Iโm pleased to announce that, as of Monday, my annualย cookbook round-up for the Times Book Review is live and ready for your reading pleasure. As you know, I always love this assignment, not only because I get to pore over beautiful books all spring, but because it really forces me to cook outside my comfort zone, to seek out new recipes, new techniques, new ingredients, and even new gear. (Hello pizza peel!) This yearโs crop was particularly influential and I thought you might like to know a few of the lessons, quotes, and tricks that will most likely always stay with me. I included a few from each book, but there are lots more in the round-up, so I encourage you to head over to the Times for the full story. (P.S. Shake Shack not pictured.)
Fromย Pizza Camp,ย by Joe Beddia
1. Do as the Neapolitans do and never use cooked tomato sauce on pizza โ it will overwhelm the toppings. Crushed raw tomatoes (with a little fresh garlic and olive oil) adds a brightness I had no idea I was missing. I canโt see ever going back.
2. Allowing your dough to ferment for 24 hours is going to take your pizza game from good to great.
3. Pickled jalapeรฑos: A great addition to Hawaiian Pizza.
From Salad for President, by Julia Sherman
4. Fried cooked quinoa makes a welcome addition to just about any salad. (Fry over medium-high heat in grapeseed oil, 5 to 7 minutes; spread on a paper towel to drain.)
5. Trick for through-and-through evenly browned golden roasted cauliflower: Marinate it in spices and olive oil at least four hours before cooking.
6. My go-to Kimchi-Miso dressing forevermore: 1/4 cup kimchi, 2 tablespoons rice vinegar, 2 tablespoons white miso paste, 1/4 cup grapeseed oil.
From Princess Pamelaโs Soul Food Cookbook: A Mouthwatering Treasury of Afro-American Recipes, by Pamela Strobel
7. For crispiest Southern Fried Chicken, add baking powder to the dredge mix. (P.S. You can use your Dutch Oven as a deep fryer.)
8. From Strobel: โThereโs a lot of trouble in this world, a lot of hunger, a lot of weeping. And the way I see it, every home-cooked meal is a lovinโ gesture and a kind of celebration in itself.โ
From Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat, by Samin Nosrat
9. Olive oil is produced seasonally. Look for a production date on the label when you purchase a bottle to ensure you are buying a current pressing. It will go rancid about twelve to fourteen months after itโs been pressed.
10. For maximum pie crust flakiness: Keep everything cold while making your dough.
11. Oil makes a moister cake than butter.
12. Nosrat: โThe true value of acid is not its pucker, butย balance. Acid grants the palate relief, and makes food more appealing by offering contrast.โ
Fromย Dinner: Chez Moi: 50 French Secrets to Joyful Eating and Entertaining, by Elizabeth Bard
13. In France, you will get disapproving looks if you walk down the street eating a sandwich. The French do not eat while walking, driving, or working. They respect food and food rituals.
14. The key to successful homemade mayonnaise is having everything at room temperature. (Combine 1 egg yolk, 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard and 1/4 teaspoon sea salt in a mixing bowl. Using an electric egg beater, beat the yolk mixture while adding a few drops of oil at a time โ Until youโve added 1/2 cup of oil โ safflower, sunflower, peanut, or other mild vegetable oil. When the mixture begins to thicken and set, add a tiny but steady trickle of oil. The mayonnaise will not take more than a minute or two to puff up.) Pregnant women or anyone with an allergy to raw eggs are not advised to eat this.
15. Classic Yogurt Cake is the first cake most French children learn to bake. (Hereโs one from DALS, FYI.)
16. Bard: โFor centuries the French have ended their meals, helped their digestion, improved their circulation, and lessened their water retention with infusions โ herbal teas made with actual plants and herbs. Drinking herbal tea is now one of my most ingrained French habitsโฆIn the evening, a mug of herbal tea and a square of dark chocolate tells m y body that the kitchen is closed.โ
From Dinner: Changing the Game, by Melissa Clark
17.ย Itโs time we fought back against โthe tyranny of a perfectly composed plate with three distinct elements in separate little piles. The chicken, the carrots, the rice. The meatloaf, the mashed potatoes, the peas.โ More pleasing might be โa giant salad filled with oozing, creamy Burrata cheese, ripe juicy tomatoes, and peaches. Serve it with a baguette you picked up on the way home or squirreled away in your freezer, and maybe some salami and thatโs all you need for a meal.โ
18. Frying your own tortilla strips for Mexican Tortilla Soup is the difference between a kid tolerating a meal and begging for it.
19. Herbed Parmesan Dutch Baby (think โgougere cheese puff meets Yorkshire puddingโ) right out of the oven with a gin martini makes a showstopping dinner party starter.
20. Combining fresh sausage (squeezed out of its casing) with ground pork makes a showstopping burger. (She uses chorizo, but sweet or hot Italian work magic too.)
21. Iโve long known that toasted anchovy breadcrumbs elevate a simple pasta. But now I know to use panko in those toasted anchovy breadcrumbs.
From Tartine All Day, by Elisabeth Prueitt
22. Gluten-free eating doesnโt have to feel upending or intrusive.
23. Especially after you do one major shop of alternative flours, includingย masa harina, the cornmeal that has undergone โnixtamalization,โ a process that makes corn softer and more nutritious, and that makes your cornbread as fluffy as air.
24. You could do worse than having a stash of gluten-free buckwheat crepe mix in the fridge: Blend 3/4 cup buckwheat flour, 2 eggs, 1 cup milk, 1 tablespoon olive oil, 1/2 teaspoon salt; keep up to five days and cook 3 tablespoons of batter into a hot buttered pan for 30 seconds a side. From Pruiett: โI hope that you will pair your crepes not only with ham and cheese or sautรฉed mushrooms and an egg, but also with sweet fillings, such as melted chocolate, sautรฉed apples, or pastry cream with raspberries and figs.โ Um, sure. No problem.
25. Chickpea flour makes a surprisingly crispy crust for fried chicken.
From Scraps, Wilt, & Weeds: Turning Waste into Plenty, by Mads Refslund & Tama Matsuoka Wong
26. In the United States, 40 percent of food goes uneaten, amounting to about $162 billion a year. (Globally, that number goes up to $750 billion.)
27. Fermentation is the โflavorful space between fresh and rotten.โ (Related, Refslund asks, instead of mushy fruit: retrain yourself to see succulent fermented glaze.)
28. A re-imagined cacio e pepe: Spiraizled cauliflower core tossed with pecorino, butter, crรจme fraรฎche and spices.
From Shake Shack: Recipes & Stories, by Randy Garutti, Mark Rosati, Dorothy Kalins, and Danny Meyerย
29. Use Martinโs potato rolls for your burgers; toast and butter them with a brush.
30. For the best burgers: Grind muscle meat, not economy cuts.
31. Invert a strainer over your frying burger to control fat splatter.
32. American cheese takes exactly 45 seconds to melt on a patty.
From On Vegetables, by Jeremy Fox
33. โFood from a happy kitchen tastes better than food from an unhappy one.โ
Shouldnโt it be โโpore overโ beautiful books all springโ? Sorry, had to point it out.
Thank you for informing me that there is a Shake Shack Cookbook! The decision to buy it took about 2.3 seconds to make. itโs arriving on Friday!
You wonโt be disappointed! Itโs half story, half recipes and totally wonderful!
Learn something new everyday. Thanks, Anu. All fixed.
I should probably be tempted by Salad for President โ but Iโm going to splurge on Pizza Camp! I love your reviews. Also, I learned about โpore overโ too โ I donโt ever remember seeing that before.
INVERT A STRAINER FOR SPLATTER GUARD! My tiny kitchen and frugal buying habits are eternally grateful for this multitasking idea. Genius.
Such a nice blog cz i am foodie i love these kinds of post which is related to the food or travel.
http://www.writerscafe.org/writing/UPTOWN18/1917403/
I really believed No 10 until I tried the French Tart Dough recipe on David Lebovitz site. I will never make a crust without brown butter again!
Such a lovely recap and share! Thank you for this distillation! (Also for pointing me towards people Iโd missed.)
The suggestion to use potato buns for hamburgers is really interesting and sounds delicious! Iโm a Canadian who moved to the US earlier this year. One of the first things I noticed in the grocery store here is the amount of potato bread in the bread aisle! I donโt think Iโve ever seen it in Canada. Is it really popular here?
I am a huge cookbook chef and reader. What a great roundup of different and spectacular examples. Thanks-B
Thankโs for condensing all this info for us! We have so many clients that love to cook, let us help plan the space and are now ready to cozy up with all their cookbooks and go wild!-Laurel Bledsoe