Americans are on a roll in the kitchen -- we've never been better
or smarter about cooking. But how does a beginning cook become
good, a good cook great?
Modeled on Strunk and White's "The Elements of Style," "The
Elements of Cooking" is an opinionated volume by Michael Ruhlman --
the award-winning and bestselling author of "The Making of a Chef"
and coauthor of "The French Laundry Cookbook" -- that pares the
essentials of good cooking into a slim, easy-to-take-anywhere book.
It will also stand alongside a handful of classics of the kitchen,
just as Strunk and White's book sits on the desk of every writer
and every English student.
Not only does this book deconstruct the essential knowledge of
the kitchen, it also takes what every professional chef knows
instinctively after years of training and experience and offers it
up cleanly and brilliantly to the home cook.
With hundreds of entries from acid to zester, here is all the
information -- no more and no less -- you need to cook, as well as
countless tips (including only one recipe in the entire book, for
the "magic elixir of the kitchen") and no-nonsense advice on how to
be a great cook. You'll learn to cook everything, as the entries
cover all the key moves you need to make in the kitchen and teach
you, for example, not only what goes into a great sauce but how to
think about it to make it great.
Eight short, beautifully written essays outline what it takes
not merely to cook but to cook well: understanding heat, using the
right tools (there are only five of them), cooking with eggs,
making stock, making sauce, salting food, what a cook should read,
and exploring the elusive, most important skill to have in the
kitchen, finesse.
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