Julee Rosso, the co-author of The Silver Palate Cookbook brings us the cookbook for the '90s, focusing on today's number-one food-health reducing fat. Rosso offers a broad collection of more than 800 delicious and easy, new recipes and a treasure trove of nutritional information, gardening and shopping tips, seasonal and international menus, and food history and lore. Illustrations.
Julee Rosso is an American cook and food writer. In 1977 she and Sheila Lukins opened and ran a gourmet food shop in New York City called The Silver Palate. In the 1980s they wrote The Silver Palate Cookbook, The Silver Palate Good Times Cookbook, and others. A 25th Anniversary update of the Silver Palate Cookbook was published in 2007.
Ah, here's a very good cookbook that I've forgotten. It's an older book and one of the first to introduce the concept of lower fat cooking. The oven puff with fruit is as good as it's presentation. Also good were the black angus and black beans and the upside down peach cake. I better keep this in better spot.
I bought a copy of this cookbook for our home and for my folks after my father had a massive heart attack in 1996. Mom and I both have used many recipes out of it--some have become staples in my cooking repertoire, especially the lemon roasted chicken. I love that the recipes are organized by season and that special treats are included. Fantastic addition to any cookbook library for any family trying to keep it healthy.
Of all of the cookbooks I own, this is one of the ones I use the most. I love the fact that these are not fat free or low fat recipes--many of them are lower fat, and she has included a few "devil" recipes--high fat things that humans shouldn't live without! It is a great "New Basics" cookbook with lower fat recipes.
While I rarely use cookbooks anymore, this one was one of my first cookbooks and one of the most used. Everything is excellent and easily reproduced. A great good starting off point for beginning cooks.
I made a couple of things from this--some pestos that turned out quite good, and some gnocchi that were a flop. I have to take the blame for the second one, as my technique could use some help! It is on my list of things I need to work on making.
Four stars mostly for nostalgia, as this was the first cookbook I was given when I moved into my first apartment in the 1990s. I think I still have it somewhere. It seemed extremely chic and "classy" to a country girl who, up to that point, had only seen cookbooks printed by church ladies with that weird plastic spiral binding.