Monday, December 29, 2008

Charlie Trotters or Frozen Drinks

Charlie Trotter's

Author: Charlie Trotter

The dynamic follow-up to the bestselling Charlie Trotter, this sensational celebration of vegetables presents some 100 seasonal vegetable recipes. Each dish is pictured in the same lavish style that so distinguished Trotter's first book. Organized by month, each chapter offers four or five savory dishes and one sweet course. Full color.

Publishers Weekly

Chef Trotter's fancy, multi-ingredient, almost-vegetarian dishes are as rich and extravagantand as fussy and specializedas those featured in his renowned Chicago restaurant and presented in his first book, Charlie Trotter's (1994). The 82 recipes here are arranged by month, and in name alone, the recipes are a mouthful: January leads off with Baby Carrot Terrine with Shiitake Mushroom Salad, Carrot Juice Reduction, Dill Oil, and 50-Year-Old Balsamic Vinegar. The preparation of Arugula Noodles with Smoked Yellow Tomato Sauce, Black Olives, and Roasted Garlic Pure requires the cook to make arugula pasta and arugula oil and, for the sauce, to smoke the tomatoes over hickory chips lit with a propane torch. Wine Notes for each recipe are helpful, as is a glossary that defines terms like "kashi" (it's the mixture of seven specific grains called for in Cold Kashi Salad with Dried Cranberries, Celery, White Pumpkin, Pumpkin Seeds and Pumpkin Seed Oil). While a few suggestions for substitutions would have allowed the home cook some welcome flexibility, flexibility is not in the exacting spirit of this chef. Trotter offers highly specific instructions (even to calling for hazelnuts from a certain farm in Oregon) for constructing complexly flavored, architecturally beautiful dishes. So long as readers are not misled, this volume, which is expensive in both in price and effort, delivers.(July)

Library Journal

Charlie Trotter's is a top Chicago restaurant with a national reputation, known for its stylish and imaginative cuisine. Trotter is a serious (his introduction opens with a quotation from Dostoyevsky and moves on to Goethe) and obviously very talented young man; unfortunately for home cooks, the recipes in his cookbook are real "chef's recipes," many requiring hours of preparation and access to exotic ingredients (the first recipe calls for two different reductions as well as two sauces, one involving three different subrecipes, to garnish plum tomatoes that must be roasted for ten hours). For area libraries and other collections catering to foodies.

BookList

Renowned Chicago restaurateur Charlie Trotter has produced another volume documenting his highly personal and refined approach to contemporary American cooking. Increasingly, nutrition-conscious eaters have become more aware of the importance of vegetables, and their attention has been matched by an explosion in both the variety and the quality of vegetables now available. Seasonality used to dictate vegetable choices, but an expanding worldwide market has made good produce available just about anywhere at any time. Trotter's rigorous attention to absolute freshness and full flavor, however, has resulted in a month-by-month arrangement of recipes emphasizing locally available ingredients at their flavor peak. As a document of the chef's culinary intelligence and prowess, the book astonishes with every turn of the page; but the home cook is not likely to find it easy to locate such ingredients as Marcona almonds and Ennis hazelnuts for duplicating Trotter's results. The really skilled and undaunted cook will find inspiration in Trotter's book to adapt the chef's unusual combinations to more homely seasonal vegetables. For specialized, professional, or regional collections only.



Read also The Rules for Online Dating or Mac Basics

Frozen Drinks: With or Without the Buzz

Author: Bruce Weinstein

Frozen drink wizard Bruce Weinstein has created more than one hundred simple, innovative recipes for slushees, daiquiris, margaritas, coladas, chocolate and coffee drinks, and granitas and sorbets. From traditional poolside favorites such as pineapple daiquiris and pina coladas to the immensely popular coffeehouse Frappuccinos and Mochaccinos, Frozen Drinks covers the range of icy treats, tangy or sweet, slushy or smooth. The book's introduction provides essential information for making perfect drinks every time, such as when to use fresh fruit and when canned or frozen fruit will do. Each recipe is nonalcoholic but has tasty variations, some with and some without alcohol. There are also a number of creative suggestions for garnishes, such as crumbled peppermint patties on a Chocolate Mint Parfait or candy canes to top off a Cabana Striped Slush.



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