ladysprite: (cooking)
[personal profile] ladysprite
"The Frugal Gourmet Cooks Three Ancient Cuisines," Jeff Smith

I've been working a lot with pamphlets and commercial books lately, so I wanted to reach back into the actual cookbooks for a little while. This is one of my husband's books, and like the rest of his, I haven't really looked at it. This, as I've been learning, is a tragedy. Glancing through this, there are so many things I want to try. It's a collection of Chinese, Greek, and Roman recipes, and while not all of them are reasonable for a dinner-for-two, many of them sound fascinating and fun.

As I looked through it, though, I kept finding myself drawn to the lamb recipes. We don't use lamb too often, but I do love it, and the recipe we finally decided upon was Souvlaki. I've had it before, but I've never made it. I will again, though - it was delicious, and fairly simple, and the blend of ingredients and flavors was perfect for summer.

"Pillsbury Quick and Easy Bake-Off Contest #39"

I know I said I wanted to get back to actual cookbooks, and I did. I had another book, and another recipe, that I had planned to use as a side dish to go with the souvlaki. Alas, the book, and the recipe, both failed abysmally upon an actual read-through. ('combine green beans, 1 1/2tsp olive oil, and garlic. bring to a boil.')

Since this was the *only* even vaguely edible recipe in the entire book, and it was broken beyond usefulness, the book was tossed unceremoniously into the Books To Be Recycled box - only the second one in this entire project - and I had to scramble to come up with a veggie dish in little to no time.

Luckily, my shiny commercial booklet came to my rescue with "Broccoli Bonanza," which, in spite of its stupid name, is actually a pretty tasty dish, and one that I at least had all of the ingredients for. Broccoli, garlic, olive oil, tomatoes, balsamic vinegar, and tiny pasta.

I've used this book before, I'll use it again, but this was a good reminder that there are more than just appetizers and main dishes in there.

Incidentally, I have to mention how happy I am to be half of a marriage where we can use the phrase 'nonconsentual monkey suckage' to describe a particularly useless cookbook without either of us scaring the other away.....

Date: 2009-06-07 02:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] browngirl.livejournal.com
"Three Ancient Cuisines" is a favorite cookbook of mine. I love the authorial voice as much as the ideas.

Date: 2009-06-07 04:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladysprite.livejournal.com
Yeah - I'm learning that, aside from wonderful recipes, he has a great way of just talking about food, and teaching.

Date: 2009-06-07 03:02 pm (UTC)
keshwyn: A woman attempts to stuff an octopus into a dutch oven. (cooking)
From: [personal profile] keshwyn
"The Frugal Gourmet Cooks Three Ancient Cuisines," Jeff Smith

May I borrow this at some point? I know you have too many cookbooks, so the offer of "you may borrow any one of mine in exchange" might be worthless, but...

I am slowly going through cookbooks from the library, so that I can decide if I want to actually buy them. Haven't decided on a criteria yet, but it's definitely giving me more options. :)

Date: 2009-06-07 04:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladysprite.livejournal.com
Absolutely you can borrow it - cookbooks deserve to be used! No collateral needed. :)

Libraries are wonderful things, and a couple of my favorite cookbooks are ones that I've found there and test-driven first.... my criteria generally boil down to 'that sounds cool....'

Date: 2009-06-08 06:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] evcelt.livejournal.com
Is "non-consensual monkey suckage" a band name or a song name?

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