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Loading... The America's Test Kitchen Family Cookbook, Heavy-Duty Revised…by America's Test Kitchen
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This is my all-time favorite recipe book. It's so versatile, everything from appetizers to drinks to desserts to grilling. It's also really easy to understand, with photographs to demonstrate certain things. There aren't a lot of extravagent ingredients or techniques if you don't want them, but some recipes have them if you want a challenge. This cookbook taught me how to cook, AND, we've never eaten a recipe from here we didn't love! I highly recommend it. ( )Peanut butter cookies are too die for! Instructions are clear but often long for most recipes. Wealth of information, though, allows recipes to come out perfectly if somewhat laboriously. Great concept and information. Don't use their crepe recipe - use Julia Child's fool-proof one. The one in this book rips too easily. Hands down, the best cookbook I've ever owned. God bless the Test Kitchen people. I especially like the product reviews and scientific explanations in this book. Ring binder and divider tabs are included with a table of contents for every section. no reviews | add a review
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| Book description |
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Unorthodox, "better-way" approaches abound. For example, a fried chicken formula instructs the cook to wet the bird's dry coating slightly before it's applied for an extra-crunchy crust. Predictably, side bars feature equipment and ingredient evaluations, on bottled salsa, for example; "good food/bad food" photographs show readers what to aim for when producing fare like holiday cookies; and there are tips, charts, and "Cooking 101" sidebars galore. Step-by-step photos offer more direction still.
Though the majority of recipes are sound and yield tempting results, readers poring through the book will note gaffes and curiosities. The recipe for poached eggs, for example, offers the option of extra cooking for "firm yolks" (hard-boiled poached eggs, anyone?) and hamburgers receive an indentation before cooking to avoid "puffy" domed burgers, a novel problem that could, in any case, be solved by proper shaping. The addition of sugar to some savory dishes--for example, a pan sauce for steak--is misguided. Readers should also know that the book, which comes in loose-leaf form, requires some assembly, and that the pages themselves are quite thin, making them vulnerable to spills and tearing in daily kitchen use.
These things said, the book delivers solid, family-friendly dishes with enough fully orchestrated "how-to" to make even novice cooks feel secure when tackling the basics or more ambitious fare. --Arthur Boehm
Amazon.com Exclusive
Read a letter, written exclusively for Amazon.com, from Christopher Kimball, host of America's Test Kitchen and founder and editor of Cook's Illustrated magazine, as he talks about the years-in-the-making new project, America's Test Kitchen Family Cookbook--an 800-pages-plus collection with 1,200 classic recipes.
Exclusive Recipe Excerpts from America's Test Kitchen Family Cookbook

French Onion Soup


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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:04 -0400)
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