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22 Reviews
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65 of 65 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best in breed among cooking tip books. Buy it now!,
By B. Marold "Bruce W. Marold" (Bethlehem, PA United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 100 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: What's a Cook to Do?: An Illustrated Guide to 484 Essential Tips, Techniques, and Tricks (Paperback)
`What's a Cook to Do?' by cooking teacher extraordinare, James Peterson is the best handbook of cooking techniques I have seen due to its excellent organization, the quality of the advice, and the great good humor of the author. This ranking includes placing it above a similar work, `Julia's Kitchen Wisdom' by the legendary Julia Child, which is no mean feat.
The book falls into a rather small niche of culinary works. It is not a `scientific' work like those from Alton Brown (`I'm Just Here for the Food') and Shirley Corriher (`Cookwise'). It is also not a formal manual of professional cooking techniques like Jacques Pepin's `Complete Techniques' or the author's own `Essentials of Cooking'. The best recent book in it's category is the issue from `Fine Cooking' magazine, `How to Break an Egg', which I liked quite a bit, but Peterson's book is better. If you are a `foodie', you will want both, but if you feel you only want one, Peterson's is the one to get. The major reason lies in the fact that as in all of Peterson's books, he writes with the kind of good humored common sense which engenders trust in his advice, even more than his impressive resume as a chef, author, and teacher. The best symptom of this common sense is revealed when his advice is simply more accurate than that offered in `How to Break an Egg' for example. Both books correctly warn against leaving a stock in the dangerous temperature range that encourages bacterial growth. But, on two points, Peterson's advice is superior. First, he more correctly identifies the upper range of the danger zone to be 140 degrees Fahrenheit rather than `Fine Cooking's 120 degrees. Second, Peterson points out that as long as the stock is above the danger point, applying coolant is a waste of ice. The trick is to apply the cooling just as the stock reaches the danger point, in order at that time to bring it down as quickly as possible to the safe 40 degrees Fahrenheit. Speaking of stocks, Peterson visits the old chestnut about freezing stocks in ice cube trays and storing them in the freezer. The problem with that is that to maintain a reasonably sized stockpile, you need a pretty large freezer. His solution is to have the stocks reduced to a light syrup, at about 1/15th of their original volume, then freeze the goodies in trays for making miniature ice cubes, so a teaspoon sized cube will reconstitute to more than a quarter of a cup of stock. Like Julia Child's little book, Peterson's work has a fair share of complete recipes for those really important skills which you should really learn by heart. This includes recipes for stocks, biscuits, crepes, omelets, marinara sauce, pesto, pie and tart pastry, meringue, breaded veal cutlets, and cheese puffs. While many of these recipes may not be as complete as you may find in `Mastering the Art of French Cooking' or even Peterson's other books, they almost always bring out the essentials, and sometimes, a few surprises. In the summary of the meringue technique, for example, he points out that the best way to begin is not as one may expect (fast). The best thing to do is start slowly. And, he suggests that you will get more out of your hands before they give out if you start with your weaker hand and switch to beating with the stronger hand when that gets tired. Peterson does repeat a few things from his `Essentials of Cooking', such as the technique for tying up a salmon steak, but I didn't see a lot of repetition. He is also not afraid of contradicting his earlier works, as when he gives advice on roasting a duck. In his `The Duck Cookbook', he gives a recipe for roasting a whole duck, but in this book, he suggests that the best tactic with duck is to disassemble it and roast its parts individually, as the fatty breasts require much different time than the leaner legs. Similarly, he points out that the best technique for roasting birds in general varies greatly by the size of the bird. It is best to brown very small birds in a saute pan first. The finishing chapter is almost whimsical, as it is a few pages on etiquette at the restaurant dining table. The photographs accompanying the tips are generally excellent, although they are a bit on the small size. The competition generally has none at all, so Peterson steals a march there as well. His opening chapter on cooking tools is excellent, but it is not as complete as, for example, Alton Brown's excellent treatise on cookware, `Gear for Your Kitchen'. All his advice is sound, and very professional, especially when he recommends some serious gear such as a food mill, china cap and a drum sieve. The only major weakness I found in the book is that it had no bibliography. There are few tools in the kitchen better than good advice about which books to go to when you want to know a particular skill. But then, the competition had no bibliography either. Lastly, I simply found this book enjoyable to read from cover to cover. You can't beat that!
33 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Recommended,
By Mitch Baywatch (Brighton, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: What's a Cook to Do?: An Illustrated Guide to 484 Essential Tips, Techniques, and Tricks (Paperback)
This is really an instructional book in 'tips' format. It's not really a collection of 'helpful hints.' To me, it resembles books such as such as Craig Claiborne's Kitchen Primer or Julia Child's Kitchen Wisdom, or even Anne Willan's The Good Cook (a much larger book).
Even if you already know how to chop an onion or peel a tomato, this book can be extremely helpful. For one tip, Peterson categorizes herbs as either watery and oily. For another, he tells you what type of pork chops should be braised rather than sauteed. His advice can be unconventional (telling you to skip the browning stage when making a stew) or middlebrow (suggesting the use of jarred mayonnaise as a starter when making homemade). Recipes are embedded throughout, although they're so under-written as to barely qualify as recipes. This is actually beneficial, as it encourages you to develop your cooking instincts and think for yourself. That being said, I have found I wouldn't mind a bit more information when trying some of his baking recipes. Nonetheless, this is a great book, and I wish it were written years ago.
29 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
please do something other than buy this book,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: What's a Cook to Do?: An Illustrated Guide to 484 Essential Tips, Techniques, and Tricks (Paperback)
I have other James Peterson cookbooks which I love, and I ordered this
because of the existing 5-star reviews. This book is tips from his other cookbooks, taken out of context. This information might be helpful to an ambitious advanced beginner, but is too much for a rank beginner. Experienced cooks might find a tip or two that's useful - unfortunately, they will also find plenty of other tips to disagree with as well. The photos are good, but in far too many of them the pans and trays full of ingredients are not the quantities that a home cook would deal with.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Really disappointing...,
By grumpy old man (OH) - See all my reviews
This review is from: What's a Cook to Do?: An Illustrated Guide to 484 Essential Tips, Techniques, and Tricks (Paperback)
I was disappointed in this book. It feels like something the author spun out in a hurry just to make a few bucks by capitalizing on his well-known name. Suggestions were very general and not explained well at all; no detail about how to perform specific tasks. It could have been a good book...it just doesn't seem like the author had his heart in it.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
four very happy people,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: What's a Cook to Do?: An Illustrated Guide to 484 Essential Tips, Techniques, and Tricks (Paperback)
I found this boook mentioned in a magazine and looked it up here on Amazon. I read the reviews. I then went to the bookstore to take a closer look at it. It is as great as described before me, so I will not repeat what everyone as already said. I gave the books I ordered as gifts to 4 very young, new cooks (male and female)and they were thrilled. I've been cooking over 40 years and learned a thing or two myself. I highly recommend it.
9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What a cool little book!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: What's a Cook to Do?: An Illustrated Guide to 484 Essential Tips, Techniques, and Tricks (Paperback)
This is a very helpful book, full of great ideas, photographs and, as stated, 484 essential tips, etc. I think any cook or chef would find this a great addition to a kitchen library. The format is also convenient - not too big, and easy to read.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very nice book !,
By
This review is from: What's a Cook to Do?: An Illustrated Guide to 484 Essential Tips, Techniques, and Tricks (Paperback)
I like this book ! I think it's a very nice book to use when looking for "tips" or "tricks" on things you don't cook everyday (artichokes, asparagus) or even when you're teaching someone how to do different cooking things...
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Essential for any amateur cook,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: What's a Cook to Do?: An Illustrated Guide to 484 Essential Tips, Techniques, and Tricks (Paperback)
Love this book. All I can say is every time my GF or I have a cooking question, we go to this book and the answer is there.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
a fine reference book,
By
This review is from: What's a Cook to Do?: An Illustrated Guide to 484 Essential Tips, Techniques, and Tricks (Paperback)
This is a fine reference work to many common issues that cooks face, as they prepare and plan meals. Having this on a shelf would be useful for cooking issues you may not be familiar with.
This reference book would also be useful for cooking problems you may be afraid to ask others the answers to, as well.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Book for everyone,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: What's a Cook to Do?: An Illustrated Guide to 484 Essential Tips, Techniques, and Tricks (Paperback)
Even for those who think they have been around long enough to know how to boil an egg, it is surprisingly helpful
and has great ideas. I purchased one for me and all my adult children. |
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What's a Cook to Do?: An Illustrated Guide to 484 Essential Tips, Techniques, and Tricks by James Peterson (Paperback - April 19, 2007)
$16.95 $11.03
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