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3+ opere 749 membri 11 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Russ Parsons is food editor of the "Los Angeles Times", the nation's largest metropolitan daily. He has won many awards for his journalism, including the Bert Greene Award & two James Beard Awards. (Bowker Author Biography)

Opere di Russ Parsons

Opere correlate

Best Food Writing 2015 (2015) — Collaboratore — 39 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
unknown
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
USA
Relazioni
Cruise, Jennifer (cousin)
Organizzazioni
Los Angeles Times

Utenti

Recensioni

This was probably more of a 3.5 stars. It was fun reading and presented a lot of "aha!" moments. I feel like it is a reference book that I could go back to again. I already used a technique in the book to prepare some vegetables and it worked quite well. Anyone who likes to cook will enjoy this book.
 
Segnalato
TheresaCIncinnati | 4 altre recensioni | Aug 17, 2015 |
I loved the information in this book so much that I started taking notes. In the book the author explains what is actually happening when you cook food. I started reading this book the day after I made fried green tomatoes for the first time, and it just so happened the the first section of the book was about the chemical process of deep frying. So then I totally understood the purpose of every layer of coating of the fried green tomatoes and why they were the consistancy they were... it was just really interesting. Just all of these things with making pie crust and sauces and salad dressing that I have observed as I've learned to cook.. now I understand it a little better. Some of it was a bit scientific and I really just don't understand chemical structures of proteins and fats and sugars and all that. I really enjoyed the book, but I'd only recommend it to people who really like cooking… (altro)
 
Segnalato
klburnside | 4 altre recensioni | Aug 11, 2015 |
I really liked this book when I stsrted reading it. The book goes through different vegetables, gives a brief history of how it was discovered/cultivated/bred, and how to choose the best ones. Some of the facts he gave were really interesting and I am amazing by plants and people and how we interact, but by the end I was just a little bored.
 
Segnalato
klburnside | 5 altre recensioni | Aug 11, 2015 |
Brilliant book, just as good as Parsons' previous one, How to Read a French Fry. Just as that book improved my cooking after I'd read just a few pages (really it did), this one immediately changed how I picked fruit in the supermarket and stored them. For instance, I didn't know that a few small brown spots on cauliflowers were only sun spots, so this week I bought a couple of them that had been reduced because of this, and found, like the book said, they didn't affect eating quality at all. (Not a lot of brown spots, that is going bad!)

The book is mostly about why we eat the varieties of fruit we do which is generally because of the needs of farmers to make a living, not really anything to do with what the person who eats it might like. There is a way around this by going to farmers' markets where there is no middleman between the farmer and the retail outlet, where the farmer can get higher prices by growing what the public actually want - strawberries that are sweet and delicious rather than travel well and ripen slowly - and where the quantities grown can be small rather than what the distributor demands. By cutting out the middleman the farmer can make as much money selling directly as by growing quantity for the big brands and supermarkets.

I also learned quite a lot about the botany of fruits and got a mystery cleared up for me. I didn't know that there was no such thing as a wild orange, that an orange was originally a cross between a pomelo and a tangerine. In my garden in the winter I had a greenish citrus fruit that looked like an orange but tasted more like a tangerine. I have wild pomelo trees and probably tangerine somewhere in the bush (I live in a rain forest) so now I know what the fruit was. Its awfully ugly and knobbly but it tastes divine, like a tangerine with honey stirred in.

The book also includes tips on selecting, storing and cooking the fruits. It is very readable and enjoyable, full of ah-hah moments, and likely to improve your quality of life far more than the usual self-help books.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Petra.Xs | 5 altre recensioni | Apr 2, 2013 |

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Statistiche

Opere
3
Opere correlate
1
Utenti
749
Popolarità
#33,951
Voto
3.8
Recensioni
11
ISBN
10
Lingue
1

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