|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
100 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
108 of 111 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful Reference Material,
By disco75 "disco75" (State College, PA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Culinary Artistry (Roughcut)
I am a self-taught home cook who enjoys the activities of the kitchen. I entered the cooking arena one of the standard ways, using cookbooks. Collections of recipes familarized me with the techniques and ethnic cooking styles. Gradually, my cookbook collection included reference books that provided some of the theory behind tastes and preparation styles. Gold's 1-2-3 series, Peterson's Sauces, and others introduced to me the philosophies that allow a cook to go beyond mimicking a recipe to improvising and even creating a dish. Culinary Artistry is perhaps the best available reference for learning about the traditions of combining flavors and food groups.It contains vital information that I suspect is taught only in some of the culinary schools. It provides valuable charts of information about cooking and menu planning. The book contains sections on Menus, including a seasonality chart and a chart explaining successful seasoning combinations. There is a section for Composing Flavors, the highlight of which is a chart showing successful food contrasts. Another section involves Composing A Dish. Here there is a chart showing great food matches and one showing seasoning matches. The Composing A Menu section offers a chart showing frequent accompaniments to meats and paragraphs presenting theories about Hors Douevres, Cheeses, and Desserts. This was a sparse and incomplete passage in an otherwise comprehensive book. Finally, there was a fun section addressing the Evolution of Chef's Styles. Here the authors provide sample menus comparing chef's offerings from earlier decades to their present day productions. The volume offers multiple anecdotes, quotes, and side bars concerning the views of popular chefs. Various recipes are interspersed to illustrate the principles. My one criticism was that the book was laid out like a college textbook. Photos, captions, quotes, highlighted lines, sidebars, and other areas compete on the same page, magazine style. The book serves as reference, frequently glanced at rather than read straight through as a narrative.
47 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Inspiration and insight abound if nothing else.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Culinary Artistry (Roughcut)
Culinary Artistry is a book some may passover or leaf through in the bookstore for the likes of the Joy of Cooking or a Martha Stewart volume 20 cookbook. But look closer, the charts and the what-goes-well-with-what sections of this book alone are worth the price if only to give the food lover an inspired moment to create a dish with ingredients he or she may love. If you find yourself saying, "gee, I'd really love to have salmon tonight but I don't know what to put with it", pick up this book, find Salmon and refer to the extensive list of items that the interviewed chefs prefer with it and an idea is born. After that, all it takes is a little know-how in the kitchen and you've created your very own gourmet meal. If you choose to read from front to back you'll also discover page after page of insightful information from some of the nation's top chef's. Take your time, it's not a novel but it can be read like one and used as reference even after you've reached the last page. For the money, this is a book that will stay on your shelf for years to come and still manage to provide a new idea each time. So put down the Martha Stewart Haloween cookie issue and give Culinary Artistry a try, "It's a good thing". Sorry about that last one, she's infectious.
39 of 39 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"Inspiring"..."A godsend.",
By A Customer
This review is from: Culinary Artistry (Roughcut)
"FLAVOR MATCHMAKING: Some cooks look to books not for precise ingredients and specific instructions, but for inspiration. I've got a book for those cooks. It's the loftily named CULINARY ARTISTRY by Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page (1996), also the authors of the better known BECOMING A CHEF. It's not a cookbook per se. Nor is it a treatise on the techniques every cook ought to know. And it's certainly not a collection of culinary prose. It's more a style manual for those who need to find out if a certain something will go with another certain something. The most relevant information is found in the aptly named section 'Matches Made In Heaven.' Arranged alphabetically, the list comprises about 328 ingredients and seasonings and, for each ingredient listed, the authors provide several complementary flavors. It may not come as any surprise that the entries under beef ribs read ginger, horseradish, mustard, potatoes, tomatoes. But it is incredibly liberating, when in a chicken rut, to alight on the appropriate page and find 57 compatible ingredients for a plain old hen. When the vegetable bin is overflowing with leafy greens or I'm flummoxed over a side dish for a dinner party, I consider it a godsend to flip through the pages and decide on mustard with the greens and walnuts with the watercress. And it's inspiring to be reminded in the midst of Thanksgiving chaos that perhaps that pear dish needs a sprinkling of black pepper rather than a drizzle of honey. As with any reference work, it's not the entire book I value so much as a particular page or two in a desperate moment. The balance of the book's 426 pages are chapters on composing a dish and a menu, complete with advice from restaurant chefs. I confess I haven't read the book cover to cover. And I doubt I ever will. But it's nevertheless the one book that regularly makes the commute from office desk to kitchen counter." ...
33 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
WOW, I know what all my foodie friends are getting for xmas,
By Amalfi Coast Girl (Mid-Atlantic, USA) - See all my reviews I was absolutely blown away by this book. I read the entire book in one sitting, fixating on each new idea. I have never enjoyed another book as much as I have enjoyed this one. If you are one of those people that never follows a recipe as written (guilty as charged) you are going to love this book. This book might just be my new favorite cookbook. Although this book is not a cookbook in the most literal sense of the word, it is more a guide to cooking than a cookbook. Yes, there are recipes in the book, but not as many as a traditional cookbook. The book is subdivided as follows: The Chef as Artist Meet Your Medium Composing Flavors Composing a Dish a. Why Food Matches b. Food Matches Made in Heaven c. Seasoning Matches in Heaven Composing a Menu a. Common Accompaniments to Entrees Evolving a Cuisine a. The Evolution of Leading Chef's Cuisines b. Dessert Island Lists Culinary Art as Communion Resources The tables that are included in this book are amazing. I have already copied some of the tables and moved them into my kitchen to use this evening with dinner. The table that the authors titled "Flavor Pals" is just wonderful. If you have ever been in the kitchen and wondered if particular spices and/or herbs go together, there is a table that answer those questions. There is another table titled "Flavor Enemies" that is extremely helpful. If you have ever tried to make Sauterne and Oranges because you didn't have peaches and wondered what went wrong, you know there are just some things that don't play well together. The table tells you which combinations are difficult to get right. There are too many tables in the book to discuss them all. But suffice it to say; I think that all the tables are fantastic. I will be ordering more of these for all my foodie friends that love to cook. This book would help anyone that loves to cook, and doesn't want to be constrained by a recipe. There is a great comment by Todd English that sums up how I feel about recipes, it is as follows, "having to follow a recipe was, to him, like being put on a leash." If this sums up your philosophy, quick buy the book. You will not be sorry.
18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fantastic book but not for recipes,
By
This review is from: Culinary Artistry (Roughcut)
This book is one of the best books in my collection. It is not a recipe book, nor is it a book on presentation with pretty pictures. It is a book to help you take the next step in developing your own recipes or to use as a reference when improvising. I have found several uses for this book so far and I keep it close at hand any time I am in the kitchen. 1. This is a great reference for what foods go together. 2. Helps in figuring out how to balance flavours. 3. A source of inspiration for new recipes. 4. The few recipes in this book are actually very good. I would not reccommend this as a beginer book. It will be most useful once you have a handle on some techniques and a variety of recipes. I really cannot say enough good things about this book.
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
By my side,
By Rusty Mattinson (Boulder, Colorado) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Culinary Artistry (Roughcut)
I initially bought this book, because it was the sequel to Becoming a Chef. Since I have graduated from culinary school, this book has not left my side. The charts of seasonality and flavor combinations are essential for any chef or apprentice chef. There are recipes which can be chenged and manipulated any way the cook sees fit. Culinary Artistry is unbiased view of what some chefs deem important need to know information about certain types of food. This book makes me want to write a cook book. Any home gourmande will also love this book, it holds ingredients in the best light possible. Telling how and why to buy seasonally, to shop at local markets within your area, to support local businesses and people. If you are passionate about food and cooking food, you WILL love this book.
30 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A lot to wade through, but it's all good,
By
This review is from: Culinary Artistry (Roughcut)
If you're the type of person that loves to cook, already has a lot of recipe books, likes to experiment, and wants to take their cooking to the next level, then this book is for you.
Most of the reviews very clearly say what this book is and what it isn't. So I will just reiterate that this book is perfect for advanced cooks looking to really expand their presentation, flavor pairings and artistry.
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Cooking is an art but..,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Culinary Artistry (Roughcut)
Being a true food & wine lover and amateur cook, I do not regret having got this book but there are some aspects that should not be disregarded as the title can be a bit misleading.
First of all, although it was clear from the start, it is not a cookbook at all. Far from it, it is neither a book on the techniques every cook should know nor a collection of useful or good recipes. It is rather a reference book for food lovers and potentially for chefs. Food matching is the most interesting section of the book. No doubt this is the perfect book for somebody who is not looking for specific dishes or ingredients, but for inspiration. However, having already bought "The Flavor Bible", you will notice that Culinary Artistry not only has some overlapping with `the bible" but also is rather incomplete. That is quite disappointing... Admittedly, this book is quite useful for a reference concerning matching different food, although many of the matchs look standard, and any chef should know what goes with what. In all cases, it can be a good place to find ideas, or to remember food combinations, and the tables are very clear. The biggest complaint - to the extent I was about to ask for a replacement or refund, is that, having received the book by mail, I could not notice that the book has rough uncut irregular edges making it impossible to browse through its pages. I also wonder whether I got a faulty or second hand book. It comes as a surprise as the book deals with presentation and sense-inviting meals (e.g. flat food vs. architectural presentation) As to the paper quality and the presentation itself, don't expect a great thing: it lacks pictures showing the artistic presentation of the finished plates.Certainly presentation is in my opinion part of food artistry.
17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Book that Keeps Giving,
By
This review is from: Culinary Artistry (Roughcut)
As a chef and graduate from a prestigious culinary school I feel that my praise is very meaningful. In a business that is ever changing and constant competing Culinary Artistry has always been there for me. The book covers a wide range of topics that were not always covered in school. I'll even go as far as calling it a companion to the real life culinary experience. From the insightful testimonies to the multitude of helpful information contained in its charts and lists it continues to give to the reader. I am not saying that you need to be a graduate from culinary school or even have to be working in the industry to benefit from Culinary Artistry. Anyone from the every day home cook to the passionate gourmet will fall under the spell held within the bindings of this wonderful guide. Yes a guide. Where other books are just cook books, Culinary Artistry opens our minds to the creative side of the restaurant industry. All this, and recipes from some of the best chefs in the industry, not only a good read but one thing I would definitely place on my deserted island list.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
This reference is the "Color Wheel" of food.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Culinary Artistry (Roughcut)
Painters have the color wheel to identify what colors match others. Now chefs, and lovers of food everywhere, have one too. "Culinary Artistry" is not a "cookbook." Rather, it is a culinary chemistry textbook. Hundreds of pages are dedicated to the "Food matches made in heaven." That is to say, what food goes with what food/herb/spice. Anyone who loves cooking will love it even more with the wealth of knowledge that this book imparts to the reader. It will take every aspiring chef, or home cook to a higher level. No matter how many "cookbooks" you have, "Culinary Artistry" is an invaluable reference in your cooking library! |
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Culinary Artistry And Menu Pricing & Strategy, 4e Set by Andrew Dornenburg (Paperback - June 29, 1999)
Used & New from: $153.59
| ||