culinary flights of fancy

Home Cooking Adventures in Berkeley Heights


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Products Worth Mentioning: America Farm to Table By Mario Batali

My wife bought this book for me and I love it thus far.  I started reading it last week and it’s great.  I haven’t cooked a recipe from it yet but they look interesting and creative…exactly what you would expect from Mario Batali.  The best part of the book, however, is that contains anecdotes regarding farms and farmers from around the country.  The farm to table movement isn’t new but it has certainly gained steam in recent years and this book celebrates the farm, eating seasonally and locally produced food/ingredients, etc.  If you read this blog regularly you know that I’m a fan of farmer’s markets and getting ingredients as directly from the source as possible and that’s the reason I was interested in reading this book…and it doesn’t disappoint in that way.  At any rate, it’s a good read and certainly worth your time if you are interested in purchasing another cookbook.

…and a little housekeeping:  recipes for chili, a classic French apple tart straight from culinary school, apple butter, pita bread, and curing your own bacon are all forthcoming.  Winter vegetable salad is on the horizon as well.  Putting that out there will hopefully set expectations so that I can keep to a schedule and catch up on writing the recipes and getting them to you!  I’m woefully behind and I apologize for that.  This fall has been crazy busy…I’m not sure where the time goes but it certainly is moving quickly these days.  Anyway, stay tuned for new recipes and I hope all is well with everyone!


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Products Worth Mentioning: My Paris Kitchen by David Lebovitz

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I’ve cooked a few things using this cookbook and I’ve found that the recipes here are easy to follow and quite good.  I also like the idea of an American chef living in Paris doing a cookbook on French food…an interesting perspective.  Beyond the recipes, one of the best things about this book are the anecdotes and advice.  I like the fact that the end of the book provides sourcing for the vast majority of ingredients used in the book.  If you are looking for a great introduction to French cuisine or if you, like me, look for French inspiration from time to time, the book is both a great starting point as well as a useful tool to learn and grow.

I made this French bread using a recipe from the book and it was great…it will definitely go into the bread rotation as a favorite of mine.  The bread uses whole wheat pastry flour, unbleached bread flour, pumpkin seeds and flax seeds among other things.  I’ll post the recipe in the coming days but here’s a picture of my final product.  I followed the recipe from the book pretty much exactly…well, not exactly as I omitted some seeds, but as close as I get to exactly.  That’s for sure!

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