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Books > Health, Home & Family > Family & health > Etiquette & entertaining
"Here it is - the much-requested book to answer all your party
needs and put your mind at rest when cooking for a crowd." - Mary
Berry In this extra-special updated edition of Mary Berry's popular
entertaining cookbook, Mary makes cooking for gatherings of family
and friends easy, with over 160 recipes that work well for both
small and large numbers of guests. Lavish new photography and bonus
festive recipes make this edition a precious self-purchase or an
ideal gift for any Mary fan. You'll discover how Mary cooks for her
family and friends during the Christmas party season, and for other
occasions and celebrations throughout the year. Her timeless
guidance and expert tips will help you cater smoothly and
successfully on a small scale for dinners and lunches around a
table, or on a larger scale for drinks parties, buffets and
teatime. Adapting quantities is made easy. Recipes provide two sets
of ingredients for serving either 6 or 12 guests, plus there is new
advice on how to scale up recipes for any number. Discover tips for
preparing in advance, simple shortcuts and stylish presentation
ideas - and cook up a feast the stress-free way with Mary.
Holiday Cookies provides dozens of foolproof recipes for cookies,
bars, and savories of all textures, from simple holiday classics
like Vanilla Bean Tuiles and Great Grahams to the more decadent
Caramel Cheesecake Bars and Chunky Hazelnut Meringues. There are
even some delicious savories that can double as hors d'oeuvres at
the holiday buffet like Crunchy Seed Cookies and Salted Peanut
Toffee Cookies. Holiday Cookies, Holiday Cocktails, and Party Food,
three new titles in the Artisanal Kitchen series, provide an
indispensable arsenal of recipes that cover all the bases fora
delicious holiday season.
Embrace veganism and keep the whole household happy and well-fed -
without making a different meal for everyone.
Not a fan of tofu? Fear not - this vegan cookbook includes over 100
healthy, delicious recipes that will appeal to adults and children
alike, using grains, pulses, and other meat- and dairy-free
alternatives as the base ingredient. You'll find options for every meal
of the day, whether you're looking for quick lunch box ideas for vegan
kids or preparing a big dinner for the whole family.
"The good stuff" box on each recipe gives an expert breakdown of
nutritional value, so everyone is getting the nourishment they need. An
additional "flex it" section on many recipes gives busy cooks an option
to easily add meat or dairy to their meal, perfect for pleasing
non-vegan members of the household or families wanting to go
"flexitarian".
This is everyday food for everyone, with nutritionally balanced vegan
meals and flexible options - There's a Vegan in the House is the
essential cookbook for any household venturing into veganism.
2011 Reprint of 1951 Illustrated First Edition. Full facsimile of
the original edition, not reproduced with Optical Recognition
Software. For almost 4 decades, Saucier was the publicist for the
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City. His 1951 cocktail classic
book, Bottoms Up includes over 200 drinks, fully indexed, plus
twelve risqu [for the period] illustrations by twelve different
artists. A typical review of a cocktail follows the actual recipe:
THE LAST WORD: Damrak Gin / Green Chartreuse / Luxardo Maraschino /
Lime / Sugar"This cocktail was introduced around here about thirty
years ago by Frank Fogarty, who was very well known in vaudeville.
He was called the 'Dublin Minstrel, ' and was a very fine monologue
artist." So wrote Ted Saucier in 1951 when introducing this drink
in Bottoms Up. Saucier credits the drink to the Detroit Athletic
Club, and if the bartender's recollection is correct, that would
place the Last Word as a Prohibition-era cocktail. If that's the
case, then the Last Word is one of the finest cocktails to come out
of that bleak period in American history. Four ingredients, two of
them fairly exotic, working in equal parts to create perfect
harmony.
In the follow-up to his New York Times bestseller Antoni in the
Kitchen, Queer Eye star Antoni Porowski shares easy and delicious
dinners for every night of the week. Let's Do Dinner is an
invitation into Antoni's easy kitchen. Dinner with Antoni means
satisfying meals full of lean protein and loads of vegetables, with
splurges of carbs and decadence. Simple, yes, but always special.
Antoni keeps shopping lists short and steps and pans to a minimum.
Pulled chicken nachos, pasta carbonara with spring onions and peas,
or pan-seared steak with harissa butter and crispy potatoes - it's
all good for post-work evenings or casual entertaining. Antoni
shows how to crank up the flavour, make exciting suppers from
pantry staples, create new takes on classics by swapping in one
surprising ingredient, and build a rousingly flavoured vegan grain
bowl. Plus, he lets you in on the secret weapons in every kitchen
that get great food on the table fast.
Make no mistake, etiquette is as important in business as it is in
everyday life -- it's also a lot more complicated. From email and
phone communications to personal interviews to adapting to
corporate and international cultural differences, "Business
Etiquette For Dummies, 2nd Edition, " keeps you on your best
behavior in any business situation.
This friendly, authoritative guide shows you how to develop good
etiquette on the job and navigate today's diverse and complex
business environment with great success. You'll get savvy tips for
dressing the part, making polite conversation, minding your manners
at meetings and meals, behaving at off-site events, handling
ethical dilemmas, and conducting international business. You'll
find out how to behave gracefully during tense negotiations,
improve your communication skills, and overcome all sorts of
work-related challenges. Discover how to: Make a great first
impressionMeet and greet with easeBe a good company
representativePractice proper online etiquetteAdapt to the changing
rules of etiquetteDeal with difficult personalities without losing
your coolBecome a well-mannered travelerDevelop good relationships
with your peers, staff, and superiorsGive compliments and offer
criticismRespect physical, racial, ethnic, and gender differences
at workLearn the difference between "casual Friday" and sloppy
SaturdayDevelop cubicle courtesyAvoid conversational faux pas
Business etiquette is as important to your success as doing your
job well. Read "Business Etiquette For Dummies, 2nd Edition, " and
make no mistake.
Both highly informative and entertaining, "Multicultural Manners"
gives readers the understanding they need, the perfect words to
say, and the correct behavior to use in a wide range of
cross-cultural situations. This incisive and award-winning guide to
etiquette features completely updated etiquette guidelines with
special emphasis on post-September 11 culture clashes as well as a
brand-new section that demystifies unfamiliar cultures in the news.
Norine Dresser identifies key cross-cultural hot spots and suggests
methods that foster respect for diversity. Readers will discover
the dos and don'ts of successful business and social interaction,
detailed tips on avoiding embarrassment in a variety of social
settings, amusing firsthand accounts of cultural gaffes, a
breakdown of customs, religions, languages, and ethnicities for
seventy different countries, and appropriate etiquette for
innumerable settings.
Etiquette isn't just something to turn to when we're expected to
behave formally. It exists to ease social tension in daily life and
make interactions between people easy, with no ruffled feathers or
hurt feelings. "Everyday Etiquette" understands that etiquette is
about real life, and will be an essential, streamlined resource.
"Everyday Etiquette" decodes the smooth, easy way to: "petiquette,"
having the best pooch in the neighbourhood; saying the perfect
thing at a funeral; acknowledge a gift; respond to a request for a
favour and to say no; smoke a cigar in public; attend a bat mitzvah
or confirmation ceremony; and, remember someone's name on the spot.
Remarkable for its scope and erudition, Jorge Arditi's new study
offers a fascinating history of mores from the High Middle Ages to
the Enlightenment. Drawing on the pioneering ideas of Norbert
Elias, Michel Foucault, and Pierre Bourdieu, Arditi examines the
relationship between power and social practices and traces how
power changes over time.
Analyzing courtesy manuals and etiquette books from the thirteenth
to the eighteenth century, Arditi shows how the dominant classes of
a society were able to create a system of social relations and put
it into operation. The result was an infrastructure in which these
classes could successfully exert power. He explores how the
ecclesiastical authorities of the Middle Ages, the monarchies from
the fifteenth through the seventeenth century, and the
aristocracies during the early stages of modernity all forged their
own codes of manners within the confines of another, dominant
order. Arditi goes on to describe how each of these different
groups, through the sustained deployment of their own forms of
relating with one another, gradually moved into a position of
dominance.
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