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20 Reviews
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Exotic, ancient, rich cuisine!,
By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Indian Spice Kitchen: Essential Ingredients and Over 200 Authentic Recipes (Paperback)
The Indian Spice Kitchen is a lush, full-size Indian Cookbook with over 200 recipes to demonstrate the use of a complex variety of wonderful exotic Indian spices and foods. Each spice or food is headlined by name, displayed in vivid color photos, and amplified by brief categories of information including how it grows, appearance and taste, buying and storing, medicinal and other uses, and culinary uses. This is followed by a couple of easy to prepare recipes to demonstrate the spice, showcased by yet more breathtaking photo compositions of the prepared food. The Indian Spice Kitchen is a treat to the eye with multisensory appeal. You can almost smell the fragrances! All recipe photography is by Julie Dixon, and extensive photographic acknowledgements are given at the end of the book. The text is descriptive, educational and contains just the right amount of anecdote to add pungency to the mix. The recipes themselves are simple and wonderful. Some examples are Bharwan Tamater (Stuffed Tomatoes), Channa Pulao (white chickpeas and rice). Pavta Patties (Lima Bean Patties), Bombay Pudding, Komdi Vindaloo (Spicy Goan Chicken Curry), Mooli Ka Salaad (white radish salad), and Lucknow Murgi Biryani (chicken Biryani Lucknow style). Chapters cover spices, herbs, vegetables and fruits, nuts, breads and cereals, and lentils/legumes as well as occasional treats and miscellaneous ingredients such as pappadams (thin fried bread wafers), jaggery (a sugar cane by-product), and edible silver foil used to garnish Indian treats. From start to finish, The Indian Spice Kitchen is a feast for the senses. Its fragrances waft out, tempting readers to try their hand at this exotic, ancient, rich cuisine.Nancy Lorraine Reviewer
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Good Introduction to Indian Cooking,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Indian Spice Kitchen: Essential Ingredients and Over 200 Authentic Recipes (Paperback)
The Indian Spice Kitchen is a good reference book for learning about the spices that are common in Indian cooking. The information is classified by spice or ingredient type. Each spice is given a two-page spread in which information is given about the taste, appearance, source, history, and cultural signifigance of the spice. Also two recipies are given which use the spice mentioned. The recipies are nice, but I think that the main function of this book is to introduce the spices common in the Indian kitchen. The book is filled with full-color pictures throughout, and it will please any serious foodlover. If you already know a lot about the spices used in Indian cooking and are more interested in recipies, perhaps you should look for a more focused cookbook. For beginners to Indian cooking, this is a perfect introduction.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Informative and Delicious,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Indian Spice Kitchen: Essential Ingredients and Over 200 Authentic Recipes (Paperback)
The recipe book is one of my favorites. I am Indian and well versed with how complicated Indian Recipes can be. Ms. Monisha has presented a diverse, delicious and interesting variety of recipes that are easy to follow and easy to make. These recipes form a majority of my "never failed" recipes. My favorites - Navratan Korma and Walnut Koftas.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An essential supplement for your Indian cookbooks,
By Recipedelights-dot-com-chef (San Francisco, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Indian Spice Kitchen: Essential Ingredients and Over 200 Authentic Recipes (Paperback)
Indian cooking can be simple and quick provided the right ingredients are at hand. In this day and age, most of these can be easily found even in western countries. The key is to know what to look for and how to use them to create just the right taste. The title of this book is a misnomer in the sense that this comprehensive book not only helps understand spices but also herbs, nuts, vegetables, fruits, lentils, cereals, flours etc., all of which are critical for creating magical flavor and zest of Indian dishes. Each ingredient has vivid color pictures that will help reader identify it, followed by details about its appearance, taste, medicinal uses, culinary uses, buying advice and storing tips. Finally two recipes are given that are meant to reveal the versatility of the ingredient. Though more than 200 recipes are given in the book, some of them are not be what may be considered "mainstream" recipes in western countries. The chefs at Recipedelights.com highly recommend this book to novice cooks or those just starting this journey of discovery to one of the most delectable cuisines of the world. As the author says "...consider this book only as a starting point..."
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
For the SERIOUS Cook,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Indian Spice Kitchen: Essential Ingredients and Over 200 Authentic Recipes (Hardcover)
If you are just looking for recipes, don't bother with this book. This FANTASTIC publication is geared toward the serious 'cuisine-o-phile', who loves to read about food, not just eat it. I have at least a hundred books about food and this is a gem. It gives a few pages on dozens of spices, rice types, pulses, and other basics of Indian cooking and provides interesting information on each along with a couple of example recipes. Well worth the very reasonable price.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Spices, Recipes, Beautiful Photos: All in One,
By
This review is from: The Indian Spice Kitchen: Essential Ingredients and Over 200 Authentic Recipes (Paperback)
I too am another satisfied reader of this wonderful book. It has so many appealing features. First of all, the book is worth the price just for the information it contains not only on spices but also on rices, legumes, flours, etc. But in addition it gives you many outstanding recipes that are well thought out, easy to make, and most importantly, achieve the desired results: delicious Indian food.
I am a Novice Indian cook with a capital N and yet I have succeeded in turning out great-tasting dishes one after the other. I have tried 8 so far and I am pleaseed with them all. I will definitely try many more. Now on top of all this, the book is filled with mouth-watering and artfully presented color photos that are in themselves a treat for your eyes. All in all I can recommend this book as a valuable addition to any cookbook collection.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Beautifully photographed, Essential Guide for the Novice!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Indian Spice Kitchen: Essential Ingredients and Over 200 Authentic Recipes (Hardcover)
Gorgeous, comprehensive, well organized! This is everything a novice could hope for. What makes indian cooking intimidating is not the difficulty of the recipes, but the unfamiliarity of the ingredients. They are all here, photographed, descriptions, storing and buying advice, culinary uses which include recipes. This would be an EXCELLENT gift! Thank you Monisha Bharadwaj for such a wonderful guide!
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent Survey of Indian Ingredients not covered elsewhere,
By B. Marold "Bruce W. Marold" (Bethlehem, PA United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 100 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Indian Spice Kitchen: Essential Ingredients and Over 200 Authentic Recipes (Paperback)
`The Indian Spice Kitchen' by Monisha Bharadwaj is an earnest, ethnic, informative coverage of Indian spice ingredients, mixes, herbs, fruits and vegetables, nuts, dals and pulses, cereals and flours, and miscellaneous ingredients. While the advocates of most cuisines, especially the Italian, French, Chinese, and Japanese rhapsodize about how important food is to their respective cultures, the Indian culture outdoes all of the others with the depth to which religion and culture affects the food mores of the Indian subcontinent. In fact, if I am to believe this author, food choices are even more important to the Hindu than it is to followers of Jewish holiday and kosher traditions. The best known and deepest strictures are those which encourage vegetarianism, based on the Hindu doctrine of reincarnation, where it is believed that animals contain souls of past or future humans. In addition to this doctrine, there are associations of particular foods with various Hindu deities, such as the devotion of Lord Krishna with milk, butter, and yogurt. These traditions are not unlike the associations of the ancient Greeks who, for example, linked Athena with olives. On top of the religious connections, there is the Ayurvedic system of nutrition that has the weight of both religion and `science'.
I have reviewed many books on Asian ingredients covering Japan, China, and Southeast Asia, including the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Burma, but virtually none of them include specifically India. Even Bruce Cost's classic `Asian Ingredients' stops at the border between Thailand and Bangla Desh. Therefore, this book is a great addition to a culinary library that aims to cover the world. While the book is not quite as detailed as Cost's book on linguistic and scientific matters, this volume does include the very important scientific names of plants which yield the herbs, spices, vegetables, fruits, grains, legumes, and other products featured in the book. This may not seem like much to the casual reader until they try to match up European and Indian ingredients. The very first item, dill, it turns out, has both a European and an Asian species. Fortunately, unlike basil, the differences between European and Indian dill are small, so one can easily be substituted for the other. The scientific name is essential when comparing items in this book to similar books on Western produce. Each section devoted to a particular plant has the following items: How it Grows: geographical distribution, size, harvesting, and whether it is an annual, biennial or perennial Appearance and Taste: Weight, aroma, and important components Buying and Storing: How and what to select and how to store in the pantry. Medicinal and Other Uses: Folk remedies and non-culinary uses. It is probably worth warning the reader at this point that the virtues attributed to many of these herbs are probably as much due to a placebo effect as to any genuine pharmacological efficacy. I suggest you do not take these suggestions at face value and only rely on suggestions that are corroborated from a more scientifically oriented source. Culinary Uses: What kinds of recipes use these ingredients. Each section also offers one or more recipes in which the highlighted ingredient is used. Each recipe is introduced with a brief headnote on the recipe's source region. Each section also has at least one or more good photographs of the product. By far the most useful chapter of this book is the second that deals with the famous Indian spice mixes. There are many more named combinations than the simple `curry powder' rubric. There is garam masala from Northern India, Sambhar powder from Tamil Nadu, Goda Masala from Bombay, tandoori masala from the Punjab, panch phoron from Bengal and Kholombo powder from the southwestern coast. Aside from its regional specialities, each mixture has a speciality. Few of these mixtures are `hot' in the way chili powder is hot from dried capsicum. The first item which gave me the sense that this was a useful and accurate source of information was when I saw the treatment of cinnamon and cassia as two different spices, in spite of the fact that practically everything labeled cinnamon in the United States is actually ground cassia. Next to the spice mixes, the most interesting chapter is the last, dealing with miscellaneous products. While I know little in detail about Indian cuisine, I was surprised at the number of items I found where of which I had never heard. Among these are the little crackers named appadams, sago, a starch similar to tapioca made from tree sap and subja seeds from a plant in the basil family. I was also surprised to find edible silver foil. This was a surprise not because I had not heard of it before, but because there was no section on edible gold foil, as gold has an enormous role in Indian culture. Possibly my only disappointment from this book is that unlike the spice mixes, there was no chapter dedicated to chutney recipes. There are several in the book, but they are distributed across sections for various different ingredients. As this is the very first book on Indian cuisine I have reviewed, I recommend it with the caveat that while I am sure this is better than many, there may be others that are as good or better. But, this is an attractive, high quality trade paperback that is worth the money if you are really interested in Indian ingredients.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is the best Indian cookbook I've found!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Indian Spice Kitchen: Essential Ingredients and Over 200 Authentic Recipes (Hardcover)
I'm an American married to an Indian, & this book is the best and most authentic Indian cookbook we've found. Monisha guides you on a culinary and educational journey through the wonderful spices used in Indian cooking. With all the beautiful pictures I feel like I go to India each time I read the book.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great! Much better than it looks,
By
This review is from: Indian Spice Kitchen: Essential Ingredients and Over 200 Authentic Recipes (Hardcover)
This book looked as if it was going to emphasize the glossy photos, but in fact it is very heavy with valuable information. It is very thorough and exhaustive about most every spice, presenting alternate names and usages. The recipes are also quite wonderful and, as far as I am able to judge, fairly authentic -- the real value of the recipes is to hilight typical usages of featured spices.
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The Indian Spice Kitchen: Essential Ingredients and Over 200 Authentic Recipes by Monisha Bharadwaj (Paperback - Mar. 2000)
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