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The Food Substitutions Bible: More than 5,000 Substitutions for Ingredients, Equipment and Techniques
 
 
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The Food Substitutions Bible: More than 5,000 Substitutions for Ingredients, Equipment and Techniques [Paperback]

David Joachim (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (44 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 3, 2005

The best and most complete substitutions guide, by the author of A Man, A Can, A Plan.

Some of the greatest cooking discoveries are the result of creatively substituting one ingredient, one piece of equipment, or one cooking technique for another.

The Food Substitutions Bible compiles all types of substitutions into one comprehensive, easy-to-use handbook. Simply organized from A to Z, its 1,500 entries have more than 5,000 substitutions. This reference covers:

  • Common cooking measure equivalents
  • Metric conversion tables
  • International equivalency tables for temperature, weight and volume
  • Emergency substitutions
  • Time-saving substitutions
  • Healthy substitutions
  • Alternatives for hard-to-find and ethnic ingredients
  • Alternatives for vegetarians
  • Innovative ideas for varying the flavor of a dish in countless ways

Every substitution includes instructions with exact proportions for accurate, reliable replacements. When multiple substitutions are given within an entry, they are organized into categories for quick reference. Some of these include: If You Don't Have It, To Vary the Flavor, To Save Time, and For Better Health. The book also has an appendix with handy reference charts.

The Food Substitutions Bible is the most authoritative, comprehensive and easy-to-use book on substitutions ever published.

(20051225)


Editorial Reviews

Review

Most informative... I find I am using it all the time... information about the characteristics of foods, equivalents, and measurements. (Peg Rahn Pasadena Star-News 20060328)

A terrific resource... an instant must-have reference in my kitchen, and I know of nothing like it. (Dana Carpender Ventura County Star 20061213)

Entries are careful, offering definitions, detailed substitutions and often including suggestion for varying flavors or boosting nutrition. (Food Network Kitchens Orange County Register 20060810)

Well-researched, well-tested reference book... The guy is seriously detailed-oriented... endlessly useful. (Andrea Clurfeld Neptune Asbury Park Press 20050914)

From abalone to zwieback, The Food Substitution Bible by David Joachim is one of the best resources on the subject. (Kansas City Star 20091027)

A must-have for the serious cook. All charts, no recipes and no prose. Useful when you need it. (Marlene Parrish Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 20051215)

A compendium of alternatives for everything from allspice to wild rice. (Plus antelope, alligator, bear... (Aleta Watson San Jose Mercury News 20051123)

Packed with useful information... more than two pages of substitutes for butter alone. (Janice Okun Buffalo News 20090924)

This would be handy reference for any cook to keep on the bookshelf. (Natalie Haughton Los Angeles Daily News 20050928)

This is the hands-down best [guide] I have ever found... you need this book. (Susan Miller Lewisboro Ledger 20050929)

The book to turn to when you've found what you to make... [but don't want] to run to the store. (Kim Davaz Eugene Register-Guard 20051207)

It is truly the bible of food substitutions and should be in every reader's kitchen. (Sue Epstein Jerusalem Post 200601)

More than 5,000 substitutions for almost every type of food... directions for making reliable replacements. (Sharon Thompson Knight Ridder Newspapers 200510)

Offering practical information and great ideas, this book is packed with creative solutions. (Detroit News 20051026)

Full of very practical information... A must for the inquisitive cook. (Jennifer Mackenzie Peterborough Examiner 20051115)

A solid, useful work on using substitute ingredients and tools in the home kitchen... a clearly written and well-organized book. (Andrea Dietze Library Journal 20051128)

625 pages of highly useful information... If you've got questions, Joachim's got answers. Highly recommended. (Restaurant Hospitality 20090807)

A blessing to cooks all over... 5,000 substitutions for almost every kind of food, ingredient and measurement imaginable. (Jo Ellen O'Hara Birmingham News )

Great book... more than 5,000 creative solutions and fascinating info on everything from exotic ingredients to common cooking techniques. (Lynn Nusom Las Cruces Sun-News )

A complex, valuable guide to alternative ingredients, techniques and equipment. (Douglas Levy Oakland Press )

[This] is one of the best resources on the subject. (Jill Wendholt Silva Houston Star-Telegram )

About the Author

David Joachim has authored or edited more than 25 cookbooks. His book A Man, A Can, A Plan has sold more than 800,000 copies. He lives in Pennsylvania.

(20050913)

Product Details

  • Paperback: 621 pages
  • Publisher: Robert Rose (September 3, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0778801195
  • ISBN-13: 978-0778801191
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.2 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (44 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #319,691 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

David Joachim has authored, edited, or collaborated on more than 35 cookbooks, including the IACP award-winning The Food Substitutions Bible and the New York Times bestsellers A Man, a Can, a Grill and Mastering the Grill, co-authored with Andrew Schloss. His 'A Man, a Can' series of books has sold more than 1 million copies. His latest book is Fire It Up, co-authored with Andrew Schloss. His website is www.davejoachim.com.

 

Customer Reviews

44 Reviews
5 star:
 (32)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (44 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

55 of 58 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars About as good as you can expect from a 'Bible'. Buy It!, January 4, 2006
This review is from: The Food Substitutions Bible: More than 5,000 Substitutions for Ingredients, Equipment and Techniques (Paperback)
`The Food Substitutions Bible' by David Joachim runs a big risk in assuming such a pretentious title, as it simply invites a search for things which are missing in order to take it down a peg or two. I have to say, however, that compared to several other `bible' titles published by this `Robert Rose, Inc.' company, this book more than lives up to its promise. On the way, it happens to fill a great need in one's culinary library.

Most good cooking manuals have substitutions and `how to make' for several of the more common pantry items such as buttermilk, lemon juice, crème fraiche, and preserved lemons. It it's an especially good book, it may have as many as 100 such substitutions. This book advertises `more than 5000 substitutions'. The book doesn't just stop at one substitution or recipe for each item. Many options have three or four or five. It also does not stop with formulas or recipes. It does an excellent job, for example, of giving substitutions for common cooking tools such as a zester or a potato ricer.

Of course, I could not resist trying to find things the book missed. I am happy to say I did find a few, but I am also happy to say that with one exception, they were all very obscure. I found no entries for the ancient Roman fermented fish sauce, `garum' or the traditional French sour grape condiment, `verjus' or the middle eastern spice, `Aleppo pepper' or the North African pantry item, salt preserved lemon. I think all these are fair, in that I have seen recipes for all these in at least one cookbook and I have seen all of them used in at least two modern cookbooks.

I also felt some of the substitutions were just a bit less than useful, as the item being substituted may have been just as hard or harder to come by than the missing ingredient. For example, if I don't have venison, it is highly unlikely I will have antelope meat or gazelle meat or buffalo meat. Fortunately, this observation is generally a quibble, as we are also given `beef' as a substitute for venison.

My last quibble with these entries is that several substitutions are a bit questionable for all but the most casual situations. For example, suggested substitutions for mozzarella are Gouda, provolone, Muenster, and Fontina. I think all of these are much too strongly flavored to act as a good substitute for classic mozzarella uses. I suppose that if all you want is `some soft cheese', these would work, but I would question all of these in a baked dish or in classic raw dishes such as the Caprese salad.

The other side of the coin is brilliantly represented by the ingredient guides in the back of the book including apples, rice, clams, pears, dried beans, lentils, olives, mushrooms, potatoes, chiles (fresh and dried), flour (wheat and alternatives), Asian noodles, roe, crabs, oils, vinegars, and salts. These pages alone are worth the price of the book. I am forever trying to remember which apples are best for baking and which clams are best for chowder. I will have to puzzle no longer.

Oddly, this book will probably be more of a service to experienced cooks than to rank amateurs, as it is at its best with unusual ingredients. The experienced cook will also be much better at identifying the good from the bad substitutions.

Very highly recommended for all cooks!
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22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Resource for Amateur or Experienced Cooks, May 27, 2006
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This review is from: The Food Substitutions Bible: More than 5,000 Substitutions for Ingredients, Equipment and Techniques (Paperback)
I really enjoyed this book, even though like others stated, some of the items were so obscure I had never heard of them! LOL. Saying that, I would still recommend it highly for anyone who cooks. I mean who hasn't started cooking and realized they did not have an essential ingredient. I looked up several of my favorites items to see if any of the substitutions were feasible, most were. Each of the ingredients in their reference book includes a description of the item, i.e. Durum Flour: finely ground durum (high-gluten) wheat.

One of the features I liked about the book is that some of the listed ingredients, i.e. butter and all-purpose flour, include substitutions "To Vary the Flavor" or "For Better Health". Many of the substitutions also include info on how it might affect your recipe. For example, if you look up Butter, the "For Better Health" substitution states: 1/2 butter and 1/2 vegetable oil, best "for baking, especially quick breads and some cookie doughs: reduce baking time slightly; baked goods will be slightly more chewy; use pastry or cake flour for lighter texture..." This kind of info is just the thing to help make me a better cook.

The final sections include ingredient tables for common foods and include direction of what they are best suited (cooking, baking, eating). Other tables include ingredients with characteristics of each variety and what can be substituted within the categories (potatoes, beans, pears, apples, olives, legumes, lentils, mushrooms and more).

I definitely recommend this book for anyone who loves cook.
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27 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Amazing Kitchen Resource, November 1, 2010
We believe in a Kitchen Murphy's Law that says sooner or later you're in the middle of a recipe and find out you are missing a key ingredient. Thank goodness for David Joachim's researching skills because the second edition of "The Food Substitutions Bible" is an amazing compilation of just what will work in place of the original thing.
We love the A to Z organization of this book so it's easy to quickly find the perfect subtitute for anything from coconut cream and parchment paper to bleu cheese and guar gum. This bible is sure to save the day because you will never have to ruin a recipe again thanks to the wrong or missing ingredient!
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
adds garlic flavor, cabbagey flavor, creamy starch, empanada wrappers, intense lime flavor, more nutty flavor, baked goods moister, cape capensis, passable risotto, adds smoke flavor, more herbal flavor, oval kidney shape, chilhuacle rojo, brine flavor, herbal salt substitute, semifirm texture, other round white, chopped celeriac, crisp lavash, other risotto rice, adds other flavors, untoasted sesame oil, alternative flours, chopped butternut squash, chopped honeydew melon
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Varieties Choose, North America, Middle Eastern, Monterey Jack, Santa Claus, Grana Padano, United States, Chinese Substitute, New York, Old Bay, Amer Picon, Bel Paese, Homemade Mayonnaise, Fernet Branca, Grand Marnier, Italian Substitute, Maytag Blue, Native Americans, Spice Parisienne, American South, Bleu de Bresse, Latin American, Lighter Bake, North African, American Substitute
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