directions. Then the variations for the basic recipe and cooking techniques to go forward with 5-9 additional variations. Any techniques needed in recipes further into the book are referenced in those recipes. The index is excellent for looking up techniques and recipes by name and main ingredient. I have already made 4 of the recipes and really like the how and why of the instructions. There are multiple Julia Child cookbooks. I believe this the best because it is written after improved cooking equipment (vs what was available to the home cook when the Art of French cooking came out). If you really want to learn From simple to more complex recipes, I highly recommend this teaching cookbook.

Reviewer: Dianna Hendrickson
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: This is my second copy- I wore the first one out
Review: If you can read, you really can cook, and with Julia Child's The Way to Cook, you will cook remarkably well. This book isn't just assembled recipes that have you doing the robot in your kitchen; no, this book is organized, not by recipes, but by techniques- and if you master basic cooking techniques, you will master cooking. This beautiful book offers culinary training that will serve you the rest of your life. I taught myself to cook with this wonderful book, and the skills I developed allowed me to reproduce beloved dishes. This is a valuable resource for anyone who loves to eat- the novice  will soon be mastering techniques that will allow him or her to easily reproduce and even improve on beloved dishes. Believe it or not, it won't be long before you'll be able to reproduce dishes you encounter dining out. You'll not only enjoy cooking, you will grow in your appreciation of food.This is my second copy of The Way to Cook; I needed to replace my original copy for my daughters. They don't have much interest in cooking right now and are content to perform basic maneuvers in the kitchen, but I don't worry. Someday when I'm not around to cook for them, they can take my recipes and notes along with this book, and cook pretty much anything they desire to eat, so I don't harp on them too much for their culinary disinterest.While a treasure for the novice foodie, The Way to Cook is an excellent resource for the accomplished cook as well- it's nice to refer back to this book when entering unfamiliar territory or revisiting something you haven't made in a while.Additionally, this book now has a DVD (sold separately) with essential demonstrations  for visual learners or culinary students new to the kitchen- I can't tell you how delightful it is to pop Julia Child into the DVD- It's like the Tao of Julia: suddenly, all is "simplicity itself". Five stars for an outstanding resource.    

Reviewer: Dan
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: It was well packed for shipping and it arrived on time. That’s about all you need in a book.

Reviewer: Cheryl A
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Birthday present for my son. He is very pleased with it

Reviewer: Paul K.
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: This is a very good, approachable cookbook for people interested in Julia Child's work. Definitely worth reading and trying out the recipes, which on their own seem to be more cosmopolitan, rather than French.

Reviewer: Ignacio M.
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Después de ver la película, estuve detrás de conseguir los libros de Julia Child para poder hacer algunas de sus recetas. Hasta ahora no me ha defraudado.

Reviewer: Northern light
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Lovely cookbook and I like the colour photos in it. I have been watching utube videos by anti-chef cooking Julia Childs recipes using this book and her other books and have been inspired.

Customers say

Customers find the instructions in the book step-by-step and easy to understand. They also appreciate the basic recipes and variations that build on them. Readers describe the book as a fantastic reference that teaches about food and the ways of preparing it. They appreciate the amazing pictures and colorful photos. They say it's well worth the cost and the writing is well-written and humorous.

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