There are several issues, a few of which should have been caught by the editor, the rest lacking pertinent information.
>>Technical Difficulties<<
•Images do not display consistently or well in landscape mode on an iPhone, and presumably, any similar phone. Not having a tablet, I cannot speak to this.
In the chapters below:
•How to eat a lobster
You will need:
>Lobster or crab cracker, nutcracker, or scissors…
>Lobster fork or crab pick (optional)
>Step 4.5 or 8.5 Break each of the smaller legs in the middle of the longest section. Using a lobster or crab pick, extract the small piece of meat.
•How to Go Nuts
>Cashews: “and other recipes”. *What* other recipes?
>Pecans: let the [carefully washed] pecans dry in a strainer 24 hours before eating or cooking with them—why?
•How to Taste Wine
>Watch out for corked wine—At a restaurant, you may be offered another bottle, or the charge is removed from your tab.
¥How to Drink Tea
You will need:
>Add lemon to the list
>How to Eat Sushi
You will need:
>Add Wasabi (optional) to the list
>Under Step 4, it is mentioned that one doesn’t mix soy sauce & wasabi, but in California sushi bars I’ve been to, no-one has heard of this rule, much less followed it. In Japan, I would expect to see non-mixing.
>How should wasabi ‘be applied to the fish’? Few I’ve seen are able to put an appropriately small amount using the standard wood chopsticks seen at most restaurants.
•How to Handle Beans
Add
>Crumble some dried epazote, found in Central and South American groceries in the US, into the beans while cooking. The pungent odor will disappear in the cooking, and it’s Nature’s Bean-o.
Other than these issues, the book was informative, well-organized, and well-laid-out, making it easy to read.The list of Foodie Fixes is great to know.