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Books > Food & Drink > General cookery > Cookery by ingredient > Cooking with meat & game
The result of a collaboration of devotees of the market celebrating
food and cooking, this comprehensive collection is an essential
guide for foodies and chefs. With over one hundred and forty
recipes, including canapes, starters, and main courses, this
delightful resource is sourced from producers and traders who are
relentlessly passionate about their livestock and livelihood, and
for whom provenance is paramount.
Jan Braai issued a crowdsourcing call in early 2017, and the response from the South African public was overwhelming – from the hundreds of entries received, Jan Braai has curated, tested and included over 80 favourite South African braai recipes. Each entry tells the story of how the recipe came about, why it is special – and of course celebrates the diversity of shisanyama available in South Africa. Shisanyama literally means ‘to burn meat’ in Zulu, and refers to the act of coming together to cook meat on an open fire.
Discover Mzansi favourites such as Bacon Bombs, Baby Back Ribs, Breakfast Pizza, Chakalaka, Brandy & Coke Short Rib, Red Curried Black Mussels, Corn Bread, Mustard Ice-cream with T-Bone Steak, Thokoza Park Chuck, Watermelon Salad and Lamb Jaffles, with loads of other treasured recipes.
A hands-on guidebook chock full of recipes for cooking with goat,
making cheese and soap, and crafting with goat fibers. Goats are
the hottest animal today to raise for hobby farmers, commercial
farmers, and members of both 4-H and FFA. But using the producst
from a goat requires special skills, handling, and recipes. Here's
The Whole Goat Handbook, chock full of recipes, crafting projects,
advice, and more. Cooking with goat meat requires special, adapted
recipes because the meat is so strong in flavor; there's no devoted
goat-meat cookbook on the market-until now! Here as well are
recipes for making cheese with goat milk as well as goat-milk soap.
And for those raising goats for fiber, here are hard-won
recommendations on crafting, knitting, and weaving. This book will
shows you how to do all this-and more.
After realizing he knew more about TVs than about the meat on his
plate, award-winning TV producer and amateur chef Jared Stone
purchased an entire grass-fed steer and resolved to make the best
use of it that he possibly could. Year of the Cow follows the
trials and tribulations of a home cook as he and his family try to
form a more meaningful relationship with their food and the
environment. From meeting the rancher who raised his cow to
learning how to successfully pack a freezer with cow parts, Stone
gets to know his steer and examines how previous generations ate,
delving into the ways our ancestors prepared meals and the
ethnography of cattle. Over the course of hundreds of nose-to-tail
meals shared with friends and family, Stone works his way through
his cow armed with a pioneering spirit and a good sense of humour.
He becomes more mindful of his diet and bravely confronts
challenges he never expected, like how to dry beef jerky without
making your home smell like a smokehouse, and how to find
deliciousness in the less-common cuts of cattle like the tongue and
heart, sharing a recipe at the end of each chapter. By examining
the food that fuels his life and pondering the ethics of meat
eating, Stone finds the areas where his cooking philosophy overlaps
with learning to live a life more fully.
Getting the hang of making haggis or the knack of preparing
knockwurst isn't nearly as tough as is commonly believed. The
Sausage-Making Cookbook explains this traditional kitchen craft and
shows exactly how to go about it. Step-by-step instructions help
make beginners into masters of the sausage-making art. Tips on
equipment and techniques enhancing the 230 recipes make this much
more than just a cookbook. The Sausage-Making Cookbook is for the
increasing numbers of people who want to provide for themselves.
*Eliminate harmful nitrates and nitrites, artificial preservatives,
and stuffers by controlling the raw materials that go into homemade
sausage. *Little investment in equipment and supplies *Traditional,
time-tested methods for preserving meat and an independent way of
life
Once again "Mr. Outdoors" guides the way to really succulent eating
after a successful hunt. Home Book of Cooking Venison and Other
Natural Meats provides not only recipes for enjoyment straight from
nature's banquet table, but also gives tips on their preparation in
ways that eliminate waste as well as advice on the best methods of
storage for those morsels you save for future feasting. The flavor
of the outdoors on every page is as pungent as the sweet, wafting
smoke of a cookfire. Sitting down to your table at home with the
product of the corner butcher shop brings a full tummy; sitting
down to nature's table with natural meat that you've stalked and
prepared yourself brings a freedom comparable only to that of the
woodlands itself. Along with that full tummy.
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