The foodie's ultimate herbal encyclopedia
Created as the ideal reference for anyone with a serious
interest in cooking with herbs, spices, or related plant materials,
"The Herbalist in the Kitchen" is truly encyclopedic in scope. It
provides complete information about the uses, botany, toxicity, and
flavor chemistry of herbs, as well as a listing for nearly every
name that an ingredient is known by around the world.
Even including herbs and spices not yet seen in the United
States (but likely to be featured in recipes for adventurous cooks
soon), "The Herbalist in the Kitchen" is organized into one hundred
and four sections, each consisting of a single botanical family.
The book provides all available information about the chemical
compounds responsible for a plant's characteristic taste and scent,
which allows cooks to consider new subtleties and potential
alternatives. For instance, the primary flavoring ingredient of
cloves is eugenol; when a cook knows that bay leaves also contain
eugenol, a range of exciting substitutions becomes clear. "The
Herbalist in the Kitchen" also provides guidance about measuring
herbs, enabling readers to understand the dated measuring standards
from antique cookbooks.
"A volume in The Food Series, edited by Andrew W. Smith"
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