The last may be best. In a final chapter, titled "The
Next Day," you'll find recipes such as Mango-Dressed
Chicken Salad, Turkey, White Bean and Escarole Soup,
and Basil Chicken Salad on Rosemary Focaccia. This is
all beyond leftovers. This is a whole new level. The
proposed idea is to plan ahead rather than simply make
do with leftovers. That is, while in the throes of
cooking, cook extra portions with easy second-day
meals in mind. Maximize your time. The authors call
this the "poultry pantry," which is another way of
saying have on hand what you need when you need it.
Empire Kosher Chicken Cookbook includes chapters on
starters and finger foods; soups; recipes for the
range, the oven, and the grill; side dishes; and
chutneys, dressings, and salsas. Okay, you'll find
Golden Chicken Soup, perhaps the last word on the
subject. But get this: you'll also find yourself
tempted by such soups as Moroccan Chicken and Lentil
Soup, Canton Dumpling and Snow Pea Soup, and
Indonesian Basil Coconut Soup.
For starters, there are Shiitake Potstickers, Chicken
Nori Rolls, Curried Chicken Kabobs. Entrées include
French-African Chicken Stew, Honey Ginger Chicken,
Pungent Shabbat Chicken with Dried Fruit, Five Spice
Roast Turkey Breast with Pear-Garlic Sauce--the list
goes on and on, a couple of hundred recipes' worth.
This isn't just a cookbook: Empire Kosher Chicken
Cookbook is a service to cooks everywhere. --Schuyler
Ingle
From Library JournalFowler
(Classical Southern Cooking, LJ 11/1/95) doesn't
neglect Southern fried chicken?in fact, he includes a
whole chapter on it? but he goes way beyond. He
describes fried chicken? whether deep-fried,
pan-fried, or stir-fried? as universal, and he's
collected recipes from countries as diverse as Israel,
Nepal, and Japan to make his point. There are South
African Cutlets in Curry Sauce, Golden Coin Chicken
from China, Fried Chicken Malabar, and more, as well
as a good introduction to "the chicken fryer's
kitchen" and a chapter of "go-withs." Recommended for
most collections. Many cooks prefer kosher chickens
for their flavor, and both the New York Times and the
Boston Globe recently rated Empire kosher chickens as
the best in the country. With food writer Boehm,
Goldman, a recipe developer for Empire and a former
caterer, presents dozens of delectable recipes for
chicken, turkey, and duck, some simple but many quite
elegant. She's drawn on a wide variety of cuisines
(the seasonings alone in the glossary range from
Middle Eastern alleppo peppers to Thai kaffir lime
leaves to Japanese wasabi powder) to come up with a
mouthwatering array of dishes. There's even a separate
chapter devoted to leftovers. As they say, you can
never have too many chicken recipes? recommended for
most collections.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business
Information, Inc.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Product Details
Hardcover: 291 pages
Publisher: Clarkson Potter; 1st edition (March 2,
1999)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0517708639
ISBN-13: 978-0517708637
|