At the heart of all good food is the successful combination of the elementary tastes: sour, salt, savory, bitter, and sweet. But why does a squeeze of lemon make grilled fish taste so sweet, and a grating of Parmesan make minestrone soup seem intensely savory? Once you understand how and why basic combinations work, you will instinctively begin to create delicious meals. Sybil Kapoor takes you through each taste, beginning with simple recipes for drinks and soups, and continuing through more complex combinations of tastes for main courses, salads and desserts. Throughout the book she emphasizes simple and fresh food. With over 150 recipes and dazzling photographs, you will soon be creating your own sensational taste dishes.
A really good cookbook for both beginner cooks who want to learn a bit about, or just play around with, different tastes (which are not flavours, explained well in the introduction), and equally for more experienced chefs as a way to understanding why certain recipes work, and how they can use different tastes in their own recipe ideas.
There are sections for the four tastes (umami is included within one of them, can't remember which, because when this book was written there wasn't much research into it- it's basically the taste of deep savouriness, found in things like parmesan, ripe tomatoes, beef stock and marmite, and is my favourite of all tastes) and another for spiciness, which isn't strictly a taste but is a very obvious sensation so it makes sense to have a section on it. Each chapter starts off with soups and drinks to experience the taste in its purest form, and then goes on to show how they can be combined or take different forms in different ingredients.
I've cooked several recipes from this and all have turned out well- favourites include a lamb and date tagine and a salty black bean, bacon, avocado and tomato salad that even my veggie-hating sister adores!
From my blog: >>The book "Taste" makes for an interesting read; it's in my bookcase for a while now and while I read it from cover to cover I have only made 2 or 3 recipes but I plan to keep it downstairs for a while to explore further. So far each and every recipe is a hit.
The set up for this book is quite different from what you're used to, categories aren't the usual appetizer, entree, dessert chapters. It is based on individual flavours and what they do to each other when combined.(which makes it difficult to search for recipes but I can see why it's done, still I would have like an added register based on the usual chapters) The author explains and gives examples of each flavour and then follows up with recipes (from sweet to drinks and soups to savoury) where you experience what she describes. You'll be finding chapters as Sour, Salt, Bitter, Sweet, and Savoury -or umami-. My sons' favourite fried rice recipe comes from her and you can't believe how simple it is but it blows you away on flavour.<<
There are a lot of ways to organize a cookbook (or any treatise on the culinary arts). Chef Kapoor chooses to organize hers around the five tastes -- sour, salt, bitter, sweet and umami. While her insights are many and useful, one could wish that her text were a bit more systematic in explaining what bitter ingredients do to salty dishes, what sour ingredients do to sweet dishes, and so on. Each premise is illustrated by two or three recipes which allow the cook with an experimental bent to try out her claims. This text is of the most use to the more advanced (and adventuresome) cook as it assumes mastery of the basics.
My favorite cookbook! A novel way to approach food, this book organizes recipes by how the different tastes interact with each other to produce flavors our tongues appreciate. How a bit of spice can accentuate sweetness, how a bit of bitterness with sweet makes feel satisfied and full, etc. Highly recommend Sybil Kapoor's book.