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Soups, Stews, and One-Pot Meals
Tom Valenti
125 Home Recipes from the Chef-Owner of New York City's Ouest and 'Cesca
Scribner
October 2003
288 pages ISBN: 0743243757 Hardcover
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This is the way we love to eat -- slowly braised, cut-with-
a-spoon-tender meat resting in aromatic juices just waiting
for the perfect piece of bread to come along and sop it up;
a steaming bowl of chowder filled with chunks of fish and
potatoes in rich broth laced with the smoky-sweet-salty
flavor of bacon; a casserole that's spent some serious time
in the oven as layer upon layer of creamy, soft cheese,
pasta, herbs, and meat meld into a delectable whole. And as luck would have it, this is the way celebrated New
York City chef Tom Valenti loves to cook. Considered
Manhattan's grandmaster of comfort food, Valenti has made
this beloved cooking his trademark. In fact, on any given
night, you'll find him in his wildly successful Upper West
Side restaurants Ouest and 'Cesca feeding the world's A-
list -- Bill Clinton, Steven Spielberg, Charlie Rose, Jerry
Seinfeld, Judy Collins, Joan Didion. Because, of course,
this is the food they love to eat, too. In Tom Valenti's Soups, Stews, and One-Pot Meals, Valenti
and coauthor Andrew Friedman dish up the flavor we've come
to expect from a New York chef, without any of the fuss.
This is food that gets better a day or two after it's made,
food to make on the weekend and savor throughout a busy
week, food that is perfect for dinner parties and family
celebrations. Here are 125 realistic recipes for the home cook -- most
made in one pot -- and all based on the fact that the right
ingredients, left alone to cook in a single vessel with
virtually no intervention from the cook, steadily build
glorious flavor and leave far fewer pots to clean. The book includes "Variations" and "Tomorrow's Table," tips
on ways to embellish a dish by adding vegetables or meats
or provide economy by stretching it into another satisfying
meal by simply adding another ingredient. Valenti and
Friedman embrace what they term "cooking in the real
world," encouraging home cooks to use canned stocks and
beans whenever appropriate. They discuss key ingredients;
offer a section on condiments, garnishes, and
accompaniments; provide a list of mail-order sources; and
recommend cookware (though you won't need a lot).
No awards found for this book.
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