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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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I just finished reading Jacques Pépin's "The Apprentice." Excellent
book, written in a very conversational style. Unlike many autobiographies, Pépin doesn't puff up his own talents and tear down other people. It struck me as the anti-"Kitchen Confidential". He also includes a related recipe or two at the end of each chapter. Cindy -- C.J. Fuller Delete the obvious to email me |
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In article
>, Cindy Fuller > wrote: > I just finished reading Jacques Pépin's "The Apprentice." Excellent > book, written in a very conversational style. Unlike many > autobiographies, Pépin doesn't puff up his own talents and tear down > other people. It struck me as the anti-"Kitchen Confidential". He also > includes a related recipe or two at the end of each chapter. I will look for that. I read _Stuffed_ by Patricia Volk recently and really enjoyed it. Life in a restaurant family. Regards, Ranee -- Remove do not and spam to e-mail me. "The God who made the world and everything in it, being Lord of heaven and earth, does not live in shrines made by man." Acts 17:24 |
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In article >,
Ranee Mueller > wrote: > In article > >, > Cindy Fuller > wrote: > > > I just finished reading Jacques Pépin's "The Apprentice." Excellent > > book, written in a very conversational style. Unlike many > > autobiographies, Pépin doesn't puff up his own talents and tear down > > other people. It struck me as the anti-"Kitchen Confidential". He also > > includes a related recipe or two at the end of each chapter. > > I will look for that. I read _Stuffed_ by Patricia Volk recently and > really enjoyed it. Life in a restaurant family. > I think you'll like it. It's a quick read, which is important to someone keeping track of a frisky brood of kids. Speaking of whom, how is your frisky brood? Cindy -- C.J. Fuller Delete the obvious to email me |
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In article >,
Ranee Mueller > wrote: > In article > >, > Cindy Fuller > wrote: > > > I just finished reading Jacques Pépin's "The Apprentice." Excellent > > book, written in a very conversational style. Unlike many > > autobiographies, Pépin doesn't puff up his own talents and tear down > > other people. It struck me as the anti-"Kitchen Confidential". He also > > includes a related recipe or two at the end of each chapter. > > I will look for that. I read _Stuffed_ by Patricia Volk recently and > really enjoyed it. Life in a restaurant family. > I think you'll like it. It's a quick read, which is important to someone keeping track of a frisky brood of kids. Speaking of whom, how is your frisky brood? Cindy -- C.J. Fuller Delete the obvious to email me |
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On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 14:56:10 GMT, Cindy Fuller
> wrote: >I just finished reading Jacques Pépin's "The Apprentice." Excellent >book, written in a very conversational style. Unlike many >autobiographies, Pépin doesn't puff up his own talents and tear down >other people. It struck me as the anti-"Kitchen Confidential". He also >includes a related recipe or two at the end of each chapter. > >Cindy I really liked Pepin's memoir, too. His generosity and good spirit are a far cry from the major league ego in Bourdain's book (which I enjoyed as well). I just finished George Orwell's "Down and Out in Paris and London." His description of the workings of a hotel kitchen in Paris coincides interestingly with Bourdain's take in several ways, though his point of view (from the bottom of the heirarchy) leads him to very different evaluations. Orwell's book was written in the early 1930's, by the way. Not much has changed, it seems. Well there are health inspectors and more regulations now, so perhaps the filth Orwell was at pains to describe is a little less repugnant now. modom "If you have a racist friend, Now is the time, now is the time For your friendship to end." -- The Specials |
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On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 14:56:10 GMT, Cindy Fuller
> wrote: >I just finished reading Jacques Pépin's "The Apprentice." Excellent >book, written in a very conversational style. Unlike many >autobiographies, Pépin doesn't puff up his own talents and tear down >other people. It struck me as the anti-"Kitchen Confidential". He also >includes a related recipe or two at the end of each chapter. > >Cindy I really liked Pepin's memoir, too. His generosity and good spirit are a far cry from the major league ego in Bourdain's book (which I enjoyed as well). I just finished George Orwell's "Down and Out in Paris and London." His description of the workings of a hotel kitchen in Paris coincides interestingly with Bourdain's take in several ways, though his point of view (from the bottom of the heirarchy) leads him to very different evaluations. Orwell's book was written in the early 1930's, by the way. Not much has changed, it seems. Well there are health inspectors and more regulations now, so perhaps the filth Orwell was at pains to describe is a little less repugnant now. modom "If you have a racist friend, Now is the time, now is the time For your friendship to end." -- The Specials |
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On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 14:56:49 -0700, Ranee Mueller
> wrote: > I will look for that. I read _Stuffed_ by Patricia Volk recently and >really enjoyed it. Life in a restaurant family. I thoroughly enjoyed _Stuffed_, too. Lots of great food writing and very touching remembrances of her family. Tara |
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On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 14:56:49 -0700, Ranee Mueller
> wrote: > I will look for that. I read _Stuffed_ by Patricia Volk recently and >really enjoyed it. Life in a restaurant family. I thoroughly enjoyed _Stuffed_, too. Lots of great food writing and very touching remembrances of her family. Tara |
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Michael Odom > wrote in message >. ..
> > I really liked Pepin's memoir, too. His generosity and good spirit > are a far cry from the major league ego in Bourdain's book (which I > enjoyed as well). I just checked out Bourdain's novel "Bone in the Throat" from the library. It was plenty of fun, although there were paragraphs where the blow-by-blow description of food prep went on too long. The writer in me thought: how is this furthering the plot??? But then, I spent 3 years working in a culinary school so I know enough about how a kitchen works that I don't need to read the notes on a chef's morning, stock to sweets. Really, I did enjoy *some* of the food porn writing, but it got to be too much after a while. I actually liked the scenes on New York streets more. I remember that North LIttle Italy area from the early 90s - where the novel is set - I used to see John Gotti walking around the neighborhood, grinning at people who recognized him, and chatting to his buddies. THere was a groovy new age Learning Annex type place nearby that all of us granola yoga types attended, and Gotti walked in front of it constantly. Characters in Bourdain's book do this very walk in the same area (but none of them mention the New York Open Center - granola yoga girls don't quite mesh with the tough guys and foodies atmosphere of the book). The tough guys walk around the neighborhood to avoid the bugs in their cars and social clubs. I'm also reading Ismail Merchant's second cookbook, a 10 year old tome, called Passionate cooking or some such. I'm obsessed with pilafs for some reason, and have turned to Claudia Roden as well for ideas about making rice and chicken layered things. A throwback to my Lebanese childhood - visions of Louis XV dining room suites, cinnamon scented rice topped with poached chicken and pine nuts, plastic sheeting over the hand crocheted table cloths for SUnday dinner...completely different from my Bohemian casual California lifestyle, low carb, with second hand furniture in the midcentury modern style, no tablecloths at all due to marauding toddlers, and a husband who doesn't eat rice. Oh well! |
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On 2004-07-12 23:58:21 -0700, (Leila A.) said:
> . I'm obsessed with pilafs > for some reason, and have turned to Claudia Roden as well for ideas > about making rice and chicken layered things Ohmygosh..have you become...the Pilaf Princess?? :-) -- I am: Mom, Attorney, Advocate for Fathers and Against Spam Read: http://www.accidentalevangelist.com | http://www.aunty-spam.com Enjoy: http://www.mydigitalrebel.com |
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Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. > wrote in message >...
> On 2004-07-12 23:58:21 -0700, (Leila A.) said: > > > . I'm obsessed with pilafs > > for some reason, and have turned to Claudia Roden as well for ideas > > about making rice and chicken layered things > > Ohmygosh..have you become...the Pilaf Princess?? In my head only. Have yet to make a pilaf. Hubby has been doing low carb for 18 months now (he isn't totally strict about it, and he's on maintenance, but rice pilaf is going too far). Mostly I just roast animal proteins and fix pasta on the side for me and the kids. Yeah, i could do the rice pilaf productions. Soon. Soon. How's by you? Leila > > :-) |
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On 2004-07-15, Leila A. > wrote:
> carb for 18 months now (he isn't totally strict about it, and he's on > maintenance, but rice pilaf is going too far). Yeah, I'm on that LC thing and it's driving me crazy. I so miss my Persian rice cooker that makes tah dig. On good side, I've lost 30 lbs. ![]() nb |
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notbob > wrote in message news:<VcoJc.77231$JR4.5227@attbi_s54>...
> On 2004-07-15, Leila A. > wrote: > > carb for 18 months now (he isn't totally strict about it, and he's on > > maintenance, but rice pilaf is going too far). > > Yeah, I'm on that LC thing and it's driving me crazy. I so miss my Persian > rice cooker that makes tah dig. On good side, I've lost 30 lbs. ![]() > > nb Yeah, there is a great deal of good sense in cutting out white fluffies (refined flour and rice, potatos, sugar). My mother alarmed me when she mentioned a sudden weight loss in the last 3 months that she ascribed to overwork. I urged her to go see her doctor, thinking the worst. Then she reminded me that her acupuncturist has her on a "warming" diet that cuts way back on sugar, white flour, white rice and pasta. Also very little dairy if any. She eats lots of warm soups, fish, chicken, hot veggies, whole grain cereals and high protein bread. She doesn't believe in going hungry so she's not undereating. But she's lost a good ten pounds in the last three months and she was already at a decent weight well within the healthy range. She's not abstaining completely - she ate a piece of her birthday cake, for instance. In any case, she will check in with her G.P. but I dropped my (unexpressed) fear of a terrible wasting disease. If I could stand to cut out sugar and bread for a month I'd lose ten pounds, too. I'm just on the edge of the overweight zone according to the BMI index. I don't worry about it too much but I like having a few pounds less - easier to get around. What about brown rice, notbob? Even ATkins says you can eat it in small quantities once you hit your maintenance weight. I actually like brown rice (and hate whole wheat pasta). Rice cookers can manage brown rice. Congrats to you on the 30 pounds. Leila |
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