Delicious Chocolate from Jacques Torres

torres-chocolate

Just in time for my Christmas Meal Planner!

Jacques Torres’ A Year in Chocolate: 80 Recipes for Holidays and Special Occasions

Who can resist a chocolate recipe? Not me, and this Christmas I’m serving Buche de Noel.

Buche de Noel is the French name for a Christmas cake shaped like a log and traditionally decorated with confectioners’ sugar to resemble snow on a Yule log.

Using one of the mouth watering recipes from Torres, I’ll be presenting a fabulous cake filled with chocolate cream and ornamented with meringue mushrooms.

And how about some elegant Poached Pears with Chocolate Fondue?

Pure Chocolate

Pure Chocolate: Divine Desserts and Sweets from the Creator of Fran’s Chocolates

Pure Chocolate by Fran Bigelow

If you’re one of those folks who thinks life is too short to stuff cherry tomatoes,” says Fran Bigelow, “you may not have the patience for tempering chocolate.”

Anyone in need of inspiration should open a page, any page. The experienced chocolatier will find new ideas and, incredibly clearly, a section on the sacred mysteries of tempering chocolate. For the less experienced, Bigelow suggests recipes which act as building blocks for more complex procedures.

Contents

Introduction
Everything you need to know about chocolate
Amazing cookies and brownies
Tortes, with and without flour (for celiacs & gluten-sensitive)
Elegant tarts
Celebration cakes and holiday specialties
Sumptuous cheesecakes, puddings, and custards
Chilled spectaculars
Silken dessert sauces
Five beverages and a snack
Truffles and other fine chocolates
Building blocks

Pure Chocolate: Divine Desserts and Sweets from the Creator of Fran’s Chocolates

Bones

Bones: Recipes, History, and Lore

Bones is about meat on the bone, plain and simple.

Beef or veal, lamb, game, poultry, fish–it matters not. If the meat is on the bone as it enters the cooking process, be that roasting, braising, steaming, baking, or grilling, it has every chance of being far superior to meat divorced of the skeleton. Think how boring skinless, boneless chicken breasts can be.

But McLagan’s underlying theme is about taking time to treat a product like meat with the respect it deserves. If you demand that it morphs into some sort of time-and-labor-saving protein package you end up with chicken fingers, not food. If it is about anything, Bones is about good food, and good food takes time. And time is the most precious ingredient any cook can add to the broth. The time it takes isn’t a burden, it’s where the cook truly learns and grows and matures.

McLagan divides Bones into sections devoted to Beef and Veal, Pork, Lamb, Poultry, Fish, and Game. Each section begins with a precise description of the basic animal from the skeleton on out before moving on to stocks, concentrated stocks, and consommés.

As for recipe enticements you’ll find Beer-Glazed Beef Ribs, Osso Buco with Fennel and Blood Orange Sauce, Spicy Korean Pork Soup, Roast Leg of Pork with Crackling, Olive-Crusted Lamb Racks, Lamb Shanks in Pomegranate Sauce, Poached Chicken with Seasonal Vegetables, Grilled Quail with Sage Butter, Coconut Curry Chicken, Sardines on Toast, Cantonese-style Steamed Fish, and Herb-Roasted Rabbit (one of four rabbit recipes!).

While the novice cook should not shy away from Bones, a firm foundation in basic western cooking technique is a plus. There’s a lot of learning available between these two covers. Some of it is about meat and bones, some about cooking and serving, and some is about an attitude to bring to the kitchen: If you take a little time the rewards will be far superior to any shortcuts along the way.

All of which makes Jennifer McLagan something of a revolutionary in our midst.

Cupcakes

125 Best Cupcake Recipes

Decadent enough to satisfy, small enough to minimize the regret

Nice dense little cakes. You know instantly this is no packaged product. Simple enough recipes to follow. Have a look at some of these variations ..

Malted Espresso Cakes with Malted Milk Icing – Buttercream and White Chocolate Glaze — Orange Chocolate Cupcakes —- Apple Cupcakes with Caramel Glaze —- Mango Coconut —- Raspberry Vanilla and, by the way, the chocolate fudge frosting is incredible.

125 Best Cupcake Recipes

Cooking Apicius

Cooking Apicius: Roman Recipes for Today

Grainger is both a scholar and an excellent cook of Ancient Roman food and writes in a friendly, chatty manner with informative discussions of various ingredients and cooking techniques.

I’ve cooked from “Around the Roman Table: Food and Feasting in Ancient Rome” by Patrick Faas, and “Roman Cookery: Ancient Recipes for Modern Kitchens” by Mark Grant, it’s fun to get another taste of the patrician’s table. I hosted a Murder Mystery Game once, with full Roman meal for seven guests using “A Taste of Ancient Rome” by Ilaria Gozzini Giacosa for inspiration and practical guidance.

For a long time cooks who reconstruct Roman food have taken Apicius literally, and without any thought into the many elements of Roman food. At best, the food is tasteless. The excuse, usually an emphatic “this is how the Romans did it!” is just plain silly. Rather, Apicius is a guide for cooks, much like 18th and 19th century cookbooks, where the recipe leaves almost all the explanations and cooking instructions out.

Sally Grainger has meticulously researched the elements of Roman cooking, and worked the recipes out into very palatable dishes. She thoroughly explains the ingredients, including mulsum and garum, and some of the unusual seasonings like lovage.

Cooking Apicius: Roman Recipes for Today