Saturday, January 31, 2009

The Ethical Chemist or Turkey

The Ethical Chemist

Author: Jeffrey Kovac

The basis of this book is a series of specific cases that present the kinds of ethical problems faced by both students and practicing chemists. Following these cases are commentaries that discuss the ethical issues raised, and present possible solutions in the form of morally acceptable courses of action. The introductory chapters provide an overview of ethics, morals, and ethical theory, as well as a discussion of professionalism and ethics in science. Ethical problem solving is explored in the chapter preceding the cases and commentaries. For chemists and scientists in other disciplines facing similar situations.



Table of Contents:
Preface
About the Author
Ch. 1Introduction1
Ch. 2Ethics, Morals, and Ethical Theory4
Ch. 3Professionalism and Ethics in Chemistry12
Ch. 4Ethical Problem Solving23
Ch. 5Cases and Commentaries27
AppCodes of Ethics107
References115
Index121

New interesting textbook: A Visão Populista

Turkey: An American Story

Author: Andrew F Smith

“Talking turkey” about the bird you thought you knew

Fondly remembered as the centerpiece of family Thanksgiving reunions, the turkey is a cultural symbol as well as a multi-billion dollar industry. As a bird, dinner, commodity, and as a national icon, the turkey has become as American as the bald eagle (with which it actually competed for supremacy on national insignias).

Food historian Andrew F. Smith’s sweeping and multifaceted history of Meleagris gallopavo separates fact from fiction, serving as both a solid historical reference and a fascinating general read. With his characteristic wit and insatiable curiosity, Smith presents the turkey in ten courses, beginning with the bird itself (actually several different species of turkey) flying through the wild. The Turkey subsequently includes discussions of practically every aspect of the iconic bird, including the wild turkey in early America, how it came to be called “turkey,” domestication, turkey mating habits, expansion into Europe, stuffing, conditions in modern industrial turkey factories, its surprising commercial history of boom and bust, and its eventual ascension to holiday mainstay.

As one of the easiest of foods to cook, the turkey’s culinary possibilities have been widely explored if little noted. The second half of the book collects an amazing array of over one hundred historical and modern turkey recipes from across America and Europe. From sandwiches to salmagundi, you’ll find detailed instructions on nearly every variation on the turkey. Historians will enjoy a look back at the varied appetites of their ancestors and seasonedcooks will have an opportunity to reintroduce a familiar food in forgotten ways.

Publishers Weekly

Food historian Smith, editor-in-chief of the Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America, discusses both fact and myth in this thorough and multifaceted history of the turkey. Smith believes the quintessentially American bird (we consume 240 million of them a year) can tell us about cultural issues and reveal something about being American. Dividing the book into a section on the turkey's history and another on historical recipes, the author hopes to give a comprehensive accounting of the bird. Beginning with a scientific description, the historical section covers turkey bones found in North America dating to 3700 B.C., then moves on to the introduction of domesticated turkeys into Europe by explorers of the New World. Methods of cooking from the 16th through the 19th centuries and efforts to preserve the disappearing wild turkey in the early 20th century follow. Even the turkey trot gets a mention. Short chapter sections keep the reading flowing, but the eye-glazing number of facts and dry prose can be overwhelming. Still, Smith has produced a well-researched, comprehensive, though somewhat scattered account of the bird most people take for granted. 22 photos. (Nov.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Lisa A. Ennis - Library Journal

An instructor of culinary history and professional food writing, Smith (The Tomato in America) now brings his fans the history of the turkey. The narrative begins with the many different turkey species and continues with the domestication and commercialization of the bird. Of particular note is Smith's discussion of "turkey iconography," or how the turkey became so symbolic in American culture. The book is very well researched and well documented throughout with copious endnotes and a selected bibliography divided into topical sections. Also included are more than 20 pages of historical turkey recipes, including turkey eggs and turkey sausage. Smith's style and wit add to the book's readability, and there are a number of historical illustrations. Recommended for all libraries.



Thursday, January 29, 2009

Savoring Mexico or Soy Soy Soy

Savoring Mexico: A Cookbook and Travel Guide to the Recipes and Regions of Mexico

Author: Sharon Cadwallader

Get to know Mexico! Respected culinary writer Sharon Cadwallader, author of The Whole Earth Cookbook, takes readers on a personal guided tour through each of Mexico's ten regions, highlighting its scenery, customs, and wonderful food. In Savoring Mexico, Cadwallader expresses her deep love for the country, its people, and its cuisine and confesses, "out of all my books this is the one I love the most." She teaches readers how to prepare the favorite foods and classic recipes of each region while also learning to appreciate its unique climate, geography, people, and traditions. The book includes more than one hundred recipes, each accompanied by complete preparation instructions. Substitutions are suggested for specialty items that may be difficult to locate north of the border. This charming book, illustrated with simple maps and drawings, is not only an introduction to regional cuisines of Mexico but also serves as a keepsake volume for those who share Cadwallader's fascination with Mexico's mystique. Whether you're an armchair traveler or interested in sampling "real" Mexican cuisine, Savoring Mexico offers an insider's view of the spectacular foods and natural beauty of this country.



Books about: Desenho de Produto

Soy! Soy! Soy!: Enjoy Soyfoods' Health Benefits in Delicious Recipes

Author: Jeanette Parsons Egan

Using tempeh, miso, soy milk, tofu, and other soyfoods in more than 120 recipes, from appetizers to desserts.



Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Chef in Your Backpack or Guy Cant Cook

Chef in Your Backpack: Gourmet Cooking in the Great Outdoors

Author: Nicole Bassett

We all look forward to spring and summer, when the sun returns, the blooms bud, and we feel the urge to reacquaint ourselves with the great outdoors. But camping and hiking trips, whether day treks or week-long journeys, beg an age-old question: what to bring along to eat? Chef in Your Backpack proves that camping and hiking meals don't always have to be about stale sandwiches and bagged veggies. With a little ingenuity and know-how, and a bit of advance planning, you can be dining in high style around the campfire.

Nicole Bassett is an outdoors enthusiast who has been developing and preparing outdoor meal recipes for years. She believes in the notion that a great yet easy-to-make meal is not only more satisfying, but is more nutritious and energizing for your hikes and treks. She also offers great tips for keeping your food safe from spoilage and not-so-friendly creatures, as well as nifty ideas like using film canisters to store spices, and using your camping mug as a measuring cup.

Nicole offers a wide-range of meal ideas, from power breakfasts to soul-nurturing dinners, all of which can either be prepared in their entirety outdoors or with a -little preparation at home before you go.

With this Chef in Your Backpack, camping and hiking never tasted so good!

Nicole Bassett grew up in the wilds of northern British Columbia, Canada. After moving to Vancouver to attend school, she now lives in Toronto where, among other things, she is developing a television series based on Chef in Your Backpack.



Look this: Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome or Healthy Exchanges Diabetic Desserts Cookbook

Guy Can't Cook: Over 350 Fantastic No-Fail Recipes a Guy Can't Be Without

Author: Cinda Chavich


A book designed for guys of all ages.

With fun and funky food, The Guy Can't Cook is designed especially for that growing group of consumers who say they can't/don't/won't cook. This user-friendly kitchen guide will help any guy think outside the takeout box. Whether it's easy, low-cost meals for everyday dinners, a dish to impress a date, or tips on cooking up the catch from the last fishing trip, The Guy Can't Cook addresses life's ongoing culinary challenges.

Loaded with tricks and tips -- many from guys in the professional kitchen trenches -- this book includes recipes for winners such as:


  • The best mac and cheese

  • Side of poached salmon in red wine sauce

  • Tender beef and beer stew

  • Mahogany-glazed short ribs

  • The guy's top 10 cocktails.



Part survival guide, part cooking class and all practical, this is a cookbook any guy can count on when he needs something impressive and easy.



Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Seasons in a Country Kitchen Cookbook or Games for Baby Shower Fun

Seasons in a Country Kitchen Cookbook

Author: Darlene Kronschnabel

With a dash of nostalgia, a scoop of country kitchen lore, a sprinkle of laughter-and over 200 old-fashioned home style recipes-Seasons in a Country Kitchen Cookbook takes you on a journey down memory lane. Step into the traditional farm kitchen and savor these made-from-scratch delights.



Interesting textbook: The Johns Hopkins Guide to Diabetes for Today and Tomorrow or Everyday Meal Planner for Type 2 Diabetes

Games for Baby Shower Fun

Author: Sharon Dlugosch

Four games, each with tear-out sheets for 12 guests, plus game ideas that will accommodate any guest list. A valuable resource for last-minute game ideas.



Monday, January 26, 2009

Great BBQ Sauce Book or Not Afraid of Flavor

Great BBQ Sauce Book: A Guide with Recipes

Author: Ardie A Davis

With over 100 sauces photographed and evaluated, this book highlights a barbecue fanatic's tour through the very best barbecue sauces, marinades, jerk seasons, and other wonderful things users can do to a consumable pig. Full- color photos.



Interesting textbook: Personal Selling or Debt Games

Not Afraid of Flavor

Author: Ben Barker

Since opening their Durham, North Carolina, restaurant in 1986, chefs Ben and Karen Barker have been hailed as rising stars of the American culinary scene. Their award-winning Magnolia Grill has been featured in publications such as Bon Appetit, Food & Wine, the New York Times, and Southern Living. With a menu that changes daily and draws inspiration from fresh, often locally produced ingredients, the restaurant is the ultimate showcase for the bold, imaginative cuisine that embodies the Barkers' motto, Not Afraid of Flavor.

From spectacular soups to inventive updates of classic American desserts, this beautifully illustrated book features more than 125 exciting recipes from Magnolia Grill. While not strictly Southern, many of the dishes display a Southern sensibility--making creative use of regional ingredients or offering a new twist on a familiar favorite. Clear, detailed directions encourage readers to try such "fearless" creations as okra rellenos, spicy green tomato soup with crab and country ham, pan-roasted duck breast with sun-dried cherry conserve, striped bass with oyster stew, wild mushroom bread pudding, brown sugar pear poundcake, and Jack Daniels vanilla ice cream.

Emeril Lagasse

Ben and Karen Barker are the King and Queen of Flavor, which is truly the soul of Magnolia Grill.

Los Angeles Times

Handsomely bound, printed on art-quality heavy paper and liberally sprinkled with nicely photographed 'mood' pieces by Ann Hawthorne, this is as good a chef cookbook as has been published in the last several years, even in New York City.

Traditional Home

Not Afraid Of Flavor Is Perfect For Those Who Love Regional Food.

Our State

This beautiful collection of recipes and photographs is more than a cookbook; it's a love story that will inspire the creativity of any Southern cook.

Savannah Morning News

Unlike so many chefs' books, Not Afraid of Flavoris designed to really make their celebrated cooking accessible for home cooks. The recipes are clear, easy to follow and, more to the point—they work in a home kitchen.

Nashville Woman

A complex blend of nouvelle Southern enhanced with the freshest regional ingredients served up with fantastic layers of flavorings.

Bon Appetit

It is a delicious relief to taste Karen Barker's sensational updated classic American desserts. . . . She has led the way in re-inventing home-style treats.

USA Today

Working from a base of traditional Southern ingredients, Ben Barker constructs wondrously inventive dishes that never lose sight of the tenets of taste and texture.

Hemispheres - United Airlines in-flight magazine

When local food cognoscenti speculate on the Triangle's top kitchen, the most frequently mentioned name is Magnolia Grill. No wonder. Chef/proprietor Ben Barker is a local treasure. . . . The bill of fare at this Durham institution evolves daily, in pursuit of the market's freshest offerings and Barker's inspiration.

Raleigh News and Observer

Ben in the role of chef and Karen as pastry chef dance a pas de deux of flavors that never fails to entertain the palate, from the first crust of buttered batarde to the last morsel of night-black chocolate. . . . Magnolia Grill is the stage where Ben and Karen Barker perform, and their standing ovations can be measured in the tables that quickly fill up on weekends. Their restaurant is more popular than ever because they've worked hard to maintain consistency while keeping the performance exciting. . . . The result speaks for itself. All the diner can add is Bravo!.

Shirley Reis - KLIATT

The Magnolia Grill has been named one of the best places to dine in the US by Gourmet Magazine. Ben and Karen Barker, both James Beard Award-winning chefs, have compiled an intriguing array of outstanding recipes for this book, which reflects the wide variety of dishes featured at the restaurant. The recipes are complex in preparation but offer stellar results. The Magnolia Grill's menu emphasizes fresh ingredients. Clear, detailed directions will encourage readers to prepare: Striped Bass with Oyster Stew, New Orleans Red Bean Soup with Andouille and Rice, Our Thanksgiving Turkey with 140 Cloves of Garlic, School Kids' Flounder with Fish Camp Beurre Blanc, Slow-Cooked Southern Greens, Angel Biscuits, Chocolate Peanut Praline Tart, Deep-Dish Apple Cinnamon Crisp with Brandied Vanilla Ice Cream, and Watermelon Granita. Wonderful full-color photographs accompany many of the recipes, further enhancing their appeal. This is a beautiful book that will inspire the reader to reach new culinary heights. KLIATT Codes: A—Recommended for advanced students and adults. 2000, Univ. of North Carolina Press, 254p. illus. index., Ages 17 to adult.

Library Journal

The Barkers' restaurant in Durham, NC (he's the chef, she's the pastry chef) is widely acknowledged as one of the best in the South. Magnolia Grill is known for its innovative, appetizing dishes, based on local ingredients and a unique take on Southern cooking--such as Ben's updated Pickled Shrimp, served with Smoked Tomato Remoulade, or Roasted Mint-&-Garlic-Rubbed Fresh Ham with Luxe Macaroni & Cheese. Karen's delectable desserts are somewhat more down-home but just as flavorful: Chocolate Peanut Praline Tart, for example, or her famous Jack Daniels Vanilla Ice Cream. Their attractively designed cookbook includes 100 photographs, many of them full page, half of them color. Highly recommended. [Good Cook selection.] Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Internet Book Watch

The author run the Magnolia Grill restaurant in North Carolina and here provides a cookbook of their dishes and Southern culinary traditions. The restaurant's favorites have been adjusted for the home cook and include fine innovations ranging form Salmon Choucroute in Creamy Mustard Sauce to Roasted Duck Breast with Sun-Dried Cherry Conserve. Color photos pepper and finish the presentation.

What People Are Saying

Jasper White
Ben and Karen add their own style and passion to the traditional and not so ingredients of North Carolina, creating very tasty food that is, at once, unique and familiar--a rare achievement.
—(Jasper White, author of Lobster at Home, 50 Chowders, and Cooking from New England)


Jean Anderson
Thank heavens Ben and Karen Barker settled in North Carolina's Research Triangle after graduating from New York's Culinary Institute of America, and thank heavens they opened Magnolia Grill, arguably the South's top restaurant, and thank heavens they've written their own cookbook at long last! The Barkers' intrepid teaming of ingredients, their new spins on old Southern classics, have won Magnolia Grill award after award after award. Their new cookbook brims with the dishes that made them famous and proves how very innovative these two chefs are. Yet the home cook will find their recipes altogether approachable and that's rare in a restaurant cookbook!.
—(Jean Anderson, author of The American Century Cookbook)


Tom Campbell
Tom Campbell, Regulator Bookshop
We're incredibly lucky to run a bookstore just three blocks from the Magnolia Grill. Over the years we've had a number of important author appearances at our store that have adjourned to wonderful late night dinners at "The Grill." I remember a spirited evening when Peter Mayle (author of A Year in Provence) kept ordering more and more appetizers, glasses of wine and desserts so everyone would have a chance to share the marvelous tastes. And then there was the dinner with Martin Amis, when a couple of the folks who had been at the reading sent over a bottle of champagne to our table. I thought that kind of thing only happened to Humphrey Bogart in the movies! Editors from New York have taken to accompanying their major authors on their visits to our store, and it's clearly not just the Regulator that draws them down here.


Elizabeth Terry
An enchanting book with all of the sunny flavors of the South clearly presented by this superbly creative culinary couple.
—(Elizabeth Terry, Executive Chef, Elizabeth on 37th, and author of Savannah Seasons)


Rick Bayless
Ben and Karen Barker give me hope that, in this world of processed, impersonal meals, we won't forget what real food tastes like. They remind us that each locale still has its own special savor and charm, but you have to tune in. Put your finger on the pulse of what a community eats, as the Barkers have, and you know that vital regional food is necessary if our culture is going to thrive. This book isn't just about a couple of chefs' creativity (though there's certainly a wonderful dose of artistry in these pages), rather it's about their commitment to tradition made new for their generation.
—(Rick Bayless, author of Rick Bayless's Mexican Kitchen, and Chef/Owner, Frontera Grill/Topolobampo)


Emeril Lagasse
Ben and Karen Barker are the King and Queen of Flavor, which is truly the soul of Magnolia Grill.
—(Chef)


Robert H. Kinhead Jr.
Robert H. Kinkead Jr., Executive Chef/Owner, Kinkead's
Ben and Karen Barker are a one-two punch of cooking talent. Ben's menus are always creative and vibrant, and his cooking is precise, full flavored, and exciting. It's always a treat to eat at Magnolia Grill. Karen's desserts are delicious and accessible home style American cooking taken to its highest form.


Frank Stitt
Frank Stitt, Chef/Owner, Highlands and Bottega
Cooking southern food with a new outlook, classical technique and passion for the finest ingredients applied with intellect and humor is the cooking of Ben and Karen Barker. They epitomize a loving couple who inspire and balance one another. Together they create some of the most flavorful and complex foods, not only in the South, but nationwide.




Table of Contents:
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Tar Heel Tapas, Dixie Delights, and a Few Cocktails
2. Soups
3. Appetizers
4. Entrees
5. Side Dishes, Relishes, and Breads
6. Desserts
7. Pantry Basics
Sources
Index

Read an Excerpt

Introduction

There is very little pretense to Magnolia Grill. Housed in a flat-roofed brick building on the periphery of an old residential area in one direction and an active business district in the other, it most resembles a truck stop of a "certain" age. We have always loved the contrast in image this creates: relaxed, a bit offbeat, lacking in some of the accoutrements usually considered typical of fine dining establishments (crystal, silver, fine china). Designed on a shoestring budget, the interior of the Grill has not changed much over the years. While paint and new upholstery freshen things up periodically, we've maintained the simple feeling of a breezy, open veranda. We are a neighborhood bistro whose neighborhood has grown.

The history of our building has always been linked to food. Originally constructed as a small independent grocery store, it was utilized for that purpose for the bulk of its existence until it became our restaurant in 1986. That link has ultimately driven our approach to the food we prepare and the style of business we operate.

The Grill is a mom-and-pop operation; we continue to be very hands-on about running the restaurant. Over the years, our menu has grown in complexity, and we now serve more people in an evening then we once imagined possible. The restaurant continues to evolve, but our goal has remained constant--to feature food we love complemented by wonderful wine in a gracious and welcoming atmosphere. We've always been very fortunate in having an incredible staff that executes this vision. It takes a great deal of dedication, attention to detail, and hard work to achieve this. Distinctive restaurants have their own personalities, and we've always felt that the Magnolia "family" is the real soul of our restaurant.

People are always asking us to categorize our food. In response, we've found it difficult to reduce what we do to a three-word sound bite. We look for ingredients that are innately good and seek to present them in ways that accentuate their good qualities. Our presentations are generally straightforward, reveling in the look of the food itself and how it tastes. Our motto, "not afraid of flavor," is typified by dishes that are bold and exciting, often featuring layers of flavors, contrasts in temperature, and textural foils, with honest, gutsy appeal. If something is "not afraid," one can definitely taste all the advertised flavors, but the dish will taste balanced. It will remain interesting to eat from the first bite to the last. Our cooking has principally been based on regional ingredients of the best quality; while not always intrinsically Southern, our cuisine bespeaks a Southern sensibility. While we've never had "specials" or "signature dishes," thematic representations reappear as the seasonal ebb and flow dictates the evolution of our cooking.

If there has been a single defining influence on our cooking, it has been the ingredients we use and our interaction with the network of growers from whom we get them. Our local farmers' market in Carrboro has been a wonderful source of inspiration, renewal, emphatic delineation of the seasonal cadence, and--not least--enduring friendships. Since its inception nearly twenty years ago, the market and the number of vendors selling there have grown; the requirement that all growers be from within a thirty-mile radius of the market and sell only what they themselves have produced gives it a distinct regional feel.

If you have a local farmers' market, use it to your advantage. Go early for the best selection. Make an initial walk-through to see what catches your eye, and then let the ingredients create your menu, in the most spontaneous sense. You'll find varieties of vegetables not available in a traditional supermarket, grown for their flavor and not for their ability to be shipped long distances. There is an extraordinary immediacy to food that is grown and picked for you, an opportunity to interact with the farmer that integrates you into the process of bringing the food to the table. Once you employ this approach in your shopping, you'll find you have greater command of your meal planning. Purchasing based on the quality and appeal of the ingredients will yield more gratifying end results and a more natural, satisfying style of cooking.

We cannot overemphasize the importance of using the finest ingredients available to you. Sometimes the difference between a home rendering of a restaurant's recipe and the professional's version is not in the skill of the cook but in the quality of the ingredients. We spend a great deal of time securing the food upon which our menu is based. Just as we have worked to develop ongoing relationships with all our suppliers, you should get to know your local butcher, wine purveyor, fishmonger, and cheese specialist as well. In restaurant lingo, if you are a regular customer, they will "hook you up"--meaning you'll be more likely to receive a superior product, good advice, and excellent service. OTHER CONTENT:A recipe from Chapter 6. Desserts®MDNMЇ

The Chef's Favorite Lemon Tart
Makes 1 10 1/2-inch tart; serves 8 to 12

The chef's favorite lemon tart is a somewhat sophisticated take on Southern-style lemon chess pie. This simple tart really is one of Ben's favorite desserts and has been a standard in Karen's repertoire for close to 20 years.

We most often serve this with a mixture of seasonal berries and lightly whipped cream. You can substitute a simple raspberry sauce made from frozen raspberries if it is not fresh berry season.

Ingredients for the Tart Shell

1 1/4 cups + 2 tablespoons flour 1 tablespoon + 1 teaspoon sugar
1/8 teaspoon salt
8 tablespoons cold unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
1 large egg yolk, beaten with 1 tablespoon milk
1 egg white, lightly beaten, reserved for baking

Ingredients for the Filling

4 eggs
1 1/2 cups sugar
1/2 cup orange juice
1/2 cup lemon juice
zest of 1 lemon, grated
zest of 1 orange, grated
1/4 cup heavy cream

Ingredients for Service

fresh berries
whipped cream

Preparation for the Tart Shell
1. In a food processor, pulse together the flour, sugar, and salt. Add the butter and pulse until the mixture resembles coarse meal. Add the egg yolk mixture and pulse just until the dough can be gathered into a ball. Flatten into a 6-inch disc, wrap in plastic, and chill several hours or overnight. Let the dough soften slightly at room temperature before rolling.

2. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. On a lightly floured surface, roll the dough into a 13-inch round. Fit the dough into a 10 1/2-inch tart pan with a removable bottom. Trim the dough flush with the rim and freeze the tart shell until firm.

3. Line the shell with foil or parchment, and fill with pie weights, rice, or dried beans. Bake for 20 minutes until set. Remove the foil and weights and bake an additional 10 to 15 minutes until lightly golden. Remove the shell from the oven and immediately brush the hot pastry with the egg white.

Hint: When rolling tart pastry, always save all the dough scraps in case you need them to repair a crack in a partially baked shell. If the pastry "bubbles up" during the baking process, gently prick the pastry with a fork to release air bubbles. Check several times and repeat if necessary. The egg white serves to seal the pastry, which is especially helpful with a liquid filling such as this. It is essential that there be no cracks or holes visible in the partially baked shell. Make any necessary repairs prior to filling.

Preparation for the Tart
1. When the pastry is almost done baking, assemble the filling. Whisk together the eggs, sugar, orange juice, lemon juice, lemon zest, and orange zest and cream till smooth. Transfer the tart shell to the oven. Place the filling in a pitcher and slowly pour into the shell as high as possible without overfilling. There might be a bit of filling left over.

2. Bake the tart for approximately 25 minutes, until the filling is barely set. Check the tart after 20 minutes and keep checking it every few minutes after that. It is crucial to not overbake this filling!

3. Cool to room temperature before serving with berries and whipped cream.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Food Lovers Guide to Massachusetts or Soup Suppers

Food Lovers' Guide to Massachusetts: Best Local Specialties, Markets, Recipes, Restaurants, Events, and More

Author: Patricia Harris

Looking for a Berkshire-made blue cheese to complement your fine wine? In search of the absolute best seafood shack on the Massachusetts coast? Want to sample the wares at a maple sugaring farm or prepare an authentic nineteenth-century New England dinner? Let seasoned food writers Patricia Harris and David Lyon bring you the inside scoop on the best places to find, enjoy, and celebrate the foods of the Bay State. From North Shore steamers and linguica to chocolate stout cake and Westport Macomber, a bounty of culinary delights awaits you in this engagingly written guide.
Each Food Lovers' guide features: Local producers of regional delicacies; specialty food shops; farmers' markets and farm stands; one-of-a-kind restaurants and landmark eateries; food festivals and culinary events; the best regional recipes; a sampling of the regions' best wineries and brewpubs, and much more.



New interesting book: The Long Road Home or Leap of Faith

Soup Suppers: More than 100 Main-Course Soups and 40 Accompaniments

Author: Arthur Schwartz

Healthful, practical, and economical, soup as a main course is a natural for the way people eat today. In Soup Suppers, Arthur Schwartz provides everything you need to know to turn a simple soup into a sensational meal.

His chapters are conveniently organized by main ingredient and feature recipes that offer something for everyone. Here are new recipes for soups from around the world as well as favorites from just around the block, all made equally accessible to American cooks and their kitchens. Here you will find everything from simple, homey dishes like Chicken Gumbo, Fresh Tomato Soup, and Chili con Carne to such adventuresome departures from the everyday as Porcini, Potato, and Barley Soup; Thai Shrimp Soup; and Moroccan Harira with Chick-peas.

In addition to the soups themselves, Arthur Schwartz provides recipes for accompaniments--breads, salads, appetizers, and desserts--that make his already hearty soups complete meals. Bruschetta, Popovers, and Walnut Onion Muffins are easy to prepare and delicious on the side of a soup, as are healthy recipes for Celery and Parmesan Salad, Marinated Mushrooms, and String Beans with Garlic and Sesame Oil. There is no better way to end a meal than with Arthur Schwartz's recipes for desserts, including Oatmeal Lace Cookies, Blueberry Apple Crumble, and Swedish Almond Cake.

Presented in the relaxed and friendly manner for which Arthur Schwartz is known, Soup Suppers offers a versatile and satisfying, wholesome and hearty approach to home-cooked meals.

Jean Anderson

Like Arthur Schwartz, I come 'from a serious soup-making, soup-eating family'. But I must say, the Scotch Broth and Corn Chowder I was weaned on pale beside this colorful collection, which includes some superb-sounding Russian and Middle Eastern soups I've never heard of. Arthur makes them all sound so easy, so delicious, I can't wait to haul out the soup kettle. Soup Suppers is one cookbook that is going to end up with plenty of smudges and spatters—the ultimate compliment!

Alice Waters

Soup Suppers is an enormously enticing book, an inspiration for cooking easy, inexpensive, and nourishing meals with seasonal ingredients. This is the way I want to cook for my family and friends.

Julie Sahni

Why do I love Soup Suppers like I do? First and foremost, it is by Arthur Schwartz, whose no-nonsense palate knows what good tastes like. Second ... there is no second!

Library Journal

Schwartz, author of What To Cook When You Think There's Nothing in the House To Eat ( LJ 12/91), is a New York City food critic and radio host. Here he offers 100 hearty, satisfying soups and stews, along with 50 or so recipes for accompaniments from breads and appetizers to desserts. James Peterson's impressive Splendid Soups ( LJ 9/15/93) with some 400 recipes is the undisputed first choice, but Schwartz's more homey compendium is recommended for most collections. BOMC selection.



Friday, January 23, 2009

PlumpJack Cookbook or League of Our Own

PlumpJack Cookbook: Great Meals for Good Living

Author: Jeff Morgan

A beautiful cookbook sure to appeal to anyone who relishes the good things in life—full of the elegantly earthy fare that has made PlumpJack’s restaurants some of the most popular and highly acclaimed in Northern California

The PlumpJack name is synonymous with great wine, delicious food, and fine living. Its Napa Valley winery produces top-rated Cabernet. Its eight restaurants—including Balboa Cafe, PlumpJack Cafe, and Jack Falstaff—have won renown in the great dining capital of San Francisco, as well as in the Napa Valley wine country and the world class ski destination of Squaw Valley. Its resorts in Napa and Squaw Valley are ranked among the most luxurious in the country.

Now The PlumpJack Cookbook brings together the most coveted recipes from all eight restaurants in a book that captures the allure and down-to-earth sophistication of everything PlumpJack and features:

• 75 favorite recipes, including the famous Balboa Burger, as well as Roasted Squash Soup with Sage, Crab Cakes with Avocado Salsa, Goose Breast with Red Wine Gravy and Wild Rice, and Bananas Foster Brioche Pudding

• stunning color photographs that spotlight the alluring dishes and the restaurants’ beautiful Northern California locations

• wine recommendations as well as wine-buying tips and a guide to wine-and-food pairing

• a foreword by PlumpJack founder Gavin Newsom, now mayor of San Francisco and, according to Newsweek, one of the five rising stars of the Democratic Party

Publishers Weekly

Inspired by a popular collection of Northern California restaurants, a wine shop, two hotels and a winery (all under the umbrella of PlumpJack-a name taken from Queen Elizabeth nickname for Jack Falstaff, a Shakespearean character), this extremely eclectic cookbook features 75 recipes for the PlumpJack group's greatest hits. This book by Morgan, a Napa-based food and wine writer, also includes a discussion of wine and unpretentious suggestions for wine pairings with most dishes. The recipes range from Boon Fly Donuts to Chicken Liver Flan Cr me Caramel with Apple "Caviar." A recipe for an elaborate appetizer of Beef Carpaccio with Lemon Aioli, Truffle Oil, and Asparagus Salad is just a few pages away from a recipe for a simple tortilla soup. The seafood chapter has a recipe for fish tacos as well as one for Grilled Halibut with Orange Fennel Puree, Asparagus, and Warm Quinoa Salad. Balboa Cafe regulars will be pleased to have instructions for preparing the famed Balboa Burger, while ambitious dinner party hosts might want to take on Lamb Shanks in Red Wine with Pomegranate/Mint Gremolata, Green Beans, and Chickpeas. There are a few desserts, too, including Chocolate Cognac Truffles and Balboa Cafe's Peanut Butter Cookies. (Nov.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

PlumpJack began in 1992 as a small wine shop in San Francisco's Cow Hollow neighborhood. Today, it is a restaurant group with seven cafes and restaurants, a winery, and two hotels, one in Napa Valley and the other near Lake Tahoe. The restaurants, which range from casual to elegant, serve "wine-friendly dishes," and they have always kept the wine prices low. Morgan, a food and wine writer, begins the group's first book with a brief history and a wine primer before presenting 75 recipes from the various eateries. There are wine selections for each dish and numerous color photographs throughout. Recommended for area libraries and others where restaurant cookbooks are popular. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.



Read also Geschäfts- und Berufsethos für Direktoren, Manager, und Buchhalter

League of Our Own: From Blue Jeans to Ball Gowns: All-Occasion Recipes from the Rockwall Women's League

Author: Rockwall Womens League Staff

This all occasion book, assembled with quick and easy favorites along with more challenging culinary trends, appeals to all levels of expertise. Whether in blue jeans barbequing a casual feast or in ball gowns adding finishing touches to a grand presentation, our treasured fares will put you in a league of your own.



Thursday, January 22, 2009

Best of Mennonite Fellowship Meals or Culinary Concepts

Best of Mennonite Fellowship Meals

Author: Phyllis Pellman Good

Favorite recipes to share with friends at home or at church. More than 800 recipes ranging from Sweet and Sour Baked Beans to Potluck Fondue, from Seven Layer Salad to Tarragon Mushrooms, from Amish Vanilla Pie to Tapioca Dessert, from Sloppy Joes to Chicken with Ginger, and from Homemade Rolls to Native Bannock.

This practical, easy-to-use cookbook is full of recipes which may be made without elaborate preparation. It contains ideas for finger foods, one-dish meals, health-conscious cooks, cross-cultural dishes, and small recipes for entertaining at home, as well as a few recipes large enough to serve several hundred people. All from the kitchens of a people known for their delectable cooking.



Table of Contents:
Table of Contents
Food for Fellowship

We have observed the growth of a wonderful practice in many Mennonite congregations during the last several years-the church fellowship meal! Where we once invited "company" home for Sunday dinner, today we are more likely to share a carry-in lunch in the church fellowship hall after morning worship.

It's a custom worth fostering, we believe, especially when we see so little of each other apart from Sunday morning. Furthermore, it seems more appropriate to relax in the spirit of community rather than to be entertained by one starring (and probably tense and exhausted!) cook.

Familiar Favorites

Collected here are favorite recipes from Mennonite fellowship meals, offered by the cooks who prepare them. "People ask me to bring this," some explained with gentle pride. "I love watching people go for this dish," or "I take this because I never have any leftovers," admitted others!

A Multi-Cultural Event

Food fuels friendships and begins to undo prejudices. In that spirit, this book contains favorite dishes from the many food traditions which are now part of the Mennonite family of faith. In some places throughout North America, Mennonite fellowship meals are multi-cultural events, reflecting the make-up of their congregations. Experiment with the Lao, Chinese, Belizean, Mexican, Native-American and African-American dishes that are part of this collection.

For Eating at Home

Not only are all these recipes fellowship meal favorites, they also feed family and friends equally well at home. One note if you prepare these dishes for eating at home-the number of servings included with each recipe assumes the traditional bounty of a fellowship meal. Consequently, we have assumed more servings per recipe than is likely to be adequate for home use.

About Titling Recipes

While most Mennonite cooks take pride in the food they fix, they are also a modest lot. We took one liberty as editors that may challenge the humility of a few who submitted recipes to us: in some cases we included the name of the submitter in the title of the recipe, in an effort to distinguish it from similar surrounding recipes. (We figured that was in keeping with our tradition of crediting the maker of a favorite dish by the name we give it-"Aunt Anna May's Snickerdoodles," for example.) We do apologize if we have embarrassed anyone with this decision.

If You're in Charge

In the interest of easing your planning for a fellowship meal we have included a chapter about overcoming common hurdles-what to do when your oven space is limited; what if there are too few electrical outlets; how to overcome tight quarters for eating.

If You Don't Know What to Make

To give you inspiration when you've been asked to bring finger food, when you're looking for something children will enjoy or when you want to make an unusual dish, we offer special indexes at the back of the book to those categories, plus several others.
May you find this food delectable and nourishing, not only for your bodies, but for your friendships and families also. There is incomparable warmth in eating together. This is food for fellowship. Thank you, countless cooks, for offering your best dishes so bountifully!

--Phyllis Pellman Good and Louise Stoltzfus

Book review: The Sivananda Companion to Meditation or Diabetes Handbook

Culinary Concepts: 100 Recipes and Tips for the Home Chef

Author: Judith Baigent

Culinary Concepts: An Extraordinary Cooking School provides 100 simple, yet delicious recipes as well as menu suggestions and cooking and preparation techniques that make it easy to prepare the perfect meal. Recipes include hors d'oeuvres, soups, salads, vegetables, seafood, chicken, meats, and desserts and are the favorites of the students who attend the Culinary Concepts cooking school. The school teaches a wide variety of classes for everybody from children to serious home chefs, with meals ranging from backyard barbecues to elegant events. With no particular food style, each teaching chef brings his or her own cooking specialties and many of the recipes taught have international appeal.
Culinary Concepts' main goal is to make time spent in the kitchen totally rewarding, and to help people find joy and satisfaction in cooking and in dining with friends or family once they're through. Growing up in Nelson, New Zealand, Judith Baigent attributes her love of cooking to the fun and fragrant memories of times spent in her grandmother's welcoming kitchen. Sharing food was family time spent together, whether growing and harvesting it from the backyard garden or preserving harvested fruits and berries for the winter. After time spent training in the culinary arts in Europe, Judith moved to Los Angeles for three years before gratefully moving to Tucson. She has two children, Timothy and Angela, as well as two grandchildren. Culinary Concepts is located in Plaza Palomino, 2930 N. Swan Road, Tucson, Arizona. Check out the website at culinaryconcepts.net.

Steven G. Fullwood - Library Journal

The best thing about Culinary Concepts-besides its perky name-is that it represents the best of what cookbooks should offer: a sumptuous variety of easy-to-follow recipes by someone who knows the way around the kitchen, inside and out, and isn't afraid to take you to your best chef self. That person is Baigent, the owner of Culinary Concepts (CC), a highly interactive cooking school located in Tucson, AZ, where students offer their own styles and specialties to share with others in a 1300-square-foot classroom. This is a unique cookbook filled to the brim with CC's students' favorite recipes, taking Baigent's creative "collective" sensibilities that much further. Here nascent chefs will find tools: a key for terminology (e.g., blend, simmer, julienne) and all the basics for creating appetizers and meals for one or many. The book's colorful design and mouthwatering photographs of prepared dishes are among its best features. For soups and salads, vegetables and meat dishes, this volume is sure to be referenced for years to come. Recommended for medium and large collections.



Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Good Home Cookbook or Southern Homecoming Traditions

Good Home Cookbook: More than 1000 Classic American Recipes

Author: Richard J Perry

Hearkening back to the days before "low-fat" and "low-carb" took the fun out of food, The Good Home Cookbook features more than 1,000 recipes from the days when comfort food wasn't the latest trend, but a way of life. From a massive collection of vintage cookbooks, including heirloom family recipe books, Richard J. Perry selected dishes that represent the true staples of American cuisine. Then, to see how the recipes changed over the years, they were cross-referenced with later cookbooks. Ingredients and techniques were "averaged" across regions and decades and finally, in a unique public testing program, sent to hundreds of home cooks in all 50 states. The recipes were tested, retested — without fancy stoves or exotic equipment — and meticulously evaluated until each was perfect: a wholesome, delicious American classic in keeping with today's tastes, but never straying from its honest, blue-plate beginnings.



Books about: Gestion du Changement D'organisation :une Approche de Perspectives Multiple

Southern Homecoming Traditions: Recipes and Remembrances

Author: Carolyn Quick Tillery

With her acclaimed historical cookbooks, such as The African-American Heritage Cookbook, Carolyn Quick Tillery has become the premier chronicler of the stories, traditions, and triumphs of our nation's great African-American academic institutions. Her books are sumptuous feasts that combine the ingredients of personal and collective history with archival photographs and hundreds of traditional and modern recipes. The results are as inspiring as they are mouthwatering-must-haves for home and school libraries as much as for kitchen bookshelves.

Southern Homecoming Traditions focuses on the food and history of one of America's most influential institutions, the Atlanta University Center, an affiliation of six schools- Morehouse, Spelman and Morris Brown Colleges, Clark-Atlanta University, Interdenominational Theological Center, and Morehouse School of Medicine-that constitute the largest, historically black educational complex in the world. For more than a century, these schools have gathered in one place the best and brightest of black America, including many of our nation's greatest civil rights leaders, such as Martin Luther King, Jr., Ralph Abernathy, Julian Bond, W.E.B. DuBois, Dr. Benjamin E. Mays, Whitney Young, Marian Wright Edelman, and Ruby Doris Smith Robinson. The region also brought us a memorable cuisine that evokes all the tastes and flavors of a Southern home. From traditional dishes that are making a welcome comeback (Chicken and Waffles), to modern dishes and drinks (Jamaican Chicken, Georgia Peach Champagne Punch), to "forgotten soul foods" that are in danger of being lost forever (Smoked Turkey Neck and Collard Greens, "Chitlins" and Hog Maws), these recipescapture the aromas and emotions of the black experience, past and present.

A melting pot of speeches, songs, stories, and photographs, Southern Homecoming Traditions pays tribute to African-Americans who, instead of waiting for a seat at our nation's table, made that table bigger. Enhanced by inspiring African proverbs ("Teach a woman and you teach a nation") and touching remembrances, this is both a food lover's delight and a joyous living history of black America's continuing influence on American cuisine and culture.

Library Journal

Part of a series about prominent black learning institutions, Tillery's new title is as much a history book as it is a cookbook. It focuses on the Atlanta University Center, which encompasses Morehouse and Spelman Colleges as well as three other historic colleges and Clark-Atlanta University. The book opens with a brief but good introduction to Atlanta's history, from the Civil War through the Civil Rights Movement. Separate chapters on the various colleges-which include minibiographies of their presidents and notable alumni-are interspersed with recipe chapters, which include both down-home Southern favorites and more contemporary dishes. The recipe head notes are informative and readable, and period photographs and other memorabilia provide further context. Highly recommended. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.



Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Feast of Soups or Only Texas Cookbook

Feast of Soups

Author: Jacqueline Heriteau

A comprehensive smorgasboard of over 500 international soup recipes for any and all occasions—from first course to main course and even dessert. Jacqueline Heriteau, renowned author of thirty cookbooks brings together her rich heritage of favorite family recipes and her own inventiveness, to create a feast of mouth-watering recipes, satisfying menu ideas, and delicious, delightful soups.



New interesting textbook: Un metodo empirico a sviluppo di organizzazione

Only Texas Cookbook

Author: Linda West Eckhardt

This cookbook is an exciting patchwork collection of authentic recipes as varied as the ethnic makeup of Texas.



Sunday, January 18, 2009

Zone Meals in Seconds or All about Chicken

Zone Meals in Seconds: 150 Fast and Delicious Recipes for Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner

Author: Barry Sears

A quick, easy, family-friendly cookbook for the millions of Zone households around the world.

Millions of people worldwide have discovered the incredible weight-loss and health benefits of living in the Zone. For almost 10 years, Lynn and Barry Sears have maintained a completely Zone-friendly kitchen. With two daughters - one a finicky first-grader and one a vegetarian teenager - Lynn has had to use all of her creative and culinary skills to keep her family healthy and happy. Zone Meals in Seconds combines Lynn's hard-won wisdom and valuable experience with Barry's Zone expertise and medical knowledge in the first-ever family-friendly Zone book. From quick and easy family dinner recipes and snack tips, to advice on packing school lunches and surviving backyard barbecues, this book is a must-have for people who want to experience the incredible benefits of the Zone but need help answering the all-important question, 'What do I eat?'Written with the help of an experienced chef and recipe developer, Zone Meals in Seconds offers more than 200 fast and family-tested recipes for Zone-approved breakfasts, lunches, and dinners.



Interesting book: Análise de Afirmação Financeira

All about Chicken

Author: Irma S Rombauer

The book that taught America how to cook,

now illustrated with glorious color photography

ALL ABOUT

CHICKEN

A fresh and original way to put the classic advice of Joy of Cooking to work -- illustrated and designed in a beautiful and easy-to-use new book.

  • Organized by techinique -- roasting, broiling, baking, braising, grilling, frying, and more

  • More than 100 of Joy's recipes, including the legendary Chicken Fricassee, Chicken Cordon Bleu, and Turned Roasted Chicken

  • Invaluable techniques and tips for buying, storing, preparing, and carving chicken

Sixty years after Irma Rombauer advised new cooks to "Stand facing the stove," America's love affair with Joy of Cooking continues unabated. And why not? Joy in hand, tens of millions of people -- from novices to professionals -- have learned to do everything from make a meat loaf to clean a squid to frost a wedding cake. For decades, Joy of Cooking has taught America how to cook, serving as the standard against which all other cookbooks are judged.

All About Chicken upholds that standard. In the conversational and instructional manner of the flagship book, All About Chicken is organized by technique. Chapters that cover roasting, broiling, baking, sautéing and stir-frying, braising, frying, and grilling chicken incorporate more than 100 of Joy's best-loved recipes -- Casserole Roasted Chicken with Forty Cloves of Garlic to Broiled Lemon Garlic Chicken to Chicken Breasts Baked on Mushroom Caps. You'll also find recipes for a dozen or more stuffings, sauces, marinades,and gravies, as well as techniques for carving, preparing, buying, and storing chicken. Add to that more than 150 original photographs, specially commissioned for this volume, presented in the most easy-to-use design imaginable.

Whether you belong to one of the millions of American households that already own a copy (or two) of Joy, or you have never cracked the spine of a cookbook before, Joy of Cooking: All About Chicken is for you. It is a spectacular achievement, worthy of its name. Joy has never been more beautiful.

The Indispensable Kitchen Resource...

All-New, All-Purpose, and now All-in-Color

Library Journal

The first four titles in a new series, these are spin-offs from The All New All Purpose Joy of Cooking (LJ 10/15/97), the major revision of the old favorite. Unlike the "new Joy" or any previous edition, these are filled with photographs, 100 full-color and 50 black-and-white each. Most of the text and the recipes come directly from the 1997 book, although some of the material has been reorganized, and some new material is included that didn't make it into that edition. (On the other hand, not all the recipes from the chicken chapter, for example, made it into All About Chicken.) The books have a very appealing look, and readers will find the photographs of ingredients, finished dishes, and techniques helpful, but since the 1,136-page Joy is still available for $35, most home cooks may not want to buy these, too. By the same token, they seem great for "borrowing," and libraries are sure to face demand. Strongly recommended. Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.



Table of Contents:
Foreword6
About Chicken8
About Roasted Chicken17
About Broiled Chicken35
About Baked Chicken39
About Sauteed & Stir-Fried Chicken53
About Braised Chicken65
About Fried Chicken87
About Grilled Chicken97
About Flavor Enhancers111
Index126
Acknowledgments128

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Romancing the Stove or Wraps and Rolls

Romancing the Stove: Celebrated Recipes and Delicious Fun for Every Kitchen Goddess

Author: Margie Lapanja

Margie Lapanja believes in awakening all the senses when it comes to eating, and for that matter, pre- and postprandial activities, too. In Romancing the Stove, she shares more than 100 of her favorite recipes along with goddess tales, practical tips, fascinating food facts, and a fine seasoning of quotes. Recipes range from the classic pain perdu — a resourceful solution for bread that would otherwise go stale — to the more unusual Love Apple Linguine, Cookie Dough Pancakes, Mango Tapioca Pudding, and Pumpkin Spice Muffins. This lively tribute to the sensual arts of cooking, loving, and living is illustrated throughout.



See also: The Family Intervention Guide to Mental Illness or Yoga

Wraps and Rolls

Author: Jenni Fleetwood

Wraps are easy to make, delicious to eat and ideal for every occasion, from breakfast on the run to a sophisticated supper with friends and family. Typically healthier and lower in fat and carbs than other snacks and lunches, these delicious easy-to-make creations are also much more exciting and fun to present than the regular sandwich. With easy-to-follow techniques and inspiring photographs, this book of wraps, rolls and parcels is the ideal inspiration and sourcebook for people who want to create food that is both fun to make and great to eat.



Jim Peytons New Cooking from Old Mexico or Sushi

Jim Peyton's New Cooking from Old Mexico

Author: James W Peyton

The sixth cookbook in the Red Crane Cookbook series, and the third by Jim Peyton, Mexican Cuisine introduces nouvelle azteca, a contemporary and richly varied style of fusion cooking. Mexican Cuisine is a comprehensive history of Mexican cooking tracing its development over the last 500 years from Mayan and Aztec to later Arab and Spanish influences. Most of the recipes are from the A list of fine Mexican cooking. Richly illustrated with color food photographs and black and white illustrations.

Los Angeles Times

Jim Peyton's New Cooking from Old Mexico is well-researched and thoroughly delicious. It places the glorious and varied cuisines of Mexico in a context that should appeal to both the food historian and the home cook.

El Restaurante

Jim Peyton's New Cooking from Old Mexico introduces a new world of Mexican cuisine-one that combines traditional peasant and court cooking techniques to create dishes ideal for home and restaurant kitchens.

New Mexico Magazine

New Cooking from Old Mexico, Peyton's third Mexican cookbook, is easily the most impressive effort by the San Antonio-based author and culinary expert. But this isn't simply a cookbook. It's also a meticulously researched and beautifully written account of the evolution of Mexican cooking over the centuries, showing how Indian, Spanish and Moorish influences all have contributed to Mexico's distinctive cuisine



Go to: Procedure pratiche di per la matematica di affari

Sushi

Author: Marlisa Szwillus

40 new recipies and a revised format make this book a much anticipated addition to the popular Quick & Easy series. Master the basics of making sushi at home.... roll up the sleeves, bring out the rice and fresh fish....you'll be an expert in no time!



Friday, January 16, 2009

Leiths Techniques Bible or Delicious Desserts When You Have Diabetes

Leiths Techniques Bible

Author: Susan Spaull

Leiths Techniques Bible is the ultimate cookery reference book. Here is all the information taught during the year-long diploma course at Leith's School of Food and Wine. Learn how to prepare meat and fish, make perfect pastry and bread, as well as equip a kitchen. Understand what makes recipes work and what has happened when they haven't. With answers to every cookery question—from how to make perfect mashed potatoes to making a spun sugar cage—this is an indispensable book for everyone from the novice cook to the experienced chef.



Go to: Soyfoods Cooking for a Positive Menopause or Tomatoes

Delicious Desserts When You Have Diabetes: Over 200 Recipes

Author: Sandy Kapoor

How to prepare and enjoy delightful desserts when you have diabetes People with diabetes often believe that they cannot enjoy rich, delicious-tasting cooking--such as desserts. Professor, chef, and dietitian Sandy Kapoor proves them wrong, showing those who suffer from diabetes how they can fit desserts into a healthy plan of eating. Presenting over 200 mouth-watering recipes that anyone will enjoy, Kapoor teaches the reader to use healthy dessert cooking techniques and ingredients to transform high-fat, high-cholesterol, and high-sugar desserts into scrumptious healthy versions.
Sandy Kapoor, PhD, RD, FADA (San Marino, CA), is a trained chef from the Culinary Institute of America, a registered dietitian, and a Fellow of the American Dietetic Association. She is the author of Professional Healthy Cooking (Wiley: 0-471-53839-6) and Healthy and Delicious:400 Professional Recipes (Wiley: 0-471-31877-9).



Harvest for Hope or A Survival Guide for Culinary Professionals

Harvest for Hope: A Guide to Mindful Eating

Author: Jane Goodall

With a firm but gentle touch, Dr. Goodall paints a global landscape in which corporations own the rainwater, patent the earth's seeds, and produce mysterious "Frankenfoods." Offering her hopeful, stirring vision, she introduces us to inspiring everyday heroes like a third-generation farmer who battled Monsanto and won; French activists who protest against genetically modified crops; and John Mackey, the founder of whole foods, who has vowed to sell only ethically raised animal products. Most valuable of all, Goodall offers simple strategies yo foster a sustainable society. By eating organic, shopping at farmer's markets, and taking other mindful measures, we can all do our part to reclain our food, our health, and our planet. And we must start now.

Publishers Weekly

Goodall, best known for her decades of work with chimpanzees and baboons, turns to the social significance of the food people eat and of how it reaches our tables. In a style that's both persuasive and Pollyannaish, her guide glides through a quick history of early agriculture, despairs of "death by monoculture" (single-crop farming), warns of the hazards of genetically modified foods and of the disappearance of seed diversity, and bemoans the existence of inhumane animal factories and unclean fish farms-the macro concerns of the environmentally conscious. On a more micro level, she focuses on what individuals can do for themselves. In a grab bag of well-intentioned bromides, Goodall counsels her readers to become vegetarians, celebrates restaurants and grocery stores that seek out locally grown produce, frets about the quality of school lunches and the pervasiveness of fast food-fueled obesity, honors small farmers and warns of a looming water crisis. Most chapters conclude with "what you can do" sections: demand that modified foods be labeled; turn off the tap while brushing your teeth. This book about making healthy choices breaks no new ground, but its jargon-free and anecdote-rich approach makes it a useful primer for grassroots activists, while the Goodall imprimatur could broaden its reach. Agent, Jonathan Lazear. (Nov. 1) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

What People Are Saying

Paul Hawken
"A lucid, anecdote-filled introduction to the world of food, revealing how our food production affects us and how our choices affect the environment...Consider this book the shopping list for you and your children's future."
author of ECOLOGY OF COMMERCE


Alice Waters
"In HARVEST FOR HOPE, Jane Goodall convinces us that we should have a new relationship with food, one that is inspiring and delicious, at the same time a preservation of tradition and an act of conservation."
author of CHEZ PANISSE FRUIT and CHEZ PANISSE VEGETABLES


Bill McKibben
"Thrice a day you get the chance to change the planet. You can change it in significant ways, if you follow just some of this book's wise advice."
author of WANDERING HOME: A Long Walk Across America's Most Hopeful Landscape


John Robbins
"If you want to be newly awakened to the joy of eating, to the miracle of food, and to the power each of us has by the way we live our lives, do yourself a favor. Read a copy of HARVEST FOR HOPE. I promise you: your life will change in countless ways, all of them for the better... One of those rare truly great books that can change the world."
author of THE FOOD REVOLUTION and DIET FOR A NEW AMERICA


Deborah Madison
"If you haven't thought much about the food you eat and the choices you make (and even if you have), this is an important book to read!"
author of VEGETARIAN COOKING FOR EVERYONE and LOCAL FLAVORS: COOKING AND EATING FROM AMERICA'S FARMERS MARKETS


Frances Moore Lappй
"I love this book! Jane Goodall's generous, playful spirit imbues every fascinating page. HARVEST FOR HOPE is full of mind-expanding observations..a personal, tender wake-up call telling us that we can reclaim the wisdom of our bodies."
author of HOPE'S EDGE and DIET FOR A SMALL PLANET




New interesting textbook: Gotti Diet or Dr Golem

A Survival Guide for Culinary Professionals

Author: Karen Levin

Well Done! A Survival Guide for Culinary Professionals is a lively, easy-to-read book that is full of anecdotes and useful information for the busy student or professional. With tips from culinary professionals on everything from organization to stress management to owning your own restaurant, this is one book busy students and professionals won?t want to be without.



Thursday, January 15, 2009

Creams Confections and Finished Desserts or Celebrate with Chocolate

Creams, Confections, and Finished Desserts, Vol. 2

Author: Alain Escoffier

The first two sections of Volume 2 are devoted to basic creams and basic confections, which, together with the basic doughs in Volume 1 provide a complete overview of the fundamental pastry recipes and techniques. The second section presents a variety of finished desserts that are based on the basic doughs, creams, and confections.



New interesting textbook: Taste of America or Cocina de Cuaresma

Celebrate with Chocolate: Totally Over-the-Top Recipes

Author: Marcel Desaulniers

He's the champion of chocolate. The king of cocoa. The guru of ganache. He's Marcel Desaulniers, award-winning cookbook author and chef-owner of Williamsburg, Virginia's renowned restaurant, The Trellis. And he's back with a whole new collection of festive recipes that turn any day into a holiday in Celebrate With Chocolate.

Whether you want a romantic cake for two, a "Big-Ass" cake for twenty, cookies, pies, or anything in between, Marcel will show you the way. In Celebrate With Chocolate, he takes you to the outer limits of the chocolate universe, with over-the-top combinations that are surprisingly simple to make.

Want something that towers over ordinary chocolate deserts? Try Marcel's "She Ain't Heavy" Chocolate Cake, which stacks three layers of extravagantly light, cocoa-saturated cake, all coated with a smooth cocoa icing. Or for a lunchtime favorite turned sweet treat that satisfies any child from 3 to 103, just pour a glass of milk and check out the Chocolate Peanut Butter and Jelly Sandwich Cookies. Whatever you make, with Marcel's guidance, this book will keep your ever-growing fan club happy.

No holiday is required to Celebrate With Chocolate with Marcel Desaulniers. Just have a true love of chocolate. Don't we all?

Publishers Weekly

There are two kinds of chocolate obsessives: purists, who like their chocolate unadulterated, more black than brown, more bitter than sweet, and would inject it if they could; and decadents, whose jaded palates can be tempted only by chocolate follies of increasing complexity and sophistication. Desaulniers (Death by Chocolate; Death by Chocolate Cakes; and Desserts to Die For) has emerged from the morbid fascination of his previous books with his obsession intact, taking chocolate machismo to new heights. Many consider his first book to be a certifiable chocolate bible, and may wonder where else Desaulniers can go. Whereas Death by Chocolate overpowers (with Chocolate Devastation), his newest amuses (Chocolate-Banana-Rum-Raisin Ice Cream Cakes with Rum and Almond Twinkle). Desaulniers is famous for his ambitious recipes, but this latest book is really most successful at is simplest. Cocoa Yogurt Mousse cannot take more than five minutes to prepare and tastes like a million bucks; Chocolate Madras Cake thrillingly combines dark chocolate with orange zest and a deep cranberry coulis. And despite Desaulniers's almost militant chocoholism, 40 years in the business have given him a voice more humane and interesting than most of the bad-boy cookbook authors in vogue. (Nov.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Desaulniers is the author of an earlier series of "Death by Chocolate" cookbooks, as well as several other dessert books. Here he returns to that favorite ingredient, with indulgent, often extravagant recipes ranging from Dancing Gingerbread Men Peppermint Fudge Cake to Chocolate-Peanut Butter Fusion Brownies. Many of the recipes are complicated, but the instructions are detailed and clear, and there are mouth-watering color photographs of selected showstoppers. For all baking collections. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.



Savoring the Wild or Quick and Easy Low Carb Recipes

Savoring the Wild

Author: Wildlife and Parks Montana Department of Fish

Savoring the Wild contains everything a cook needs to know about preparing delicious meals from a wide variety of wild foods. Over 100 recipes cover big game, small game, fish, upland birds, waterfowl, and edible plants. There's enough diversity so that any cook-from the expert in wild foods to the beginner-will find something new and tantalizing to try. These recipes come from Montana kitchens where wild game has been a staple food for generations.



Read also The Patient from Hell or The Great Physicians Rx for Depression and Anxiety

Quick and Easy Low-Carb Recipes

Author: Joanna Whit

From Spicy Roasted Mushrooms and Broccoli Beef Salad to Shrimp Omelet and Gorgonzola Frittata; from Chicken and Pine Nuts to Maple Pork Medallions; from Mocha Mousse to Lemon Souffle -- you'll find more than 100 delicious and varied recipe options for healthy, low-carbohydrate meals in this book!



Delias Kitchen Garden or Chewy Cookies

Delia's Kitchen Garden: A Beginner's Guide to Growing and Cooking Fruit and Vegetables

Author: Gay Search

Delia Smith has always been concerned with the quality and flavor of the ingredients she uses, and nothing comes fresher than fruit and vegetables straight from the garden. When the opportunity arose for her to work with garden expert Gay Search to create her own kitchen garden, she seized the chance. This guide, with gardening advice by Gay and recipes and advice on cooking the crops from Delia, is for any cook interested in good food, free from pesticides, who wants to try their hand at growing their own. It follows a year in the life of Delia's kitchen garden, with a chapter devoted to each month, and contains detailed advice on sowing and planting, fruit and vegetable varieties, and how to harvest. Lavishly designed with hundreds of color photographs, and with Delia's recipes that use the produce at its peak, this guide is suitable for first-time horticulturists and cooks of all levels.



New interesting textbook: Sokratischer Verkauf: Wie man Die Fragen stellt, Die den Verkauf Bekommen

Chewy Cookies: America's Comfort Food

Author: Eileen E Talanian

Create melt-in-your-mouth cookies everyone will love!

You loved them as a kid. You love them now. Soft and gooey, warm from the oven, chewy cookies rank high on everyone's list of favorite treats. Eileen Talanian, professional baker and Best of Philly winner for Cookies, has compiled an extraordinary collection of irresistible cookie recipes. Packed with over 125 recipes, including:

  • Chewy Chocolate Chunk Cookies
  • Banana Oatmeal Pecan Clusters
  • Chewy Orange Granola Bars
  • Chocolate-Almond Macaroons
  • Chocolate Peppermint Patties
  • Caramel Apple Bars
  • Chocolate Chip Oatmeal Bars
  • Snickerdoodles
  • Peanut Butter Dreams
  • Chewy Chocolate Pixies
  • And many more chewy treats!

Includes step-by-step directions, and chapters on bar cookies, holiday cookies, butter-free macaroons, home-style favorites, and cookies for chocolate lovers.

Find out why her bakery won the Best Cookies award and national acclaim.



Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Top Secret Recipes Lite or Wine Enthusiast Essential Buying Guide 2007

Top Secret Recipes - Lite!

Author: Todd Wilbur

With the new health-consciousness sweeping America, many of us feel we can no longer indulge in the tasty but guilt-inducing foods we grew up with. Todd Wilbur, who made a name for himself by allowing us to clone treats such as Oreos« and Outback Steakhouse« Blooming Onions in our own kitchens, now gives us back our cherished foods with reduced fat and calories. Not only does Wilbur enable us to produce lite versions of Cinnabon« Cinnamon Rolls and Twinkies«, he shows us how to duplicate our favorite Snackwell« and Healthy Choice« products. Top Secret Recipes--Lite! includes recipes for 75 new dishes, complete with Wilbur's helpful diagrams, which call for ingredients easily found at the local supermarket. The newest addition to the Top Secret Recipe franchise is sure to make us not only happier, but healthier.

Judie Choate

If you're like me, when you want to pig out, you want to pig out on the real thing. When Taco Bell calls, I'll take no substitute. However, if you really want to create a low-fat and healthier version of your favorite fast or convenience food, this is the book for you. If a Whopper is not on your list of approved diet foods, try Todd Wilbur's low-cal, low-fat clone and let me know if you really got what you wanted!



See also: Andrew Jackson or The Enduring Debate

Wine Enthusiast Essential Buying Guide 2007: Includes Ratings and Prices for More that 25,000 Wines!

Author: Wine Enthusiast Magazin

and/or stickers showing their discounted price. More about bargain books

Low Salt Cooking or The Over the Hill Party Game Book

Low-Salt Cooking: Over 70 Recipe Provide Healthy and Tasty Solutions to Cooking without Salt

Author: Michelle Berriedale Johnson

This informative book not only has healthy and tasty low-salt recipes, but is packed with tips on avoiding salty foods, understanding nutritional labels, and using alternative flavorings to make sure you palate is stimulated.



Table of Contents:
Introduction6
The Role of Salt in Good Health8
Why We Eat So Much Salt10
High-salt Manufactured Foods12
Reducing the Salt in Your Cooking14
Low-salt Cooking Methods15
Alternative Flavourings16
Menu Planning20
Soups and Starters22
Salads and Vegetable Accompaniments36
Main Meals48
Pasta, Pizza and Grains66
Breads and Baking80
Stocks and Basic Recipes92
Index96

New interesting textbook: The Art of Getting Well or Managing Chronic Illness

The Over the Hill Party Game Book

Author: Courtney Cook

Eight Entertaining Games and Activities to Make Your Over-the-Hill Party Fun

Here's a great way to "break the ice" and get your over-the-hill party off to a fast and funny start. You'll find four group activities and four party games that everyone will enjoy. The games come with duplicate game sheets for eight people.



Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Pancakes Crepes Blitnzes Blinis or Appetizers Starters and Buffet Food

Pancakes, Crepes, Blitnzes & Blinis

Author: Susannah Blak

More than 20 deliciously simple recipes for sweet and savoury batters from blini wraps and fruit-filled crepes to latkes and griddled scones, shown step-by-step in over 125 colour photographs.



Look this: Hollywood Dish or Italian Vegetarian Cooking

Appetizers, Starters and Buffet Food: Fabulous First Courses, Dips, Snacks, Quick Bites And Light Meals: 150 Delicious Recipes Shown In 250 Stunning Photographs

Author: Christine Ingram

Fresh, bright and contemporary, this beautifully designed book shows you how to make the most of appetizers & starters, showcasing over 150 recipes.



My Life in France or All along the Danube

My Life in France

Author: Flo Salant Greenberg

Julia Child singlehandedly created a new approach to American cuisine with her cookbook Mastering the Art of French Cooking and her television show The French Chef, but as she reveals in this bestselling memoir, she was not always a master chef.


Indeed, when she first arrived in France in 1948 with her husband, Paul, who was to work for the USIS, she spoke no French and knew nothing about the country itself. But as she dove into French culture, buying food at local markets and taking classes at the Cordon Bleu, her life changed forever with her newfound passion for cooking and teaching. Julia’s unforgettable story – struggles with the head of the Cordon Bleu, rejections from publishers to whom she sent her now-famous cookbook, a wonderful, nearly fifty-year long marriage that took them across the globe – unfolds with the spirit so key to her success as a chef and a writer, brilliantly capturing one of the most endearing American personalities of the last fifty years.

The New York Times - Alan Riding

The result is a delight. On one level, it's the story of how a "6-foot-2-inch, 36-year-old, rather loud and unserious Californian" — her words — discovered the fullness of life in France. On another, it recounts the making of "Julia Child," America's grande dame of French cooking. Inevitably, the stories overlap.

The Washington Post - Nancy McKeon

And so our last communication from Julia Child can double as a tour book. Quelle joie ! Child couldn't have planned it any better had she tried. Or maybe she was trying to teach us right up to the very end.

Publishers Weekly

Famed chef Child, who died in 2004, recounts her life in France, beginning with her early days at the Cordon Bleu after WWII. Greenberg, an actress for radio and commercials, does a fine job capturing Child's joie de vivre and unmatched skill as a culinary animateur. We hear Child's delight and excitement when she discovers her calling as a writer and hands-on teacher of haute cuisine; her exasperation as yet another publishing house rejects her ever-growing monster of a manuscript; and her joy at its publication and acclaimed reception after more than a decade of work. Child's opinionated exuberance translates remarkably well to audio, from her initial Brahmin-like dismissal of the new medium of television (why would Americans want to waste a perfectly good evening staring into a box, she wondered?) and frustration at her diplomat husband being investigated in the McCarthy-driven 1950s to her ecstasy about roast chicken and mulish insistence on the one correct method to make French bread at home. The seamless abridgment has no jarring gaps or abrupt transitions to mar the listener's enjoyment. Potential listeners should beware, however: this is not a book to hear on an empty stomach. Bon app tit! Simultaneous release with the Knopf hardcover (Reviews, Feb. 13). (Apr.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Begun just months before her death and completed by her grandnephew, this memoir resurrects Julia's early days in France-when she didn't even know how to cook. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

"Ooh, those lovely roasted, buttery French chickens, they were so good and chickeny!" Anyone who remembers the iconic, deceased Julia Child (1912-2004)-or perhaps Dan Aykroyd's affectionate imitation of her-will recognize the singular voice. It's employed in this memoir to full advantage, and to the reader's great pleasure. As relative and writer Prud'homme recalls, at the end of her long life, Child was busily recording her years as a budding chef. In 1948, newly wed, she moved to Paris with her diplomat husband Paul, whom she had met while on wartime duty for the OSS (now there would be a story) in Asia. The first meal she cooked for him, she recalls, was "a disaster," and she arrived in France "a six-foot-two-inch, thirty-six-year-old, rather loud and unserious Californian," but in every aspect of her life, she was determined to do better. With self-effacing humor, Child recalls her efforts at learning French, finding an apartment and coping with life in a different culture. No matter how embarrassing or baffling the course of her learning curve, Child's francophilia and zest for life shine through, and nowhere more than in the pages devoted to her sentimental education at the Cordon Bleu, the world-renowned culinary institute, in whose cramped basement she "learned how to glaze carrots and onions at the same time as roasting a pigeon, and how to use the concentrated vegetable juices to fortify the pigeon flavor, and vice versa," among other talents. Matching her growing skills with a formidable armada of kitchen gadgets that will make cookery-loving readers swoon, she then recounts the difficult conception and extremely difficult birth of her book Mastering the Art of French Cooking,which brought her fame. Charming, idiosyncratic and much fun-just like its author, who is very much alive in these pages. A blessing for lovers of France, food and fine writing. First printing of 150,000; first serial to the New York Times Magazine & Bon Appetit; Book-of-the-Month Book Club main selection; Quality Paperback Book Club alternate selection



New interesting textbook: Império:a Subida e Fim da Ordem Mundial britânica

All along the Danube: Recipes from Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria

Author: Marina Polvay

For novices and gourmets alike, this unique cookbook offers a tantalizing variety of dishes from the shores of the Danube River. Its recipes bring Old World flavor directly into today's kitchen with such cherished favorites as "Weiner Schnitzel," "House Knedliky (Bread Dumplings)," "Hungarian Goulash," "Shrimp Sophya," and "Mititei (Romanian Sausage)." Along with a special chapter, "Christmas Along the Danube," which covers each country's holiday specialties, this cookbook also includes black and white photographs of menus, shots of regional interest, and maps and illustrations throughout. A new appendix provides information on classic Danubian wines -- the perfect complement to any dish from central and southeastern Europe.



Table of Contents:
Acknowledgementsv
Prefacexi
Introduction1
1The Black Forest: The Land of Hansel and Gretel and Cuckoo Clocks5
Appetizers9
Soups12
Salads15
Vegetables17
Fish and Seafood20
Poultry23
Meat24
Side Dishes33
Desserts36
2Austria: Mozart, Schnitzels, and Strudels48
Appetizers56
Soups61
Salads66
Vegetables68
Fish70
Poultry76
Meat79
Side Dishes89
Desserts94
3The Land of the Czechs and the Slovaks105
Appetizers110
Soups112
Salads114
Vegetables116
Fish118
Poultry121
Meat124
Side Dishes132
Desserts135
4The Land of the Magyars143
Appetizers152
Soups156
Salads161
Vegetables163
Fish167
Poultry173
Meat178
Side Dishes186
Desserts190
5Yugoslavia: Crossroads of the Balkans203
Appetizers206
Soups212
Salads214
Vegetables216
Fish218
Poultry221
Meat224
Side Dishes232
Desserts234
6Rumania: The Land of the Delta241
Appetizers244
Soups248
Salads250
Vegetables252
Fish255
Poultry257
Meat261
Side Dishes265
Desserts268
7Bulgaria: The Enigmatic Balkan Land273
Appetizers277
Soups278
Salads281
Vegetables282
Fish286
Poultry289
Meat292
Side Dishes297
Desserts301
8Christmas Along the Danube307
Germany312
Hungary317
Austria321
Czechoslovakia326
Yugoslavia329
Rumania333
Bulgaria335
9Wines Along the Danube337
Index345

Monday, January 12, 2009

Napkins and Napkin Folding or Mini Bar

Napkins and Napkin Folding

Author: Bridget Jones

Professional secrets revealed-includes beautiful napkin folds and table decorations for every entertaining occasion.



New interesting book: White Barn Inn Cookbook or Eaters Guide to Chinese Characters

Mini Bar: Rum: A Little Book of Big Drinks

Author: Mittie Hellmich

Don't let the small size fool you each volume in the Mini Bar series is filled with more than 50 traditional and original recipes that pack a punch. Rum lovers will break out the little umbrellas for Mittie's innovative Frozen Watermelon Daiquiri and Colada Nueva. Each title in this series describes the history and distinct characteristics of its particular alcohol. Small enough to carry on a tropical vacation or stash next to the blender, these little cocktail books are a must-have for the weekend bartender.



Kinkeads Cookbook or Country Tea Parties

Kinkead's Cookbook: Recipes from Washington D. C.'s Premier Seafood Restaurant

Author: Bob Kinkead

BOB KINKEAD is a self-taught chef who began his fine dining career in restaurants throughout New England. He opened Kinkead's in 1993 to immediate critical success. He opened Colvin Run Tavern in Tyson's Corner, Virginia, in 2002. He lives in Washington, D.C.
* More than 120 recipes from Kinkead's, Washington D.C.'s top seafood restaurant.
* Bob Kinkead was the winner of the James Beard Award for Best American Chef, Mid-Atlantic Region.



See also: Thin Commandments Diet or Bodylove

Country Tea Parties

Author: Maggie Stuckey

This month-by-month collection offers interesting and creative ideas for 12 special tea parties, from June's Bridal Shower to a September Hiker's Tea.



Table of Contents:
I. THE TEAS

Herb Tea

How to Make a Perfect Pot of Tea

Spiced Tea

Iced Tea

II. THE TEA PARTIES

Tea Classics

Making Tea Sandwiches

January: Twelfth Night

February: Valentine Tea for Two

March: Breakfast in Bed

April: Easter Brunch

May: Mother's Day

June: Bridal Shower

July: Tea & Roses

August: The Queen's Tea

September: Hiker's Tea

October: Children's Tea

November: Party for a Shut-In

December: Holiday Open House

Bedtime Tea

IndeX

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Ultimate Book of Beer Trivia or Everybody Loves Pizza

Ultimate Book of Beer Trivia

Author: Bill Yenn

What three famous beers are named for hats? What is the world's oldest brew pub? Over 200 questions.



Read also Impact of Geographic Deregulation on the American Banking Industry or Organizational Change in the Community College

Everybody Loves Pizza: The Deep Dish on America's Favorite Food

Author: Penny Pollack

Everybody Loves Pizza is a celebration of America's favorite dish — its history, its versatility, its staying power. It delves into where pizza came from, where it's going, and what it means to American culture. Thanks to food writers, pizza insiders, and ordinary, pizza-loving Americans, it also reveals where to find 540 top-notch pizzas across the country, plus recipes from the familiar (Pepperoni or Barbecue Chicken Pizza) to the adventurous (Shrimp Pizza with Tasso Ham, Goat Cheese, and Spinach or Prosciutto Pear Pizza).