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Books > Health, Home & Family > Cookery / food & drink etc > General cookery > Cookery by ingredient > General
There's nothing nicer than a bowl of delicious hot soup on a cold
day! This delightful recipe book celebrates old-fashioned Irish
soups that are enjoyed in farmhouses throughout the country, with
nourishing traditional favourites that can be enjoyed by all the
family. Includes recipes for potato soup, mutton broth, cabbage
soup, beef and barley soup, and parsnip soup.
A comprehensive guide to making tofu and cooking with it, featuring
75 versatile recipes from one of the country's leading voices on
Asian cuisine. Respected cooking teacher and popular blogger Nguyen
showcases tofu in all of its forms in this horizon-expanding
cookbook.
Green tea has gone mainstream as more and more people in the West
are discovering its exquisite taste and myriad health benefits. In
New Tastes in Green Tea - now available in paperback after being
out of print for two years - tea expert Matsuko Tokunaga offers
readers everything they need to know to fully appreciate the many
pleasures of this age-old and revered beverage. The wide variety of
recipes for drinks, as well as for both savoury and sweet dishes,
will delight any cook who's looking to expand their culinary
repertoire.
The pleasure of going to the local pub or craft brewery for a
pint and a delicious meal can now be recreated at home with John
Holl's collection of 155 recipes that all taste amazingly great
with beer. From pub grub and barbecue to appetizers, main dishes,
side dishes, breakfast fare, and desserts, many of these dishes use
beer as an ingredient, and all of them can be paired with your
favorite brews. The recipes were contributed by brew pubs, craft
brewers, and other beer lovers across the United States.You'll love
the new twists on traditional favorites, such as Slow-Cooked Dopple
Bock BBQ Meatballs and American Wheat Beer Steamed Clams, as well
as unexpected recipes like Crawfish Bordelaise, Chopped Reuben
Salad, Beermosas, Beer Ice Cream Floats, and Chocolate Jefferson
Stout Cupcakes."
Sections on universal ingredients - such as garlic, onion, and
shallots - offer some of the simplest yet most satisfying recipes
in the world. Consider the onion in these three marvelous
incarnations: Lebanese Caramelized Onions, American Buttermilk
Fried Onion Rings, and French Onion and Bacon Tart. And the chile
section encourages readers to use real chiles (rather than reach
for bottled hot sauce each time) on an everyday basis in recipes
from Hungary to India, from Mexico to China, with wonderful
results. Surprises abound in this vast recipe collection (over 60
percent of which are vegetarian or vegetable-based), such as
Tanis's unexpected happy nod to the value of leftovers: he offers
scores of suggestions to morph them into dishes every bit as
delicious as the meal in which they originally appeared.
The Yoga Kitchen celebrates nourishing wholefoods that enables you
to reclaim your inherent power to heal your digestive system and
boost immunity, and help you to forge healthy new habits, not
restrictions. This collection of recipes will inspire you to return
to the kitchen to create delicious simple, satisfying and
nutritious meals that will appeal to the whole family. All the
recipes are gluten, grain and dairy free, and based on the ‘Food
Combining’ principles that promote good digestion and nutrient
absorption, weight loss and an alkaline body. Extras: highlighted
health benefits of each recipe, the Yoga Kitchen 21-day meal plan
to reboot your metabolism, an A–Z guide to the sources and roles of
vitamins, minerals and phytonutrients, traditional recipes for bone
broth, cultured vegetables and sprouting that will transform your
health, essential pantry ingredients and lifestyle tips.
Is Your Kitchen a PlantPure Kitchen? The grassroots plant-based
nutrition movement inspired by the film PlantPure Nation has helped
foster a growing community of whole food, plant-based eaters. Key
to its success has been the PlantPure Director of Culinary
Education Kim Campbell's inspiring and delicious recipes. In 2015,
her cookbook, The PlantPure Nation Cookbook, helped change the way
people view the food they put in their bodies. Now, Campbell is
back with even more inventive recipes bursting with flavor in The
PlantPure Kitchen. Campbell builds on favorites from her last
cookbook, turning recipes like the Creamy African Stew into tasty
African Wraps, and shares tons of new recipes that will turn any
plant-based eater into a chef with ease. With compassion for the
challenges of following a plant-pure diet, Campbell lends advice
about the best natural sweeteners, the most useful kitchen tools
for plant-based cooking, vegan-friendly substitutions for making
recipes gluten-free, and a whole lot more. Whether you are new to
the lifestyle or looking to expand your own recipe repertoire, The
PlantPure Kitchen makes committing to your health through eating
plant-based exciting, accessible, and easy! From dips and spreads,
like Crockpot Apple Butter, to classic dinners, like Welsh Rarebit,
The PlantPure Kitchen's recipes will inspire you to lead a more
plant-pure life. Recipes include: Strawberry Rhubarb Streusel
Muffins Asian Noodle Salad Southwestern Chili Mac Potato-Crusted
Mushroom Quiche Welsh Rarebit Slow Cooker Jackfruit Tacos Hot Fudge
Sundae Cake Featuring a foreword by T. Colin Campbell, coauthor of
the groundbreaking national bestseller The China Study, this book
will become a kitchen staple for PlantPure veterans and newcomers
alike.
Feed your aubergine obsession! Discover surprising new ways to
cook, serve and eat this king of veg. No longer the 'poor man's
meat', aubergine can be transformed into impressive dishes with
these 60 brand new recipes ranging from Aubergine Fritters with
Honey and Goats Cheese, to Sicilian Aubergine Pizza, Persian
Stuffed Aubergine, and even Aubergine Chocolate Cake. Whip up
exotic yet simple mid-week suppers, impress friends and feed a
crowd, and even convert aubergine haters with these creative and
delicious recipes, packed with flavour.
Over 100 delicious recipes featuring America's favorite! Try Corn
Chowder, Corn Souffle, Apple Cornbread or Caramel Corn and many
more! Includes corn trivia.
Almost everyone has a patch of rhubarb tucked in a corner of the
garden. In this fun and friendly new book, Sandi Vitt and Michael
Hickman have compiled nearly 150 recipes featuring this
surprisingly versatile plant. From beverages to quick breads,
muffins to main courses-plus a large assortment of pies-these
recipes will tempt you to enjoy rhubarb throughout the year. Chock
full of facts and delicious suggestions, Rhubarb: More Than Just
Pies is a must-have for gardeners, cooks, cottagers, and anyone who
enjoys the bright flavours of summer.
For chef Matt Wilkinson, vegetables come first. Whether he's
cooking in the kitchen of his Melbourne eatery Pope Joan or for his
young family at home, Matt plans and builds his dishes around the
vegetables in season, when they'll taste the best, be cheapest and
most readily available. Today too many of us - chefs and home cooks
alike - plan our meals around the meat (or protein) and
carbohydrate components letting the vegetables play second fiddle.
In this book Matt Wilkinson lets his favourite 24 vegetables take
centre stage. This beautifully illustrated book will appeal to
vegetarians but it's not a vegetarian cookbook. Among the more than
90 recipes are plenty of dishes incorporating meat but Mr
Wilkinson's favourite vegetables are the true stars.
Physician and popular New York Times contributor Aaron Carroll
mines the latest evidence to show that many "bad" ingredients
actually aren't unhealthy, and in some cases are essential to our
well-being. Advice about food can be confusing. There's usually
only one thing experts can agree on: some ingredients--often the
most enjoyable ones--are bad for you, full stop. But as Aaron
Carroll explains, if we stop consuming some of our most demonized
foods, it may actually hurt us. Examining troves of studies on
dietary health, Carroll separates hard truths from hype, showing
that you can Eat red meat several times a week. Its effects are
negligible for most people, and actually positive if you're 65 or
older. Have a drink or two a day. In moderation, alcohol may
protect you against cardiovascular disease without much risk. Enjoy
a gluten-loaded bagel from time to time. It has less fat and sugar,
fewer calories, and more fiber than a gluten-free one. Eat more
salt. If your blood pressure is normal, you may be getting too
little sodium, not too much. Full of counterintuitive, deeply
researched lessons about food we hate to love, The Bad Food Bible
is for anyone who wants to forge eating habits that are sensible,
sustainable, and occasionally indulgent.
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