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55 of 57 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lots of Clever tips for Amateurs and great Photo Techniques
`How To Break An Egg' is a collection of `1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions, and Handy Techniques' by the Editors, Contributors, and Readers of `Fine Cooking' magazine. One of the first things this means is that if you are a dedicated subscriber to `Fine Cooking' magazine and have every issue going back about ten (10) years, you already have most of...
Published on October 21, 2005 by B. Marold

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Does NOT tell you how to actually break an egg
I've always had a problem breaking the yolk when I crack an egg. Obviously I'm not doing it correctly. Then I ran across this book on helpful kitchen tips with good reviews. The first thing I tried to look up in the book were egg breaking instructions - too bad that's one kitchen tip they did not include. There is a bunch of useful info in this book. But I felt a bit...
Published on September 29, 2009 by Rodger W. Raino


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55 of 57 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lots of Clever tips for Amateurs and great Photo Techniques, October 21, 2005
This review is from: How to Break an Egg: 1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions, and Handy Techniques (Hardcover)
`How To Break An Egg' is a collection of `1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions, and Handy Techniques' by the Editors, Contributors, and Readers of `Fine Cooking' magazine. One of the first things this means is that if you are a dedicated subscriber to `Fine Cooking' magazine and have every issue going back about ten (10) years, you already have most of what is in this book.

This volume belongs to one of the three general classes of books which focus much more on why and how to do things in general rather than on specific recipes. The first of these classes is represented by Shirley Corriher's `Cookwise' which has many recipes, but whose real purpose is to demonstrate why things work the way they do. The second of these three groups is represented by the Williams-Sonoma `Kitchen Companion' and Christopher Kimball's `The Cook's Bible'. These two books deal less with science and more with technique, and are typically organized like an encyclopedia. The third class, to which this book belongs, is a collection of individual tips and suggestions from many different sources. The other most recent entry into this category was `Chef's Secrets' collected by Francine Maroukian'. This `Chef's Secrets' was not entirely up to the standard represented by the reputations of the contributors (see my review of this book).

`How To Break An Egg' has some of the weaknesses of `Chef's Secrets' in that a few may simply be wrong or at least unnecessary, but the very large number of suggestions and the diligence of the `Fine Cooking' editors has kept the chaff to a minimum. It is also important to note that many of these suggestions come from several culinary heavyweights such as Bruce Aidells, John Ash, Rose Levy Beranbaum, and Shirley Corriher. And, I can see that the suggestions from these authorities are uniformly better than those submitted by `Fine Cooking' readers.

Many of the suggestions are probably common knowledge to most amatuer cooks who spend a lot of time reading these authors, `Fine Cooking', `Saveur', and `Cooks Illustrated Magazines', and spend time watching the Food Network, especially Alton Brown's `Good Eats' show. Thus, the book's value drops off if you are an experienced foodie own a sizeable culinary library.

On the other hand, the average level of the suggestions is really pretty good. I suspect there may be a fair amount of friendly copying, as I recognize many suggestions from other sources, especially, Alton Brown and the baking Gurus such as Beranbaum and Flo Brakker. The suggestions fall into several different categories.

First, there are the amateur techniques to make up for the lack of technique typically gained through practice. Many of the baking tips fall into this category such as the technique for draping a pizza dough over an overturned bowl to spread it out in place of the usual method of stretching it on your knuckles. These are often revealed by caveats saying that `the usual method of doing this only works if you have a very sharp knive...'. Well, I see no excuse for not having very sharp knives, so these suggestions are often moot. Most amateur suggestions are in this category and they are easily recognized as things which a professional will typically not do, because they have all the right equipment and knowledge for doing things quickly and correctly.

Second, there are sanitation tips, which I recommend we all commit to memory and follow, such as the tip to wash the handles on your water faucets after washing your hands.

Third, there are tricks to do things which become harder if you have either a lot more than usual or a lot less than usual.

Fourth, there are reminders about common baking problems, especially with cookies, pastry doughs, and cake batters, and alternative ways to avoid them. I really like most of these, especially the one which says that it may simply not be a good time to make a pie crust if the humidity and temperature is high.

Fifth is the color section which contains an entirely different kind of material, that being color photographic tutorials on how to do various techniques. I am certain these are all done by `Fine Cooking' staff writers and photographers and they are all of a high quality. Unless you own James Peterson's `Essentials of Cooking' or Jacques Pepin's `Complete Techniques', this section alone may be worth the price of the book.

Sixth is a set of tables to help you diagnose problems especially in common baking tasks. This, together with the color section makes this book well worth the investment. These may be less valuable if you happen to already have thoroughly digested Shirley Corriher's `Cookwise' or other superior reference on baking techniques.

Seventh is a table of EMERGENCY SUBSTITUTIONS. I emphasize this because the authors are clear on this point that these are not perfect replacements. This section has just about all the most useful cases I can think of, especially for buttermilk, bread crumbs, crème fraiche, fish sauce, lemongrass, mascarpone, pancetta, and shallots. In other words, common ingredients which, however, you may not stock. Two examples should illustrate how these are not perfect substitutions. I would not typically prefer substituting white wine vinegar for sherry vinegar rather than their suggested balsamic vinegar. And, I would typically prefer to substitute finely diced white or yellow onions for shallots rather than scallions.

This book is great fun to read for any culinary amateur. I recommend it for that reason alone, but it is also a useful reference if you have no other books on cooking or baking technique. Oddly enough, I could find no suggestion anywhere in the book for an answer to the title question, the preferred way to break an egg.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An all-in-one guide to kitchen troubles, January 8, 2006
This review is from: How to Break an Egg: 1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions, and Handy Techniques (Hardcover)
For an all-in-one guide to kitchen troubles, whether it be rescuing a failed recipe, making emergency substitutions, or brushing up on techniques, How To Break An Egg: 1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions And Handy Techniques packs in tips by the editors, contributors and readers of Fine Cooking Magazine. Each chapter on 'tips' or 'techniques' is subdivided in the table of contents by method or tip: this makes it quick and easy to locate tips on say pitting fruit, or cooking potatoes properly. New cooks will find this a much more extensive reference than your usual substitution guide - and provides much more overall culinary detail on method than most, while retaining the at-a-glance referencing system so important to a cook facing problems and needing immediate solutions.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An all-in-one guide to kitchen troubles, January 8, 2006
This review is from: How to Break an Egg: 1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions, and Handy Techniques (Hardcover)
For an all-in-one guide to kitchen troubles, whether it be rescuing a failed recipe, making emergency substitutions, or brushing up on techniques, How To Break An Egg: 1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions And Handy Techniques packs in tips by the editors, contributors and readers of Fine Cooking Magazine. Each chapter on 'tips' or 'techniques' is subdivided in the table of contents by method or tip: this makes it quick and easy to locate tips on say pitting fruit, or cooking potatoes properly. New cooks will find this a much more extensive reference than your usual substitution guide - and provides much more overall culinary detail on method than most, while retaining the at-a-glance referencing system so important to a cook facing problems and needing immediate solutions.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars How to Break an Egg, January 29, 2006
This review is from: How to Break an Egg: 1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions, and Handy Techniques (Hardcover)
I am at best an amateur cook. I have more cookbooks then I will ever be able to use. This book has so many useful hints and techniques. I actually set down and read it thru. I have already used several with complete success. One of the most useful books I have used.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars review for How to Break an Egg, August 13, 2007
By 
Joan Frost (Altadena, CA, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
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This review is from: How to Break an Egg: 1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions, and Handy Techniques (Hardcover)
I've been cooking for more years than I like to count, but this book gave me a lot of tips I never came across before, plus a handy color photographic section on de-shelling lobsters and shrimp and pitting various fruits. However, the tip on shelling hard boiled eggs, one of my cross-eyes bears, didn't work for me. For any home cook, though, this is wonderful recreational, as well as useful, reading.
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Learn dozens of tips in just a few minutes, November 26, 2005
This review is from: How to Break an Egg: 1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions, and Handy Techniques (Hardcover)
Since I rarely have time to sit down and read a book cover to cover, this is the perfect book to fit in when I have little snippets of time - I leave this book on my kitchen table. While waiting for water to boil, chicken to finish baking, or even breaking up the monotony of washing dishes, I often flip open to a random page and read a few tips. Every single time I've found an idea that I could use! Each tip is no more than a couple of sentences long - and only takes a quick glance to read. The money and time you'll save with hundreds of great ideas is worth it!
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10 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, October 22, 2005
This review is from: How to Break an Egg: 1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions, and Handy Techniques (Hardcover)
Library Journal
Utilizing information from qualified food writers, chefs, and experienced readers, the editors of Fine Cooking magazine have compiled a troubleshooting guide for home cooks. The recipients of the 2005 International Association of Culinary Professionals Compilation Award for their previous book (Cooking New American), these editors have delivered another classic. Included are troubleshooting charts, step-by-step preparation techniques (with photographs), ingredient information, a substitution guide, equivalent measures, tips on kitchen safety, and much more. The most useful section helps cooks understand what went wrong with the recipe and recommendations of what to try next time. An extremely valuable guide assisting the home cook in learning how to cook as opposed to just cooking; recommended for all public libraries.-Jennifer A. Wickes, Suite101.com, Pine Beach, NJ Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful quick resource book!, October 12, 2009
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This review is from: How to Break an Egg: 1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions, and Handy Techniques (Hardcover)
Was visiting my sister in Canada over Labour Day and she pulled this book off the shelf for a quick look on how to speed up the mango ripening process. It worked and we enjoyed reading portions of the book out loud to each other. When I got home I ordered copies for myself and my prospective daughter-in-law. They arrived quickly and I have enjoyed mine...esp reading up on how to keep ginger fresh! I can see that it will really come in handy!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fun Fact Filled Book, August 9, 2008
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This review is from: How to Break an Egg: 1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions, and Handy Techniques (Hardcover)
Saw this book at my daughter-in-law's and couldn't put it down! I think I've found the perfect engagement/shower gift for the new bride!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great for Beginners, February 19, 2008
This review is from: How to Break an Egg: 1,453 Kitchen Tips, Food Fixes, Emergency Substitutions, and Handy Techniques (Hardcover)
I borrowed this book from my local library and looked through it and realized that I had to have a copy of my own. It is a book with very clever ideas on using kitchen equipment, fruits, veggies, you name it. It even has answers to questions that I've always wondered about like.....Why will potatoes and onions spoil more quickly if you store them together?

I like to cook more now because I'm more informed about foods, utensils and equipment. This would be a great wedding shower gift for any young woman starting her own family and who isn't very experienced in the kitchen. I don't know if it would be useful for more experienced cooks because I'm not one. Hopefully that helps.
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