Don't Sweat the Aubergine: What Works in the Kitchen and Why
By (Author) Nicholas Clee
Transworld Publishers Ltd
Black Swan
1st July 2012
26th April 2012
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Food and beverage technology
Catering and food preparation skills and trades
Popular science
641.5
Paperback
368
Width 127mm, Height 198mm, Spine 23mm
252g
What works in the kitchen and why- the cookbook that tells you what others leave out. On average, people cook no more than two dishes from each cookbook they buy. Why Because most of the other recipes seem just too daunting. At last, here is the book that answers the questions you always want to ask and solves those frustrating kitchen conundrums - why do some writers tell you to wash and soak rice before cooking while others never mention it Why won't mince 'brown' the way they tell you Will an aubergine really taste better if you sweat it with salt first The authoritative verdict on these and every other cookery technique is here. Written in Clee's easy, wry style and packed with his own selection of jargon-busting recipes that will deliciously broaden your range of standbys, this is the last cookbook you will ever need to buy . . .
Intelligent, thoughtful, fascinating... A gem -- Nigel Slater
A really useful book for anyone interested in learning about the practical side of cooking rather than just throwing ingredients in the pan and hoping for the best -- Matthew Fort
Need a guide to that most complex of assietes rustiques, cassoulet Wondering whether to salt that mountain of aubergines when you would rather be poolside Clee's your man -- Kate Colquhoun * Daily Telegraph *
Given added spice by clee's willingmess to take a pop at the top chefs who peddle old wives' tales -- Lydia Slater * The Sunday Times *
It would make the ideal first recipe book for anyone with a bit of a brain -- Tom Jaine * Guardian *
Nicholas Clee is a journalist and author. He lives in north London with his wife and two daughters.