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Helen Willinsky

Autore di Jerk: Barbecue from Jamaica

1 opera 114 membri 1 recensione

Opere di Helen Willinsky

Jerk: Barbecue from Jamaica (1990) 114 copie

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Informazioni generali

Sesso
female

Utenti

Recensioni

When we make recipes from cookbooks we always rate those recipes with our own system, so that when paging through years-old books we’ll know which recipes are worth making again and which aren’t. Each recipe we made from this book got absolute top marks–and we’re rather picky after ten years of cooking together, so that is quite unusual.

You’ll need access to some sort of barbecue grill or the equivalent in order to get the most out of this cookbook, it’s true, but it’s certainly worth buying even if you don’t have that. Oven directions are included for many recipes, and there are even adaptations to the slow cooker and other such modern conveniences. A few sources for ingredients are provided, as well as substitutions using more commonly-found items.

I’ve found one of the marks of a truly accomplished cook to be the ability to create a dish with complex, subtle flavors out of a surprisingly short list of ingredients, and this is something at which Mrs. Willinsky excels. Take her jerk rub, for example, which uses simple onion, scallions, and hot peppers as a base, with just a few extra spices and herbs; it would be easy to assume that the result would taste primarily of heat and onion. Instead it lends a delightful flavor to dishes it’s used in that doesn’t even trigger my dislike of onion.

Another surprise was the rice and peas dish; it’s a staple of the Jamaican diet and, again, a simple recipe that yields subtle and exquisite flavors (although it calls for white rice, it’s easy enough to substitute red rice to great effect if you’re trying to go whole-grain). I was absolutely delighted to find recipes in here for both baked and fried plantains–I haven’t had plantains in years, and I’ve longed for a chance to use them since noticing that our local grocery store carried them. Finally last night I got my wish.

Chapters include basics and seasonings; pork; chicken and fowl; seafood; beef, lamb and goat; side dishes; desserts; drinks; and resources. Each chapter starts off with a bit of history or explanation of the place of that ingredient or area of cooking in Jamaican cuisine, and many of the recipes also include wonderful tidbits of history, folklore, or childhood memory. This is a very colorful book that beautifully conveys the flavor of Jamaica on every page, and enables you to do a remarkably good job of replicating it in your kitchen. Whether you want jerk chicken, jerk fish, jerk lobster tails, a jerk beef stew, curry goat, rum custard, or rum punch, you’ll find it (and so much more!) in here.

Full review at ErrantDreams
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
errantdreams | Dec 14, 2007 |

Statistiche

Opere
1
Utenti
114
Popolarità
#171,985
Voto
½ 4.3
Recensioni
1
ISBN
4

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