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Happy in the Kitchen: The Craft of Cooking, the Art of Eating
 
 
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Happy in the Kitchen: The Craft of Cooking, the Art of Eating (Hardcover)

by Michel Richard (Author)
Key Phrases: julienne blade, potato bites, food mill fitted, Yukon Gold, Potato Puree (more...)
4.6 out of 5 stars See all reviews (19 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
"In cooking as in love, you have to try new things to keep it interesting." So says chef Michel Richard in his cookbook Happy in the Kitchen, a collection of 150-plus recipes that more than make his point. Whether reinventing traditional recipes, often whimsically, as he does with dishes like Tomato Tartare, Cuttlefish Schnitzel, and Turkey "Steak" au Poivre, or presenting otherwise novel treats like Tuna Medallions with Passion Fruit Salsa; Chicken with Preserved Lemon and Honeydew Melon; and Lamb-Loin with Basil Crust and Fennel, Richard delights readers with creativity that can thrill. Vegetable dishes, including his spuds-for-rice Potato Risotto and Lo-Carb Carbonara, in which sliced onions sub for pasta, are particularly ingenious. Equally novel--and tempting--are sweets like Upside-Down Chocolate Orange Sponge Cake, Lemon-Lime Madeleine Muffins, and Raspberry Meringues with Raspberry Tuiles.

To pull off his particular sleight-of-hand, Richard has devised novel techniques--like using plastic film to shape and poach food, and gelatin to bind fatlessly--that all cooks should know about. Whether readers will tackle the often-exacting recipes will depend on their willingness to engage in kitchen workouts that also regularly require special equipment like a Japanese mandoline and electric meat slicer. Though there are a number of simpler, homier recipes like Tomato Soup with Fresh Mozzarella and Thyme-Glazed Baby Back Ribs--and the formulas themselves couldn't be more lucid--this handsome book will probably be best appreciated as an artful record of a great and wonderfully playful cooking intelligence. Replete with stunning photos, used generously to illustrate techniques, it's hard to imagine any serious cook who wouldn't want to join Richard, dig in, and learn. --Arthur Boehm

From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. In this hefty follow-up to his 1993 debut (Home Cooking with a French Accent), Richard imparts culinary wisdom of the highest order in cheerful nursery tones. Humpty Dumpty, Captain Crunch and a vegetable called Mr. Beet are a few of the merry characters who populate his kitchen. Goofiness apart, the book is filled with clever, innovative techniques and little-known time-savers (microwave béchamel, anybody? food processor sorbet?). Most of the recipes hinge on Richard's unconventional methods, and their successful execution does require a certain level of skill. Attention-grabbers like Asparagus Salmon (in which asparagus spears are slipped inside the pocket of a salmon fillet which is then sliced like a terrine), and Red Snapper in a Spinach Coating are elegant enough to serve to a Michelin inspector, yet are corralled and fenced within the range of ability of a competent home cook. Other dishes are more demanding—the superlative Lamb Loin with White Bean Sauce, for example. In any case, professional cooks and serious amateurs will find this volume an essential resource. (Oct. 31)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Artisan (August 30, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1579652999
  • ISBN-13: 978-1579652999
  • Product Dimensions: 11.4 x 10.1 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars See all reviews (19 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #147,788 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

19 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (19 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
43 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The master chefs cooks in your home with you!, January 13, 2007
This is one cookbook to cook with, ahead of your other cookbooks, and then just let your friends or guests rave..over your cookery skills.

This is as if a master chef, genie like, comes to your home and dispensed countless pearls of cookery knowledge..elevating a simple recipe to one that has you say "Oh my Gawd, why didn't I think of that...it's SO good".

He tells how to get certain foods "crunchy" to excite the experiences of taste..making vegetables and meats alike crunchy with flavor, yet not overdoing it. At the same time, he tells how to heat vegetables so they are soft and tasty, without overdoing it and giving that overcooked taste to them. Try his All-Crust Potato Gratin to see.

He "works" a vegetable to bring out it's best...with carrots, he braises whole carrots in chicken stock and orange juice, to give body, brightness and intense flavor, then finished off with touches of unusual spice combinations, and sprinkles the end product with orange zest. Heck, outside of glazing carrots, or eating baby ones raw, I didn't realize the fun I could have with the crispy critters. And onions..what magic he conjures up with cooked onions, as their soft sweetness, sometimes heightened with caramelization, are used as stuffed shells, a pasta-less pasta, a tart, and as a delicious component of a burger!

Have you read about trendy sous-vide cooking and the $2000 thermal circulator set-ups? Get a Foodsaver* to vacuum pack your food in plastic bags, or just wrap it in Saran-wrap* or other cellophane to keep in the flavors while cooking it at ~ 160 F. A steady burner/range, thermometer and some ice cubes will get you through most any sous-vide recipe in your home.

Want to WOW your guests, try his pureed sea scallops, and cook on low temperature as he describes, or make Chicken Faux Gras, Corn Nugget Crab Cakes, or various desserts even.

Try even his version of a lobster roll as a burger, for a fun appearance, and all the luscious taste of lobster.

I cook "higher end" meals for 8-24 people at a time, and often wonder how to serve something new and stunning...well, here's my source of ideas for the next few years! It's easy to see his recipe, and dream up another use for his technique with a different food or other variation. This is the measure of a great teacher..you are not bound to one recipe...he opens your eyes to all sorts of riffs, or variations you can do, and it's not too involved at all.

By the way, this is his second book, the first, Michel Richard's Home Cooking with a French Accent (1993), is a wonderful collection of fairly easy to make recipes with excellent general advice on preparation. Back then, he "tweaked" foods to reveal their best, i.e. adding a little mushroom to enhance a curry sauce, and possibly adding a little cayenne, for a different variation. These hints are even better in Happy in the Kitchen.

There are stunning photographs, and each recipe is well written.

BUY this book and start cooking and eating, and find yourself also Happy in the Kitchen.
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55 of 60 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars With a bullet! Superb techniques and insights. Buy it NOW!, October 13, 2006
By B. Marold "Bruce W. Marold" (Bethlehem, PA United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
`Happy in the Kitchen' by the outstanding French / American chef, Michel Richard is a book all foodies should immediately buy and read from cover to cover, twice. If you are a card-carrying cooking amateur or professional, stop wasting your time reading this review, go to the top of the page, and click yourself an order for this volume. Now! At the very worst, put this book on the top of your Christmas wish list and give it to your best, or best-heeled friend.

Mentioning Christmas reminds us that Monsieur Richard looks remarkably like old St. Nick himself, and this book is simply chocked full of goodies for the adventuresome chef. I immediately place this among the few exceptional books by leading American restaurant chefs, such as Thomas Keller's `The French Laundry Cookbook', Judy Rodgers' `The Zuni Café Cookbook', Eric Ripert's `A Return to Cooking' and Paul Bertolli's `Cooking by Hand'. I've read several `good' restaurant books, all with their fair share of useful recipes for the home kitchen. But, I've also read many restaurant cookbooks which have very little value for the average home cook, even for the serious amateur cook, since they teach relatively little which adds to our basic understanding of cooking and less to our arsenal of useful techniques. Monsieur Richard does all of these things, and he does them well.

I may even go so far as to say that Michel Richard may be America's answer to Spain's inventive Ferran Adria, if it were not for the equally inventive Thomas Keller. The thing is, however, that Richard has done better than Keller of communicating his techniques to us mere mortals in the kitchen. At the very least, he has done a much better job (witness the title of the book) of communicating the joy of inventive cooking in the kitchen. And, this is a level of inventiveness which goes far beyond the ability to cook without a recipe and come up with good dishes from a selection of ingredients found in the refrigerator on any given day.

For starters, Michel makes us aware of the value of many old, but uncommon or new but formerly expensive kitchen tools. The most surprising on this list is the home version of a deli food slicer, Michel is pointing out that there are now small, inexpensive home models which will work very well, thank you. My favorite is the old food mill which has clearly NOT been replaced by the food processor, and which does several important tasks in Richard's techniques.

The book's main section of recipes is organized very much like a graduate level text on cooking ingredients and techniques. The first main section, `Vegetables' is organized around eight (8) very important vegetables (one, the tomato, is actually a fruit), techniques used with these vegetables, and a few very interesting dishes to illustrate what you can do with these foods.

What is so immediately great about some of the techniques in this book is that they are sound, easy solutions to major cooking problems. My favorite example is the problem of poaching chicken or any other dryish low fat meat such as `the new pork'. I commonly use a venerable James Beard method for poaching chicken breasts when I need chicken meat for a salad. The paradox is that if you leave the chicken in the poaching liquid for too long or at too high a heat, it will literally dry out while surrounded with a water-based liquid. So, it will become too tough and stringy when you cut it up and mix it with the usual mayonnaise, onions, and celery. Richard's solution in retrospect is so simple and obvious, one may be ashamed that they didn't think of it themselves. The trick, used in several different recipes, is to wrap the raw meat in plastic wrap (be sure to avoid plastic which includes PVC) and poach the chicken breast `sausage' at a moderate temperature, somewhere around 160 degrees Fahrenheit.

One of Richard's other major techniques is in the use of packaged gelatin as an intermediate ingredient in forming ingredients before or during cooking, and in maintaining moisture. But wait, haven't French chefs been using gelatin for centuries in creating aspics and the like. Of course they have. What we have here is Michel Richard's putting old wine in very new, and delightfully friendly bottles, and making it all feel like great fun.

In spite of the fact that most of this book is best suited for the advanced amateur or professional (if only because there is nothing here which is quick or easy on the first few tries), it still has some remarkably well illustrated presentations of some really basic techniques. As always, I pay close attention to an author's treatment of lamb. And, lo and behold, Richard has a superbly illustrated technique for preparing my favorite lamb shoulder for braising, following a superior recipe for braised lamb shoulder or `melon'.

A third seemingly novel technique is Richard's use of `waters', the natural juices retrieved from some vegetables, most notably tomatoes. The fact is that this is not new with Richard. Paul Bertolli discusses this material at great length, but I have seen practically no mention of it in even the most complete and authoritative Italian cookbooks. What I have seen is Deborah Madison's excellent advice to use similar resources in general in stock making to make the stock match the main ingredient in a dish.

With the great quality of this book, one wonders why Richard took so long to bring it to us. But now we have it and I for one am enormously grateful. Look for a discount, but it is truly worth every penny to someone who is serious about having fun in the kitchen!
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35 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fun cooking again!, November 9, 2006
By Sushi "cookbook collector" (Browns Mills, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
This book actually had me excited about cooking again. The recipes are
interesting and not so complicated, that just reading them makes you want to run right out and get the ingrediants to try them. You can tell from reading the book that Chef Michel Richard loves cooking and his enthusiasm
is infectious! His anecdotes and stories are very funny and you can see he has a great sense of humor which come out in his recipes. I have over 700 cookbooks, but this is one I actually use, especially for inspiration and some new techniques that the chef teaches in this fab cookbook.
The photos are stunning also.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Michele Richard is Brilliant!
This is one of the best cook books I have ever read. I am an ex chef and am able to understand and apply some of the more advanced tecniques in the book so it might have a... Read more
Published 7 months ago by Jamie E. Landsman

5.0 out of 5 stars Best of the cookbooks
We collect cook books, but this one by Michel Richard is outstanding. He uses practical and easy to do techniques. His cooking recipes are doable and reproducible. Read more
Published 12 months ago by Harry L. Roth

5.0 out of 5 stars I'm having fun!
Fun in the kitchen? With Richard's novel perspective on presenting "old foods" in new ways, I am definitely having fun in my kitchen these days. Read more
Published 15 months ago by Magoo

5.0 out of 5 stars Such fun!
It's fun to read and to try the recipes. Love the hamburger buns (of all things).
Published 18 months ago by Fran

5.0 out of 5 stars Makes me happy too!!
Michel Richard is my favorite chef.... He IS happy in the kitchen, I know, I watched him and his crew preparing wonderful dishes for my family at his restaurant in Georgetown... Read more
Published 19 months ago by P. J. Barille

5.0 out of 5 stars 5 stars all the way
I got this book about a month ago and I've already prepared two of the entrees (Red Snapper and Figgy Piggy). My husband and I enjoyed both very much. Read more
Published 19 months ago by HT

5.0 out of 5 stars As good as everyone says, and I've even cooked from it.
This book is such a delight. Like the other reviewers mentioned, the photos are gorgeous, the tone and ideas are inventive and appealing. Read more
Published 21 months ago by Stepone

3.0 out of 5 stars michele richard
I received it with minor scratches on the cover, it took a while for delivery, opened the booked once since bought
Published 23 months ago by A. Espiritu

3.0 out of 5 stars A little disappointed.
This is a beautiful "coffee table" type book but in my opinion is not practical for everyday use. The recipes are so outlandish, I can't see how anyone would have the time or the... Read more
Published 23 months ago by Vicki Warren

5.0 out of 5 stars Happy to have this book in my kitchen
This book is enormous fun. Michel Richard is an incredibly talented chef and the kitchen is his playpen. His passion is contagious and his innovations are ingenious. Read more
Published on July 11, 2007 by Antigone Walsh

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