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5 Reviews
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Molly loves food and cooking - this book will make you, too!,
By Scott (Charleston, SC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Well-Seasoned Appetite: Recipes for Eating with The Seasons, The Senses, and The Soul (Paperback)
This is a cookbook for gourmands, epicurians, foodies. Divided into four sections, Well-Seasoned takes an ingredient-based view of the seasons, celebrating the best produce and game the season offers. This is the approach to cooking that brought fame to the likes of Alice Waters at Chez Panisse, and for good reason: seasonal foods are at their best at a given time, and that is precisely the time to enjoy them to their fullest. The sections are thus arranged around a series of central theme ingredients, with a couple of pages of prose concerning the subject at hand, be it morel, lobster, fiddlehead, shell bean, or shank. Each ingredient (or cooking method) is explored with respect and wonder at food, and (although some may find it a little breathless) instills one with the joy that cooking can bring. This is a book that makes you want to grab a saute pan and get busy.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fresh, fun and sophisticated,
By
This review is from: A Well-Seasoned Appetite: Recipes for Eating with The Seasons, The Senses, and The Soul (Paperback)
Organized by season, O'Neill's book pairs seasonal ingredients with appropriate food techniques, sparking the appetite with seductive writing and succulent recipes.For spring there's steaming with exotic liquids and the sizzle of quick saute to bring out the fresh subtleties of lamb, asparagus, fiddleheads, morels and more. On to summer where grilling, juicing and make-ahead salads minimize kitchen time and maximize the flavors of garden vegetables, fresh seafood and cold soups. How about scallops poached in fresh tomato juice with orzo salad? Or Korean Barbecue for pork chops, steak or chicken wings? Autumn and Winter get equally luscious treatment with concentrations on quail, nuts, apples, brussels sprouts and root vegetables, stewing, braising, baking and roasting. There's veal shanks with preserved lemon, chicken stuffed with mashed turnips, braised escarole. A book that's as much fun in the kitchen as it is under the reading lamp.
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is my go to.,
This review is from: A Well-Seasoned Appetite: Recipes for Eating with The Seasons, The Senses, and The Soul (Paperback)
I've had this book for a good 10 years. She has such great ideas. I believe it was a bit ahead of it's time. My favorite, easiest recipe is the Pork loin with mustard seed crust...always a winner! I love this recipe collection.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Re-energized about cooking~,
By Bette-B "Beagle Lover" (Virginia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Well-Seasoned Appetite: Recipes for Eating with The Seasons, The Senses, and The Soul (Paperback)
I started reading - and then started cooking. Farfalle with Asparagus, Linguine with Pea Greens, Chicken Glaze, all the salsas. I can't wait for summer to do the dried vegetables. I love that these recipes look healthy - but well flavored!
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
i destroyed the library's copy this summer,
By Ayun Halliday "Author of No Touch Monkey!" (Beautiful Brooklyn New York) - See all my reviews (REAL NAME)
This review is from: A Well-Seasoned Appetite: Recipes for Eating with The Seasons, The Senses, and The Soul (Paperback)
because I couldn't get enough of Ms. O'Neill's blue fish recipe!
guess i should buy the dang book... everything i tried was wonderful |
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A Well-Seasoned Appetite: Recipes for Eating with The Seasons, The Senses, and The Soul by Molly O'Neill (Paperback - April 1, 1997)
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