Jumat, 09 Agustus 2013

[D418.Ebook] PDF Ebook Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman

PDF Ebook Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman

As recognized, book Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman is well known as the home window to open up the world, the life, as well as extra thing. This is exactly what individuals now need so much. Also there are many individuals who don't such as reading; it can be an option as recommendation. When you really require the means to develop the next inspirations, book Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman will truly guide you to the means. Additionally this Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman, you will certainly have no remorse to get it.

Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman

Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman



Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman

PDF Ebook Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman

Outstanding Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman publication is constantly being the most effective buddy for investing little time in your workplace, evening time, bus, and everywhere. It will certainly be a great way to merely look, open, and read the book Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman while in that time. As known, experience and also skill don't consistently included the much money to acquire them. Reading this publication with the title Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman will certainly let you understand more points.

The factor of why you can receive as well as get this Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman faster is that this is guide in soft data kind. You could read guides Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman any place you want even you remain in the bus, office, residence, and also other places. Yet, you could not should relocate or bring guide Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman print any place you go. So, you will not have bigger bag to bring. This is why your option making far better concept of reading Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman is truly useful from this situation.

Recognizing the method the best ways to get this book Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman is also valuable. You have actually remained in ideal site to start getting this details. Obtain the Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman web link that we supply here and check out the web link. You could order guide Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman or get it when feasible. You could rapidly download this Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman after getting deal. So, when you require guide rapidly, you can directly get it. It's so very easy and so fats, right? You must like to through this.

Just connect your tool computer or device to the web connecting. Obtain the modern-day innovation to make your downloading Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman finished. Even you don't wish to read, you could straight shut the book soft data and open Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman it later. You can likewise effortlessly get the book anywhere, considering that Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman it remains in your gizmo. Or when being in the office, this Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, By Jill Norman is likewise recommended to review in your computer device.

Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman

Herbs & Spices is the essential cook's companion, now redesigned and updated with all new recipes.

A classic reference, the best-selling Herbs & Spices is a trusted resource in the kitchen, with more than 200 unique herbs and spices from around the world showcased alongside gorgeous, full-color photography, flavor notes, and pairings. This new, updated edition includes the newest herbs, spices, and flavorings influencing global cuisine today, plus more than 180 recipes for main dishes, marinades, pastas, pickles, and sauces.

Part spice cookbook, part kitchen encyclopedia, Herbs & Spices offers handy seasoning how-tos:

  • How to identify and choose the best herbs, spices, and other flavorings.
  • How to prepare and cook with them to ensure you are making the most of their flavors.
  • How to make your own blends, spice rubs, sauces, and more — then customize them for your family's palate.

Herbs & Spices is perfect for beginning cooks just setting up a kitchen, foodies exploring the deliciously exotic mash-ups of today's modern cooking, and experts looking for ways to experiment with new flavor combinations. This practical illustrated reference book gives you all the guidance you need to become a master of seasonings and to make tantalizing food from around the world.

  • Sales Rank: #66551 in Books
  • Brand: Norman, Jill/ King, Dave (PHT)
  • Published on: 2015-05-05
  • Released on: 2015-05-05
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.50" h x 1.06" w x 8.00" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 336 pages

From Booklist
More and more herbs and spices appear in American kitchens daily, encouraged by television chefs and promoted through new ethnic cuisines entering the mainstream. Jill Norman's Herbs & Spices comes at exactly the right moment to guide readers through the tangle of leaves, seeds, and berries. Norman thoughtfully organizes herbs into major classifications by their predominant bouquets. This approach immediately assists the cook looking for substitutions. Norman's tasting notes, borrowing a vocabulary identical to that used for wine, establish a standard language for characterizing each item's salient aromas and flavors. Full-color, close-up pictures aid in identification. Text outlines culinary uses and purchasing and storing data and gives information on growing one's own herbs. A short recipe section offers examples of how specific herbs and spices are used in cooking. A directory of mail-order sources further assists those who lack local access. Norman has made a vital contribution to reference collections for quick identification of species and for the use of herbs and spices in cooking. Mark Knoblauch
Copyright � American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

"Jill Norman's Herbs & Spices comes at exactly the right moment to guide readers through the tangle of leaves, seeds, and berries." — Booklist

"Both novice and expert cooks will find much to savor here." — Booklist

"Readers who want to experiment with something different will enjoy flipping through the various flavor sections with their favorite cookbook in the other hand." — Library Journal

"If you've stopped reading cookbooks because the truly inspirational have become few and far between, make space on your bookshelf for this one." — Foodies West Magazine

About the Author
Norman is Elizabeth David's literary trustee. She is director of the European Patent Office in The Hague.

Most helpful customer reviews

187 of 192 people found the following review helpful.
This is a MUST HAVE if you love making your own recipes
By Chris Baker
I am a backyard BBQ fanatic who has started competing at local BBQ competitions. Outside of heat, smoke and meat, the most important part of making good BBQ is in your seasonings. Whether it is making a rub, a baste, or sauce, it is important to balance the flavors and recognize what flavors are needed to take your recipe to the next level. This book has all of the information I need to do exactly that. This book gets a LOT of use and abuse in my house, and I have used it as a reference to help me blend/enhance flavors for SO many recipes. I can not recommend this book highly enough. If you want to know about the flavors, uses and pairings of spices, this book will take care of you. The thing I like most about this book is how for each spice it mentions what other spices are typically used with it. This is very helpful when trying to narrow the search for another flavor to add to your recipes.

248 of 259 people found the following review helpful.
Only book you need on herbs and spices
By B. Marold
`herbs & spices, the cook's reference' is the latest of eight different books on either herbs or spices by noted culinary editor and author, Jill Norman, one of the more influential disciples of the great English culinary writer, Elizabeth David, who contributed two books of her own to this subject.

I chose this book to review since I had a backlog of herb and spice books to review, and I wanted to start with one I could assume to be a standard against which all other books can be measured. The problem with starting with the standard is I'm assuming this role purely on the basis of the author's reputation in the field. I am happy to say that I find virtually nothing in this book to invalidate my holding it up as a standard against which other books on the subject may be judged.

For starters, Ms. Norman convinces us at the outset that the difference between an herb and a spice is vague enough around the world to require that we treat the two together, thereby eliminating any chance of leaving something out because it was not thought to be a spice or an herb. Part of this ambiguity is her statement that in the United States, a dried herb is considered a spice. Since Ms. Norman is an expert on the subject, I must assume that there is a faction in America that believes this. She states this to make it clear that her basis for distinguishing herbs from spices is based on the current British thinking on the subject. But, since she is covering both, the issue is academic in this book.

Much more interesting is Ms. Norman's separation of the various herbs and spices into a large number of categories based on flavor. Herbs are divided into `Fresh and mild herbs' featuring parsley, `Sweet Herbs' featuring lavender, `Citrus or tart herbs' featuring lemon balm, `Licorice or anise herbs' featuring dill and fennel, `Minty herbs' featuring mint, `Onion herbs' featuring garlic, `Bitter or astringent herbs' featuring celery, `Pungent and spicy herbs' featuring sage, thyme, and cilantro. This division alone is a great service, as it gives us a sound basis for substituting one herb for the other, as when we may need borage, and see that it's in the same class as parsley.

A deeper look at this lineup of herbs shows that Ms. Norman is covering a far broader range of species and varieties within species than most other books or sections of books on herbs. Most of us know of two or three varieties of basil. Ms. Norman shows us fourteen, divided between three groups, Genoese and purple basil (Ocimum basilicum), `other basils', and Asian basils. The inclusion of the scientific name is essential in a work like this. The most important need is when you wish to buy seeds to grow these plants, the scientific name is the only way you have to guarantee getting the species or variety you want. If you happen to see seeds for `Asian Basil', know that this could be any one of seven different species or varieties! Within sections such as those for the Asian basils, the pictures in this book really shine, as the pictures of these seven varieties are all on the same page, including stems and flowers in many cases, as many of the leaves from two different varieties are almost identical in appearance.

We are especially happy that Ms. Norman has drawn outside the lines in her including several plant species which border on what we think as teas (such as sassafras), salad greens (such as sorrel and celery), or root vegetable (such as horseradish and wasabi). The only lapse I can find in all the material on herbs is that the distinction between the Mediterranean bay is not clearly made from the New World plants often called `bay'.

Spices get an equally thorough treatment, being divided between `Nutty spices' such as sesame, `Sweet spices' such as vanilla, `Acidic and fruity spices' such as tamarind, `Citrus spices' such as lemon grass, `Licorice or anise spices' such as anise, `Warm and earthy spices such as saffron, `Bitter or astringent spices such as capers, `Pungent spices' such as chiles, ginger, mustard, and pepper. One of my fondest discoveries in this book is that not only are ginger and galangal shown to belong to two different biological genus, they are categorized as in two different taste classes. These two are commonly mistakenly lumped together.

The sections on chilis (genus capsicum) are as vividly colorful as all the others, with a surprise in that the heat in a chili species is rated on a scale of 1 to 10 rather than the better known (in the U.S. at least) Scoville scale.

The chapter in this book which makes it the only book you should need on herbs and spices is the one on recipes, featuring combinations for all the world famous herb and spice mixes, and lots you may never have heard of. The very best aspect of this section is that it provides not one recipe for things such as bouquet garni, but seven, for beef, pork, lamb, poultry, game, fish, and vegetables.

The very last chapter on general recipes could have easily been left out, as what comes before is more than enough to justify this as the only book you will need on herb and spice usage. One thing some readers may miss and the one thing that may justify a second book in you library dedicated to herbs and spices is one that deals with the history and geography of herb and spice origins. This book will not satisfy your curiosity over how New World Tomatoes joined up with their soul mates, Mediterranean basil.

An excellent book and a `must have' for a foodie library.

84 of 89 people found the following review helpful.
The ultimate spice dictionary and reference
By Fan of His Royal Badness
The book is organized to make using it a dream. It is divided into three sections Herbs, Spices and Recipes.

The first two sections are organized identically; an introduction, categories/groupings of herbs or spices and a section on preparing herbs or spices. Herb groupings are Fresh and mild herbs, Sweet herbs Citrus or tart herbs, Licorice or anise herbs, Minty herbs, Oniony herbs, Bitter or astringent herbs, Pungent and spicy herbs. Spice groupings are Nutty spices, Sweet spices, Acidic and fruity spices, Citrus spices, Licorice or anise spices, Warm and earthy spices, Bitter or astringent spices, pungent spices.

Each individual herb or spice has a page that includes pictures, history, notes on flavor use how it is harvested, culinary uses, other spices/herbs it combines with. The pictures and information combine to make this a top notch reference.

Recipes section is divided into two main sub-sections Blending herbs and spices and Cooking with herbs and spices. There is also a bibliography, sources and an index.

The Recipes for herb blends is shorter than expected but nice and represent other cultures. The spice blends are from around the globe and a longer more comprehensive list there are also recipies for sauces and marinades. Both herb and spice blend Recipes include suggestions and notes on how to use them and the best food pairings.

Cooking with herbs and spices has a good range of Recipes and the author packs a lot into this small section; soups and light dishes, fish, meat (includes three chicken recipes), vegetables, pasta noodles & grains, desserts and drinks ( including ice cream, Pineapple ginger cooler, Mojito).

The bibliography gives a detailed and exhaustive list of sources should you need to do further research. The source section gives contact information on places to purchase herbs and spices it is also a long and detailed contact information many including, addresses, phone numbers, fax numbers and web sites, and e-mail if available.

If you are a beginner and want to learn more about how to use herbs and spices or if you are an experienced cook and want to expand your flavor palate this is a great reference for you.

See all 248 customer reviews...

Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman PDF
Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman EPub
Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman Doc
Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman iBooks
Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman rtf
Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman Mobipocket
Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman Kindle

Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman PDF

Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman PDF

Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman PDF
Herbs & Spices: The Cook's Reference, by Jill Norman PDF

0 komentar:

Posting Komentar