|
The Short-Cut Cook: Make Simple Meals with Surprisingly Little Effort | 
| Author: Jacques Pepin Publisher: William Morrow Cookbooks Category: Book
List Price: $18.00 Buy Used: $7.93 You Save: $10.07 (56%)
New (11) Used (11) from $7.93
Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 60019
Media: Paperback Pages: 288 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.8 x 0.8
ISBN: 0060936924 Dewey Decimal Number: 641.5 EAN: 9780060936921 ASIN: 0060936924
Publication Date: October 1, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: 100% GUARANTEED! Fast shipping on more than 1,000,000 Book, Video, Video Game & Music titles all in one location! Discover Your Entertainment at goHastings.
| |
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Jacques PEpin, America's favorite French chef, makes your cooking easier with 150 timesaving recipes.Make crackers by spritzing wonton wrappers with oil and bake until golden.Use frozen butternut squash for quick soup.Freeze salmon and cream cheese appetizer rollups for easy slicing.Prepare cheese straws appetizers with frozen puff pastry.Need an elegant entrEe in record time? SautE pork cutlets with prunes and steak sauce.Spoon a rich-tasting sauce of wine, ketchup, and mustard over grilled steak Mix melted chocolate with whipped cream for quick chocolate mousse.Fill a store-bought, hollowed-out pound cake with quick food processor lemon buttercream.
|
| Customer Reviews:
Gift for sis January 9, 2007 Dina L. West (Benicia, CA United States) 0 out of 11 found this review helpful
She loved it. I hope she lets me sample some of Jacques's delictable meals. Yummmm.
biased August 11, 2005 Ann S. Gregorowicz (NY, NY, USA) 3 out of 21 found this review helpful
jacques pepin is my all time favorite chef.. there is nothing negative i can say about Mr. P.. even with all the new chefs today.. Jean Georges-Daniel--Bobby--Alain.. i always go back to Mr. P..
Easy Access to Good Food November 11, 2003 B. Marold (Bethlehem, PA United States) 94 out of 95 found this review helpful
I began cooking from this book about 12 years ago, when it was first released in hardcover. I did not know Jaques Pepin's reputation, I simply wanted recipes one can do quickly. My bottom line on this book is that it succeeded in delivering on the promise of the book's title.I confess I was a little cynical about Pepin's book at first. Pierre Franey, a chef whose very very impressive pedigree I did know had published, at that time, at least three volumes of quick cooking recipes based on his well-known New York Times column. I interpreted this as simply 'jumping on the bandwagon' of a popular trend. I got it anyway because the evidence of Pepin's previous books and the blurbs on the back of the dust jacket attested to Pepin's credentials in the kitchen. Little did I realize that Franey and Pepin were close friends and had worked together for many years. Regarding thie recipes in this book, I am very happy to find the reliance on prepared foods such as the famous Campbell's soups, to be much smaller than one may expect from the introduction. I also believe that unlike Rachael Ray, Jacques does not accomplish his objective by finding short cuts to long techniques, but keeps his dishes short by selecting recipies which are classicly short on preparation. In this way, he succeeds in describing recipies with few or no compromises on results. Having prepared several dishes from this book, I will warn you that Pepin is wise not to give any expectations about how long these dishes should actually take. While there is not a lot of prep work in most recipes, some of the recipes do require a fair amount A perfect example is the Salade Nicoise. This may be faster than the recipe in Julia Child's books, but you still need to plan for some serious shopping and prep work to get a good result.Another example is one of my favorites, his Asian influenced tangy rice stick salad. It looks simple on page 105, until you realize you need to do an ingredient preparation on page 22 which takes longer than the final recipe. All grousing aside, this is really good stuff. The price for 200 recipes of this quality is a real bargain. My only other complaint is that the short section in the beginning of the book on stocking one's pantry is probably a waste of time. Whenever I buy anything with the expectation that I will use it in some unknown recipe in the future, I usually find the stuff spoils or expires before I get around to using it. After a fair amount of experience in cooking from cookbooks, I have learned to ignore all such recommendations and simply buy what I need for what I know I will be making in the next week.
No Ego Here -- A Title That Delivers June 17, 2003 Vanessa (Salt Lake City, UT) 67 out of 68 found this review helpful
Jacques Pepin is known for honest, straight-forward, fool proof techqniue and advice. As the most familiar French face for most American foodies, his association has generally been with what Americans consider "classic" French cooking.But Pepin has been touting all along the simplicity of "real" French cooking -- from his home kitchen to that of his mother's, these recipes attest to the paradigm that a few high quality products can transform a meal into something memorable. Many contemporary food writers tout quick cooking as a new phenomenon, borne from the hectic digital lifestyles we live. However, quick cooking has always existed and been in continuous evolution for the busy individual for, sadly, time has never been on our side. This collection of recipes, efficiently organized and simply presented all offer genuine short cuts to fantastic meals. He offers priceless insight on how to stock your pantry (although, what he recommends calls for a fabulously Martha-large kitchen), but you get the general idea of being well prepared. Practical advice on how to entertain surprise guests and making do with what you've got allows the home cook (and individual with a life) to create Mock Chocolate Mousse, Easy Cheese Souffle (a la Madame Pepin), and his daughter Claudine's favorite cake (simple butter cake, a little apricot preserves, allfrosted with vanilla pudding mixed with whipped cream)! The book is a joy to read. Pepin is a humble, genuine culinary figure eager to offer his expertise to reinforce the love of everyday cooking. No ego here. Just good food.
|
|
|
| |