Wrap It Up provides 100 great recipes, with ingredients from regional cuisines all over the world - Thai, Mexican, Italian, Japanese, Southwestern, and more. The flavors may be from far away, but the ingredients are not; most of them can be found at the nearest grocery store. Home cooks will learn what a snap it can be to create simple, flavor-packed, one-handed meals, such as Pesto Chicken Wrap with Sun-Dried Tomatoes, Teriyaki-Glazed Salmon Spirals, Athenian Lamb Gyro with Tzatziki, even revised editions of old standbys like Caesar salad, reinterpreted as the Et Tu Brute Roll. Wrap It Up will be the kitchen muse for any busy home cook who wants recipes that are tasty, healthy, portable, economical, and totally fresh.
Amy Cotler has worked as chef, caterer, cooking teacher, food writer and farm-to-table advocate in New York and New England before moving to Mexico. (Although she's often in the US.) She's the author of several books, including: The Locavore Way: Discover the Pleasures of Fresh Locally Grown Food (Storey Publications); Fresh from the Farm: The Farm to School Cookbook (Massachusetts Department of Education); The Secret Garden Cookbook (HarperCollins); Wrap it Up: Bold and Bright Sandwiches with a Twist (Rivers Press) and One Pot Vegetarian Dishes (HarperCollins). Ms Cotler has lectured before small and large audiences at numerous venues, including Cornell and New York University, the Annual Chefs Collaborative Summit and the National Restaurant Association Show in New York and Chicago. She's taught cooking, writing and culinary history at many schools, including The Culinary Institute of America and The Institute of Culinary Education. I’m the founding director of Berkshire Grown, an early New England farm to table initiative that has received national recognition. For six years Ms Cotler worked as the host of four forums on The New York Times on the Web. As a major contributor to Joy of Cooking, and over the course of her career she's developed close to a thousand recipes for that book, as well as for clients and her own books and articles. She's appeared on The Food Network and many public (and private) radio stations.
There are some interesting combinations in the vegetarian section. I pulled 2 or 3 ideas from the book. Not much else will work for me. I have to substitute corn tortillas or different leafy greens for the wheat wraps.