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The Improvisational Cook [Hardcover]

Sally Schneider (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 10, 2006

What happens if you . . .

. . . pair prosciutto with roasted pears?
. . . shave Parmesan on French fries?
. . . add pepper to a chocolate cake?
. . . pan-fry macaroni and cheese?

In The Improvisational Cook, Sally Schneider helps home cooks declare their independence from recipes and set lists of ingredients by offering a fun, more spontaneous way to cook. The secret lies in understanding the internal "logic" of a recipe and its creative possibilities.

Start with an essential dish, such as Caramelized Onions. Following Schneider's clear advice, it can become a savory onion jam; a real onion dip; a quick bruschetta topping with anchovies and olives; or a rustic onion soup with dried porcini mushrooms—all in just a step or two.

The possibilities are endless. Prepare a savory lemon jam to go with lamb or veal chops, or turn it into a cake filling. Roast a whole lobster instead of a fish in a salt crust. Add minced rosemary or Earl Grey tea to butter cookie dough. Turn a brownie batter into an elegant, pepper-scented chocolate cake.

Schneider gives cooks the know-how to embellish, adapt, change, alter, modify, and experiment in their cooking with plenty of encouragement and helpful information. Here are the tools and insights everyone needs to find his or her own voice in the kitchen—from where to get inspiration, to learning "what goes with what," to pantry staples that make improvising easy.

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. As she did in A New Way to Cook, Schneider offers an original, practical and well-executed plan for improvisational cooking—experimenting, cooking creatively, playing with ingredients and recipes, and "relinquishing total control and allowing an idea to develop organically." She presents ingredient-inspired recipes followed by several improvisations, or variations: a simple Herb Salad morphs into Spring Salad with Pea Shoots, Tarragon, and Chives; Cilantro Salas with Fragrant Peanut or Sesame Oil; Salad of Cress, Pine Nuts, Pears, and Chives; and Doctored Mesclun Salad. The Sage-and-Garlic Popcorn precedes derivatives for Brown Butter Popcorn, Caramelized Shallot Popcorn, Rosemary Popcorn, Smoky Bacon Popcorn and White Truffle Popcorn. Each anchor recipe features an "understanding" section that explains key ingredients or techniques. For example, a section within the Crackling Corn Bread recipe discusses cornmeal, fats in breads, buttermilk, flavorings and the basic cornbread formula. Readers can then use the ingredients and techniques—with confidence and knowledge—in myriad ways. Photographs are too few and far between; more images would enhance this volume and inspire experimentation. But overall the format is a creative way to teach readers to think more like chefs. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

“...teaching the reader to think like a chef.” (O Magazine )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: William Morrow Cookbooks; First Edition (stated) edition (October 10, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060731648
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060731649
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 7.7 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #101,629 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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49 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good Presentation of Improvisational skills and exercizes, February 1, 2007
This review is from: The Improvisational Cook (Hardcover)
`the improvisational cook' by notable cookbook author, Sally Schneider is an inspired approach to a fascinating aspect of cooking. It is notably superior to the one other book I have reviewed on this subject, `How to Cook Without a Book' by Pam Anderson. Unlike Ms. Anderson, Madame Schneider is aiming at high end cooking rather than quick or easy cooking.

Ms. Schneider's precepts are not original. Her suggestions have appeared here and there in hundreds of other books, most notably in `How to Think Like a Chef' by Tom Colicchio' and in several different books by the Brits, Nigel Slater (`Appetite', `the Kitchen Diaries') and Nigella Lawson (`How to Eat'). Even if you do not consult these books or other similar books, you will acquire an understanding of Ms. Schneider's principles by simply cooking on a regular basis, working with a wide variety of recipes from at least two or three different cuisines, preferably including one native (such as Italian, Mexican, Polish, Jewish, Southern, Pennsylvania Dutch, or whatever) to cooks in your immediate family. This is due to my belief that learning how to cook well is very much like learning how to play chess. All good chess instruction books are little more than collections of games with commentaries on the techniques used in each game.

What Ms. Schneider has is a great way with presenting her principles. Her basic approach is an odd admixture of the `Julia Child' model of master recipes with the `Elizabeth David' approach (especially in her earliest books) of minimal information on precise measurements. Surrounding this is a special emphasis on paying attention to and thinking about the taste and smell of ingredients. If you don't think this is important, watch the combatants on `Iron Chef America'. The moment the theme ingredient is unveiled, you will see Bobby or Mario or Masaharu or Cat taking a piece of the mound of goodies and giving it a taste. This is followed by constant tasting as the dishes progress throughout the course of the hour's competition. Thus, one of Ms. Schneider's main principles of improvisation is to smell and taste the goodies and reflect on the various flavors and aromas, and what they have in common with the flavors and aromas of other foods.

A second major principle is that of `terroir', commonly expressed as `what grows together, goes together'. Three of the most famous examples may be strawberries and rhubarb in America, the apples and butter or Normandy, France and the vanilla and chocolate of Mexico and Central America. The most common mode of using this principle is in combining wines with food, but it obviously has wider application, as wines are only really important in the cuisines of Western Europe.

The heart of the book lies in 51 master recipes, all relatively simple, and from three to eight `improvisations which are primarily variations of the technique or uses of the results of the technique. A simple example of variations is the recipe for herbal salt. An example of where the improvisations use the result of the master recipe is the roasted tomato. This master recipe is an excellent example in that the author does not stipulate a single type of tomato (although I suspect Roma or `plum' tomatoes are the best in the off-season). She gives instructions for how to use several different sizes. The technique is also excellent in that it is the perfect way to `improve' off-season' tomatoes, which tend to be a bit flavorless when they have been shipped in from sunny Florida or sunny California or sunny Chile. Since Ms. Schneider emphasizes improvisation, sometimes she may be just a bit light on some of the finer points. While her roasted tomato recipes do use a blender or food processor to whiz up some of the tougher parts of tomatoes, two excellent recent recipes for roasted tomato soup by Ina Garten and Alton Brown both suggest running the tomatoes through a food mill before adding to other ingredients in a soup. I have made it both ways and removing the skins with the food mill makes a BIG improvement.

One excellent result of Ms. Schneider's approach is that her book gives her reader several superb general techniques that are directly applicable to many common cooking situations. One of the more useful master recipes may be the one for macaroni and cheese. If there were ever a recipe you want to know without the aid of a cookbook, this is one. The improvisations reveal that as well as being a classic pasta and sauce dish, it is also at the heart of the technique for making gratins. I almost regret she did not add that the technique also has a strong family resemblance to creamed dishes such as creamed chipped beef, creamed eggs, and creamed chicken.

Ms. Schneider has given us an excellent book and I have no problem giving her five stars; however, if one does cook a lot and already has many cookbooks (and is limited shelf space or money), you may not need to jump to the top of this page and order yourself a copy. The book's design makes it a much better armchair cookbook than one that plays well in the kitchen. It is pretty and well laid out, but it has a rather stiff spine and will not nicely lie flat on the kitchen table. It has an excellent listing of all master recipes and improvisations in the back of the book, which I think would have better gone in the front. The short appendices on kitchen tools would have also been better in the front rather than the back. I think the biggest single lapse in the book is that it does not have a good bibliography of cookbooks and other references that are superior sources for the improvisational cook. I would start with the `Larousse Gastronomique', `The Silver Spoon', and Shirley Corriher's `Cookwise'.

An excellent foodie read!
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45 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars "Improvisational" Recipes, a Contradiction in Terms, January 27, 2007
By 
JFMP (Hanoi, Vietnam) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Improvisational Cook (Hardcover)
This is a book on improvisational cooking only inasmuch as Schneider's own improvisations. If you, like me, bought this book thinking that it would provide the basis for your own improvisations, you'll be disappointed. Schneider 15-odd pages on mixing flavors will only enlighten if you haven't figured out by now that ginger mixes well with oriental dishes, that thyme goes well with poultry, and that salt and pepper are seasoning staples. What follows after these no-brainers is a typical recipe book with Schneider's own "improvisations."

Her recipes look interesting, but this is not at all the book that the title would seem to imply.

For much deeper and helpful insights into improvisational cooking, pick up instead Shirley Corriher's Cookwise.
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39 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Aid to Stretch One's Cooking Imagination, October 19, 2006
By 
rodboomboom (Dearborn, Michigan United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)   
This review is from: The Improvisational Cook (Hardcover)
Break free from recipes by learning techniques and then how to expand them to additional dishes. For example, leeks with hazelnut oil expanded to leek noodles with creme fraiche and hazelnut oil to steamed asparagus with hazelnut oil, creamed swiss chard with hazelnut oil, roasted potatoes with hazelnut oil and hazelnut dipping sauce for steamed artichokes.

This aids in the matching of techniques with different ingredients, combining of ingredients and flavors, extension of basic recipe, etc. The improv is an experimental and learned thing, which takes willingness to fail/succeed. This book is an aid in all that, providing some attempts of the author which one can springboard from.

This is nothing new in cookbook world however. Ming Tsai for one has been ahead of the curve here, coming out with his wonderful version of this three years ago: Simply Ming: Easy Techniques for East-West Meals.

Schneider's efforts though are not to be bypassed, as she provides her creative approaches and encouraging examples to take the home chef to the next level of learning to reach out on one's own in creating recipes from scratch building on previous utilized dishes/techniques.
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