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Baco: Vivid Recipes from the Heart of Los Angeles

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This is the cookbook of the season from the chef credited with capturing the myriad tastes of Los Angeles on the plate. Visually stunning and conceptually fresh, this cookbook contains 130 recipes that redefine the way we think about flavor. Josef Centeno, chef and owner of 5 acclaimed restaurants, draws on his multicultural heritage, formal training in top-notch restaurants such as Manresa and Daniel, a lifelong obsession with cookbooks, and an insatiable curiosity. Centeno's cooking layers textures and explores how spices and sauces can be used to transform the most basic vegetables. Recipes span from simple to showstopping, exploring sauces, soups, mains, salads, and desserts, too. More than 130 vivid photographs convey the beauty and excitement of Josef Centeno's extraordinary cooking.

322 pages, Kindle Edition

Published September 5, 2017

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Josef Centeno

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Michael Russell.
247 reviews1 follower
January 31, 2018
Chef Josef Centeno opened his first restaurant, Baco Mercat, in a dicey neighborhood in downtown Los Angeles in 2011. He would open four more restaurants on the same block in the next four years, which led a revitalization of the area. What was once skid row quickly became hip, with lofts, boutiques, and nightclubs.
The chef briefly recounts his history in the culinary field, cooking in various restaurants and finding the flavors that inspired his restaurants. Centeno spent time with menus from Spain, Korea, Japan, and now in his restaurants incorporates flavors from North and East Africa, Tex-Mex, Tejano, Italy, the Mediterranean, Eastern Europe, and parts of Asia. He comes from a family with a huge mixed heritage that includes Mexican, Irish, French, German, and Polish. All of these flavors influence his dishes. “The goal isn’t authenticity but deliciousness.” Spices are at the heart of Centeno’s arsenal. He has a fifteen pound mortar and pestle that he uses to grind the fresh spices he uses in his original dishes.
Baco: Wild Recipes From the Heart of Los Angeles takes a crack at replicating some of the dishes from the five restaurants, although Centeno admits that none of these are recipes sacred. The menu at Baco changed rapidly in the restaurant’s first few days, with staff doubling and tripling the menu, then changing it virtually daily. His focus is on flavor, and a dish’s flavor profile might change over time as Centeno and his staff redefine dishes. The recipes in this cookbook offer a glimpse of what the restaurants were putting out at a given time. Everything is fluid, based on what is fresh and what spices are available.


If you’re used to cooking family meals out of a quick-fix five ingredient cookbook, Baco will blow your mind and senses. Spice blend recipes include the Japanese inspired urfa Biber shichimi togarashi and arbol-guajillo furikake (pages 38 and 39) or marcona almond, coconut, and rosebud breakfast dukkah (page 51). Check out beautiful salads like the castelfranco with cheddar and miso-fenugreek dressing (pages 98 to 101) or crudites with walnut miso bagna cauda (pages 114-115).
While some of the recipes might seem way out of reach for the average home cook who might not have access to many of the exotic ingredients, there are still a number of recipes that are within reach. Baco Bread (pages 175-179) is a flatbread that can be enjoyed on its own or with a variety of dishes in the book. Other recipes that have ingredients the average home cook can find at an average supermarket include: Panko crusted shrimp with chives and Mexican sriracha (p. 148), potato croquettes (pages 151-153), sweet potatoes with aonori mascarpone butter, feta, and honey (pages 188-189), hand-torn pasta (pages 201-209), whole roasted orange- and soy-glazed duck (pages 266-269), salty caramel (page 279), and many of the drinks starting on page 296.
Aesthetically, Baco: Wild Recipes From the Heart of Los Angeles is a joy to behold. The top corners of the pages are rounded, while the bottoms retain the traditional 90 degree cut. The photography is breathtaking and artistic, with a majority of the photographs taken on a white background to help the spices and food stand out. The photography further elevates the elite culinary recipes within the book.
Give Baco: Wild Recipes From the Heart of Los Angeles to the foodies in your life, as well as your friends who worship Top Chef and Top Chef Masters. While Centeno has not (yet) appeared on the show, these are the sort of culinary masterpieces that could win someone the title.
1,921 reviews
November 11, 2020
What a refreshing book. I loved the way it was presented by taste combos. I learned a lot. Thanks for the inspiration.
825 reviews
March 1, 2020
Stocked with stunning food photographs and recipes with hard-to-find-ingredients. I adore the enthusiasm.... But if you publish a book about your restaurant in reaching the commoner... I think it should be curated for them.
Profile Image for Sarah.
691 reviews19 followers
November 21, 2018
Kind of fun to look through but definitely nothing I’d want to make.
Profile Image for ara.
210 reviews
Read
June 27, 2019
intro was annoying
but the food looks good
Profile Image for Terresa Wellborn.
2,584 reviews42 followers
August 13, 2021
Food porn, for sure. A delicious book, just don't browse it when hungry.

Recipes I'm going to try for sure:
p. 151-153: Potato croquettes
p. 300: Fruit mashes
Profile Image for Laura.
3,863 reviews
August 9, 2022
some interesting sauces and extras to add to recipes and some great flavor ideas. although did not really feel like recipes i wanted to make at home - although ones i wanted to eat.
Profile Image for Juli Anna.
3,227 reviews
January 27, 2023
Beautiful recipes with some unique flavor combinations, but generally a bit too entailed for a home cook like myself.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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