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The Food Allergy Baking Book: Remarkable Recipes from a Chicago Legend Hardcover – December 1, 2015
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This cookbook includes 40 cheesecake recipes, including Original Plain, Chocolate Chip, Cinnamon Rum Raisin, Belgian Chocolate, Espresso, and Banana, plus 10 signature steakhouse dishes like the acclaimed Liver Eli. Schulman is often credited with putting Chicago-style” cheesecake, richer and creamier than its New York counterpart, on the map. Published to coincide with the 35th anniversary of Eli’s Cheesecakes, this collection will allow home cooks to make the same cheesecakes that helped celebrate Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s inauguration, Presidents Clinton and Obama's inaugurations, Abraham Lincoln’s bicentennial, the City of Chicago’s 150th birthday, the White Sox World Series, and more. As Eli Schulman might say, it’s a helluva book.
- Print length208 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAgate Midway
- Publication dateDecember 1, 2015
- Dimensions8.25 x 0.75 x 10 inches
- ISBN-101572841826
- ISBN-13978-1572841826
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Intensely flavored, it is creamy without being too heavy. . . a local product making a national reputation because it is one of the best." The New York Times
"A Chicago legend and deservingly so." the Chicago Tribune
"Slice of Heaven. . . this cheesecake is perfection on a plate." Oprah Winfrey
"Eli's Cheesecake, long celebrated in Chicago and now nationwide." Parade magazine
"A Chicago institution and a world wide ambassador of the City's culinary scene." City of Chicago Mayors Office
"Guaranteed to satisfy the most ardent chocolate fan." Cooks Magazine
"King of Cheesecake." Chicago Sun-Times
"It’s the best. . . it's like deep dish pizza except sweet." Roe Conn, 89 WLS Radio, ABC7's Windy City Live
"Chicago's #1 Cheesecake." NewCity
About the Author
Jolene Worthington, executive vice president of The Eli’s Cheesecake Company, has lectured on creating premium cheesecake at the American Institute of Baking and on the history of cheesecake before the Culinary Historians of Chicago, and trains young artisan bakers through the Eli’s Cheesecake Bakery. Before joining Eli’s in 1984, she wrote the Cooks Tools” column for the Chicago Tribune, served as culinary consultant for the Time-Life cookbook series Good Cooks,” and wrote for Cuisine magazine. She is a member of the board of Slow Foods Chicago, has served on the governing board for the Cooking and Hospitality Institute of Chicago, and is a board member and mentor for the Chicago High School for Agricultural Sciences. She lives in Chicago, IL.
Tara Lane is an award-winning pastry chef and a culinary innovation consultant. She apprenticed at New York’s François Payard before garnering national acclaim as the executive pastry chef at the restaurants Blackbird and Avec in Chicago. She earned a bachelor’s degree in fine art from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a master’s degree in design methods from the Illinois Institute of Technology, and trained at Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts in Portland. She also worked as a food preservationist at the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum, where she focused on food advocacy and policy issues. She lives outside of Austin, TX.
Diana Moles is vice president of research and development at Eli’s Cheesecake Company, where she oversees Eli’s chefs and bakers in developing new products. Her received her professional training at the American Institute of Baking and the Culinary Institute of America. She also teaches pastry classes in the greater Chicago area. She lives in Chicago, IL.
Peter McCullough is CEO of McCulloughPhoto, a photography firm specializing in architecture, commercial design, and concept photography. Originally from Belfast, Northern Ireland, he began his career as chef at the award-winning McMasters, and was executive sous chef at the Kensington Hilton in London and the Chicago Hilton and Towers. He lives in Chicago, IL.
Born and raised and still living in Chicago, Rick Kogan has worked for the Chicago Daily News, Chicago Sun-Times, and the Chicago Tribune, where he is currently a senior writer and columnist. Named Chicago's Best Reporter in 1999 and inducted into the Chicago Journalism Hall of Fame in 2003, he is the creator and host of WGN radio's "Sunday Papers with Rick Kogan" and the author of a dozen books.
Product details
- Publisher : Agate Midway (December 1, 2015)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 208 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1572841826
- ISBN-13 : 978-1572841826
- Item Weight : 2.25 pounds
- Dimensions : 8.25 x 0.75 x 10 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,018,100 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #821 in Cake Baking (Books)
- #915 in Gluten-Free Diets
- #2,508 in Celebrity & TV Show Cookbooks
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When I was working in London years ago, there was an amazing bakery near Green Park that made the most sumptuous cheesecake I have ever tasted. It was so good I used to buy a whole one every Friday.
The cake was nothing like you buy in cold food stores or supermarkets today with their oversweet taste and pork gelatine. This was good fill-you-up slightly tart (tangy) heavy set cheesecake with melt in the mouth yumminess which resonated on your taste buds to linger longer before it disappeared to the nether regions. One slice is all you could eat at a sitting, spectacular.
Now that I no longer work near or am in commuting distance of this cheesecake heaven, I thought I would see if I could find a book on the subject and make my own Ü
The book:
Comprising of 232 pages in hardcover, with an inviting photograph of a plain cheesecake to the front board and further photographs and commentary from reviewers to the back. Measuring H26.5cmx W21.5cmx D2cm.
Eli’s Story unfortunately takes up the first 43 pages which are promptly followed by recipes for Chateaubriand, Liver Eli, Chopped Liver Eli, Shrimp á la Marc, Shrimp de Jonghe and Chicken in the pot.
Any reference to cheesecake doesn’t start until page 67.
Page 69-76 covers ingredients and techniques used; cultured cream cheese, sour cream, eggs, flour and vanilla; tempering and mixing, the pan, the method, transferring from the oven, cooling and cutting. Page 78-107 covers all the batters used from the Original Plain Cheesecake to Vanilla Soufflé Glacé. Each description has many good coloured photographs. Page 110-118 covers the subject of crusts from Shortbread to Toasted Almond. Finishing touches (chocolates, caramels and compotes) are on pages 120-128 from Bittersweet Chocolate Ganach to Salted Caramel; again accompanied by good quality photography. Eli’s Original Plain Cheesecake (the one that started it all) is featured on page 131 and is the beginning of the various cheesecake recipes which continue until page 199. The book continues with a Celebratory Cakes section from page 203-217. The remainder, 218-224 contain photographs depicting various celebratory occasions. The index 225-229 is followed by About the Authors for a further three pages.
Being American of course the measurements are all in cups. There is no conversion chart within the book. All the ingredients are easily obtainable in the UK.
Eli’s Original Plain Cheesecake, looking uncannily like the one I used to buy, triggered fond memories of me walking up the street balancing a large cake box with my scrumptious cargo inside. Precious.
The verdict:
Whilst I understand that originally ‘Eli’s’ was a steak house, the title of the book specifically states ‘Cheesecake Cookbook’ so the inclusion of recipes for dead animals and/or their parts is, in my opinion, totally unnecessary. To be honest, I was shocked to encounter these, particularly the sight of a walloping great tenderloin steak featured on page 43.
The book has been published in memory of Eli Schulman and I suppose therefore is the reasoning behind the again in my opinion, far too long history of the man and his restaurant, interesting though it may be.
That large gripe aside, from a recipe book perspective, it is an interesting and well laid out book. The recipes are clear, the photography is excellent and there are some interesting combinations. If I decide to keep the book my first port of call would be to try the Original Plain Cheesecake, followed by the Sabayon individual cakes and the Espresso.
Could be problematic for those who don’t like cup measurements.
I can say, from experience, that the ‘cheesecake filling’ recipes look very good. I have baked many cheesecakes over the years, so I have some experience with this.
As vexing as it is, in order to create a complete recipe, I’ll have to do a ‘Frankenstein’ and cobble together external cheesecake recipes, with the cheesecake filling recipes in this book, to use them. i.e. I’ll have to use a crust recipe from another recipe book, or buy a readymade crust; and, I’ll have to ‘guesstimate’ cooking temperatures and times. It’s ridiculous that the book’s editor didn’t pick-up on these major omissions.











