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B**D
Masterful Reference on Bistro Recipes. Highly Recommended
Expectations for Thomas Keller's new book `Bouchon' are very high, and I firmly believe he has exceeded them. The book sets new standards for the foodie coffee table fare as well as confirming Keller's reputation as one of the country's foremost culinary artists. The book is larger, heavier, and better than his first cookbook on the cuisine of his flagship French Laundry. There are several things that make this an excellent book for all people who love to cook.First, the book is a superior reference work of bistro dishes and how to prepare them. It is certainly not complete, but then I think no cookbook in the world will ever be a complete reference to any subject, as every culinary subject changes daily due to changes in provisions, historical research, and the enormous variety in how even one dish is made from place to place. For example, both `Bouchon' and Tony Bourdain's recent book on bistro recipes from Les Halle has five (5) dishes containing mussels, yet no two are the same dish. For all of the virtues of Bourdain's book, Keller's book is superior as a reference to the overall style of cooking if only because he and his editors rigorously give both French and English names to all dishes.Second, as amazing as it is to say this, lots of dishes in `Bouchon' are actually easy to make. The initial roast chicken recipe is literally not much more complicated than carefully prepping the carcass and sticking it into the oven. Keller does not even baste the beast and it is done within an hour (for a 3-pound bird). And, all this with the cachet of making a Thomas Keller recipe. Almost all the salads and `openers' dishes are equally as simple, as long as you have high quality ingredients.Third, the pantry chapter of recipes is a more complete reference for making stocks and other sauce bases than I have seen anywhere else. My former gold standard for stockmaking recipes was in `The Zuni Café Cookbook' by Judy Rodgers. This is better by giving recipes that are just as good, better written, and a more complete collection of stocks than I have seen anywhere else. The only thing I would possibly add to this chapter would be a recipe for a court bouillon. But, the recipe does appear in the book as a part of the recipe for a shellfish platter. Other sauces such as a mignonette sauce and a cocktail sauce also appear `in situ' along with appropriate dishes with which they are used.Fourth, the book is simply packed with important culinary techniques. Most of these are not the sort of thing which will find their way to the quick tips pages of `Cooks Illustrated' or `Gourmet' as they are not shortcuts, but more painstaking ways to improve what is probably already an excellent dish. One dramatic example is Keller's twist on braising where he segregates his flavoring vegetables at the bottom of the Dutch oven under a layer of cheesecloth before adding the meat and the broth. In this way, it becomes very easy to remove the finished meat from the veg and retrieve the broth with little or no odd floating bits of celery leaf or thyme branch. A more simple technique is the recommendation to transfer finished stock to the filtering device with a ladle rather than simply pouring the stuff into the chinois. The force of the uncontrolled flow will force some unwanted particles into the filtered stock. It is all about little details piled up upon one another, which separates good from great cooking.Fifth, Keller's interpretation of bistro cooking is uncompromising. One dramatic example of this is his claim that America has forgotten how to make a proper quiche, if it ever did know in the first place. The cardinal sin is to make a quiche in a pie pan. This is no surprise, as Julia Child in `Mastering the Art of French Cooking' gives the same warning. What is more surprising is that while most Americans probably use a tart pan with sides of no more than an inch and Child recommends a flan or cake pan with sides up to 11/2 inches, Keller states that you need a 2 inch tall pan to make a proper quiche. A more subtle difference is in his technique for preparing his pate brisee. Virtually every pie crust recipes I have ever seen calls for cutting in butter to leave lentil-sized bits of butter in the mix. Keller insists this is a mistake for a quiche with a wet custard filling, as the pockets of butter create weaknesses in the dough that may break through before the custard filling has firmed up.Although the book contains many simple recipes, there are also many classic recipes such as boeuf bourguignon, which are literally essays in classic French cooking. Tony Bourdain's recipe for boeuf bourguignon requires 10 ingredients and two concise paragraphs to describe the method. Keller's recipe calls for 43 ingredients in 5 different component preparations, not including the veal stock preparation. This recipe is the poster boy for Keller's take on bistro cooking, which is technique and constant refinement by filtering, skimming, and straining. While the authors have been painstaking in translating the professional's practiced eye and nose into English, this cooking is still about constant attention to the state of the dish as it cooks, and of recognizing the right time to move from one stage to the other. It is this dish where if Bourdain did it at the French Laundry his way, he would be fired on the spot.This book is so large that it will probably be unwieldy to cook from in the kitchen. Open, it is large than two of my cutting boards together. Still, I cannot overstate how valuable this book is to someone who loves to cook and to read about cooking.Very highly recommended.
M**.
Treasured, Authentic Bistro Recipes & Technique from a Fabled Chef
This cookbook is all about traditional French bistro recipes prepared with classic French technique. Chef Keller focuses exclusively on the bistro dishes he makes for Bouchon. If the thought of delving into traditional bistro recipes with exacting techniques, very specific ingredients, and, on occasion, hours or even days of preparation, excites you, then this is the book for you. It's clear that Chef Keller wants us to learn how properly to prepare traditional dishes such as rillettes, terrines, tartines, and, of course, French onion soup. He does not compromise on ingredients: these are traditional dishes. He's a California/NY chef, so he uses a lot of fresh seafood. Some ingredients, such as the freshest seafood suitable for a raw bar, may not be accessible for some home cooks. However, for the most part, his other ingredients are accessible: I'm assuming that, if you're reading this review, you know how to find, for example, raclette cheese. I think it's telling that Chef Keller's very first recipe is "My Favorite Simple Roast Chicken." That sets the tone for his premise, which is to offer traditional food prepared with excellent ingredients and executed with classic techniques. It's clear that Chef Keller wants us to learn about some of his tried-and-true techniques: for example, 5 pages are devoted to making duck confit. I'm definitely going to screw up my courage and try making my own brandade, which is salt cod cured over a few days--oh my goodness. The author provides excellent headnotes, which I love: I really want to know why he thinks each dish is important. Virtually every "what's that?" ingredient in his recipes is clickable to his excellent "Sources" chapter, in which almost every entry is also clickable to the purveyor's website. Want to know Chef Keller's suggestion for "top quality" canned escargot? Or grenouille, quail, garlic sausages, and duck? Click on the link in his "Sources." Most recipes have color photos. Kindle format review: this book is 100% clickable, which is rare in Kindle books. TOC, Index, chapters, sub-chapters, sources, ingredients, embedded recipes, equipment, and even technique are all cross-clickable. 6 stars to the authors and editors for a fabulous Kindle edition!
C**E
Service & Book Description
This used book was perfect; just as the seller described & it was delivered on time & with care from Amazon. The book itself is beautifully written, photos of the food are so inviting that you want to sit at the table, smell the aroma and taste each gorgeous entree. I can't wait to cook some of these recipes for my friends. Awesome, awesome book to give as a gift for the holidays ahead.
D**A
My Bible, my Educator, my Happiness!
What a value! Yes I do read each recipe and I do write into the book, after all the book is mine!This one is a huge cookbook with many pictures and the paper of superb quality and of course from my Top Chef Thomas Keller!No, I don’t cook or bake each recipe, but I certainly can taste it when I read it and I read those recipes slowly and carefully.Truly my cookbooks keep me sane in these stressful times, away from the Computer and Social Media. Those books simply transfer me into a much more sharing, healing and creative World.
J**L
It's TK
How can anything Thomas Keller create suck? If you do just one of these recipes, it is less than the cost of admission to his fine restaurant(s). I suggest his other books as well
J**E
Best cookbooks ever
I’ve eaten at this restaurant, easily 100 times when it was in Beverly Hills. This book has the entire menu. It will challenge you and teach you. Would highly recommend the others from this series like as hoc. He’s an amazing chef. Most of the ingredients you can get in a major metropolitan area (I live in LA and rarely can’t find something). Follow every step. Each one is there for a reason that may not be obvious unless you have as many Michelin stars as Keller :)
A**R
bistro at its best
Not what i had expected the book to be, however i learned some very new and entertaining information about french cooking
I**E
Great book and great shape!!
Shipped in timely manner and in great shape!
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