Overview
From the editors of America's favorite culinary magazine, SAVEUR: Soups & Stews features more than 80 recipes from the magazine's archives and editors paired with enticing full-color photography, sidebars, and more. With a masterful selection of soups and stews that celebrate the brand's authority, heritage, and culinary wealth, this cookbook is for everyone who relishes cooking home to SAVEUR's standard of excellence. These authentic, diverse, and from around the globe feature a range of techniques and cuisines that will inspire home cooks everywhere. Contents
Meat
Chicken and Poultry
Seafood and Chowders
Vegetable
Beans and Legumes
Noodles and Dumplings
Chilled
Stocks These authentic and diverse easy-to-follow recipes, combined with the editor's top tips, will help you churn out delicious soups all year long.
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Details
- ISBN-13: 9781616289652
- ISBN-10: 1616289651
- Publisher: Weldon Owen
- Publish Date: November 2015
- Dimensions: 10.2 x 8.3 x 0.9 inches
- Shipping Weight: 2.7 pounds
- Page Count: 224
Related Categories
Cooking: Wintry comfort foods
Savory soups and stews made with Saveur savvy may be the best way to fight the February food blahs. In their scrumptiously illustrated new celebration of international comfort foods, Saveur: Soups & Stews, the editors of Saveur magazine have collected more than 100 recipes for a fabulous variety of big-pot pleasers. All are made with what they call the “easy economical alchemy” of transforming meat, poultry, beans, seafood and cut-up vegetables into nourishing, inviting dishes that work on an ordinary weekday night as well as they do for a Saturday night dinner party. The very first recipe, Beet Stew with Lamb Meatballs, a Jewish-Iraqi entrée served on golden basmati rice, is a great example of the kind of “alchemy” you’ll find here. Go on to a hearty Finnan Haddie Chowder, salty-sweet Cuban-Style Chicken Stew or healthy one-pot Quinoa & Sweet Potato Soup. They’re all fabulous, all inspirational.
EASY AS PIE
Ken Haedrich willingly admits that he’s a dinner pie fanatic with an incurable “lust for crust.” With Dinner Pies, his newest paean to pies, this wonderful world of one-dish delights is not a pie in the sky—it’s doable and delicious. There’s something enticingly cozy about hand-crafted “crusted cuisine,” whether it’s an elegant Quiche Scampi, a beautiful Tomato Tarte Tatin, flaky Kale Spanakopita or kid-friendly Chicken, Broccoli & Cheddar Turnovers. Haedrich’s savory-pie imagination seems boundless, as is his hands-on advice. There’s a whole chapter on What It Takes to Make a Perfect Dinner Pie, followed by carefully detailed recipes for pie dough, pastry dough and biscuit crusts, which starts with his super-versatile, got-your-back Go-To Pie Dough (you may not ever need another recipe). If you suffer from fear of pie dough, Haedrich is your man. He’s never met a dough phobia he can’t fix, and he’s done his best here to anticipate your questions, adding time-tested tips to help—it’s really as easy as pie!
TOP PICK IN COOKBOOKS
There’s a lot more to Korean cuisine than kimchi. The flavors are intense, bold, tangy and spicy, with a little bit of fabulous funk. More and more Americans are learning about its complex wonders, but Koreatown by Deuki Hong and Matt Rodbard is the first cookbook I’ve come across that offers immersion into the Korean kitchen and the intricacies of the dishes served in Koreatown restaurants across the U.S., along with their truly accessible recipes— techniques included—for making them at home. There’s only one problem—once you get hooked on these unique flavors, you might find most everything else you cook just a bit bland. Believe me, I got hooked years ago, and it’s a worthy addiction. The recipes range from the sensational small plates that accompany entrées, to warming soups, stews, to-die-for barbecue, Bibimbap and much more. Great header notes, interviews with well-known Korean food fans and super photos add to the fun.
This article was originally published in the February 2016 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.
Cooking: Wintry comfort foods
Savory soups and stews made with Saveur savvy may be the best way to fight the February food blahs. In their scrumptiously illustrated new celebration of international comfort foods, Saveur: Soups & Stews, the editors of Saveur magazine have collected more than 100 recipes for a fabulous variety of big-pot pleasers. All are made with what they call the “easy economical alchemy” of transforming meat, poultry, beans, seafood and cut-up vegetables into nourishing, inviting dishes that work on an ordinary weekday night as well as they do for a Saturday night dinner party. The very first recipe, Beet Stew with Lamb Meatballs, a Jewish-Iraqi entrée served on golden basmati rice, is a great example of the kind of “alchemy” you’ll find here. Go on to a hearty Finnan Haddie Chowder, salty-sweet Cuban-Style Chicken Stew or healthy one-pot Quinoa & Sweet Potato Soup. They’re all fabulous, all inspirational.
EASY AS PIE
Ken Haedrich willingly admits that he’s a dinner pie fanatic with an incurable “lust for crust.” With Dinner Pies, his newest paean to pies, this wonderful world of one-dish delights is not a pie in the sky—it’s doable and delicious. There’s something enticingly cozy about hand-crafted “crusted cuisine,” whether it’s an elegant Quiche Scampi, a beautiful Tomato Tarte Tatin, flaky Kale Spanakopita or kid-friendly Chicken, Broccoli & Cheddar Turnovers. Haedrich’s savory-pie imagination seems boundless, as is his hands-on advice. There’s a whole chapter on What It Takes to Make a Perfect Dinner Pie, followed by carefully detailed recipes for pie dough, pastry dough and biscuit crusts, which starts with his super-versatile, got-your-back Go-To Pie Dough (you may not ever need another recipe). If you suffer from fear of pie dough, Haedrich is your man. He’s never met a dough phobia he can’t fix, and he’s done his best here to anticipate your questions, adding time-tested tips to help—it’s really as easy as pie!
TOP PICK IN COOKBOOKS
There’s a lot more to Korean cuisine than kimchi. The flavors are intense, bold, tangy and spicy, with a little bit of fabulous funk. More and more Americans are learning about its complex wonders, but Koreatown by Deuki Hong and Matt Rodbard is the first cookbook I’ve come across that offers immersion into the Korean kitchen and the intricacies of the dishes served in Koreatown restaurants across the U.S., along with their truly accessible recipes— techniques included—for making them at home. There’s only one problem—once you get hooked on these unique flavors, you might find most everything else you cook just a bit bland. Believe me, I got hooked years ago, and it’s a worthy addiction. The recipes range from the sensational small plates that accompany entrées, to warming soups, stews, to-die-for barbecue, Bibimbap and much more. Great header notes, interviews with well-known Korean food fans and super photos add to the fun.
This article was originally published in the February 2016 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.