The Ninth Edition of Professional Cookingreflects the changing nature of our understanding of cooking and related fields such as food safety, nutrition, and dietary practices, as well as new thinking about how best to teach this material. What has not changed is the core material that focuses on the essentials--the comprehensive understanding of ingredients and basic cooking techniques that are the foundation of success in the kitchen, and the development of manual skills to apply this knowledge.
The ULTIMATE cookbook. If you want to become a "real chef", going through this book from start to finish would be a fine replacement for what you'd learn in culinary school (as this was the book used in Culinary school), without the critical French teacher telling you "more salt" under severe time constraints.
Professional Cooking is one of the textbook I use while I was at the Food Institute and part of it include the lectures that I have gone through like the Introduction of Sanitation (condensed version of Microbiology) and Fundamentals of Food. But as a whole, the book does contain helpful guides for those who are interested in the culinary industry and some parts that includes hundreds of recipes and preparation methods.
I am not fully a culinary student, I just took several diploma classes with the diploma students. For starters, this book is very basic even for those who never enter a kitchen before. There are multiple of chapters that discuss food science, microbiology of food handling and techniques including vegetable cutting, stock making and etc. The content is wealth about food from preparation to definition and although it is an academic textbook, the application is endless.
But it doesn't mean the book is one shot over everything in the kitchen by just reading this book. Being a chef involved a lot of practical skills and practice. But if you are interested in furthering the career, this book would help you know terms that involve in food preparation.
Now in its 6th edition, I've been reading Mr. Gisslen's first version of the famous "Professional Cooking." While it lacks the impressive visuals, extensive recipes and pretty tables of its more modern counterparts, I've found that this version of the text is significantly more useful to me as a novice chef. It does a fairly good job of teaching *why* a dish is cooked in a particular way (and not, for example, at 75 degrees warmer) as well as a thorough job of explaining basic techniques (for example, how to clean a chicken).
Over all, one of the best "technique" books I've ever run across. Don't miss it!
Do not read this book for recipes, unless you are cooking for 50. But the chemistry behind the recipes, especially in baking, are good reminders for all of us. What does gluten need to make it work? Why you NEED shortening and salt. And why we shouldn't mess with cakes, breads and pastry recipes, unless you have been educated to do so. Not a book to own, but definitely worthy reviewing, if your library owns a copy. I truly enjoyed perusing and reading sauces, breads and cakes. Even meats and poultry offered some new insights.
Wonderful reference for the culinary student but not for the home user. All recipes are given in commercial quantities and in weights (not measurements). The food science portion of every chapter is incredibly interesting however, especially if one wanted to know (and see pictured) every kind of potato (or fill in the blank as you choose) grown on earth, its unique granular structure, and the seventeen ways you can mess it up.
The book was actually a textbook for one of my hospitality classes in college. I used to get a kick out of studying the cuts of beef at a local Steak and Shake. This always scared the servers to the point they refused to come to the table until the book was closed. I’ve been out of college for several years now, and I still use this book as my culinary bible for all of the classic techniques.
This book was one of two books that we had for my Principles of Cooking class. It had some cool recipes in it and a lot of general stuff about each cooking type & each major food group. Some of the information was a little elementary for me, but I've been in food service for years. This should really help someone that is just starting out though.
As I study culinary, this has been one of the greatest books to have around to reference. A friend gifted it to me, and It has always had the go to material that I'd been looking for. A definite must have for the aspiring professional chef.
Buku lengkap mengenai memasak dan profesi seorang chef. Benar2 lengkap! Dan seperti judulnya, ditulis dengan profesional untuk mereka yang ingin menjadi seorang profesional di bidang kulineri. Me? Well, I enjoy cooking and eating, but never intend to be a professional :)