An essential guide to perfect food preparation includes little-known secrets from the combined kitchen experimentation of the executive editor of Cook's Illustrated and a test kitchen director at Cook's Magazine, as well as 175 delicious recipes.
PAM ANDERSON is the author of the best-selling The Perfect Recipe, Perfect Recipes for Having People Over, and the New York Times bestseller The Perfect Recipe for Losing Weight and Eating Great. She has been the food columnist for USA Weekend for the last eight years, is a contributing chef to Fine Cooking and Runners World, and writes a weekly blog for the Asheville (North Carolina) Citizen-Times.
My rating of this book would really between 2 and 3 stars. I was not really impressed with this cookbook and will not be keeping it. Yet the recipes were not bad and would be perfectly acceptable to many other cooks. It is not bad, but I have books that are better and there is nothing new in the book from my perspective.
Her technique for soup and stock is probably good if you otherwise would be using a canned stock or none, but I find that I get better tasting results by using the classic techniques of stock-making (although the author claims not to). The technique for roasting chicken works at high heat works well, but can be found elsewhere and I prefer Barbara Kafka's book on Roasting. The other recipes are good and work, but again nothing special.
The recipes do work however and yield acceptable, if not outstanding, results. I would recommend this book to someone who was learning to cook, or not particularly interested in spending time cooking but who wants good basic recipes.
i LOVE this cookbook. While it doesn't have a million recipes, it takes a few serious favorites, offers several ways to make each, and hones each down to the perfect recipe. My two absolute favorite recipes in this book are the lemon meringue pie (perfection!) and the strawberry shortcake biscuits. I turn to this book first and hope it has what I'm looking for. I love the commentary on each recipe on why you should use certain ingredients instead of others.
This cookbook is fashioned in the same style as America's Test Kitchen (and she happens to work for them, I believe). It takes the most common recipes and perfects them. AND EXPLAINS THEM!! Which is just great for a novice like me.
I appreciate the author's dedication to her craft and making a recipe; sometimes even forty times. This book had a lot of good recipes that anyone could make and be a good cook. I especially liked her section on stir-fry.
Very meticulously researched. I'm sure all the recipes will turn out remarkably well. Sadly, there are no photos to inspire you. Still, I will hang on to this so that I have the best basics when I need them.