Gather & graze 120 favorite recipes for tasty good times

Stephanie Izard

Book - 2018

"Since becoming Top Chef's first female winner in 2008, Stephanie Izard has opened three restaurants in Chicago, won the coveted Iron Chef title on Food Network's Iron Chef Gauntlet, got married, and had a baby--and still she finds time to entertain and cook for her friends and family. In Gather & Graze she teaches home cooks how she does it: her tricks, techniques, and shortcuts to cooking creative, knockout dishes with ease and confidence. Fans who wait months to snag a reservation at one of her restaurants can now have Stephanie right alongside them in their kitchens with 120 home-cook-friendly recipes for making Bánh Mì Burgers; Crumpets with Chorizo-Maple Syrup; Roasted Shishito Peppers with Sesame Miso and Parmesa...n; and Apple Fritters with Cider Glaze"--Page 2 of cover.

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Nonfiction
Published
New York : Clarkson Potter/Publishers [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Stephanie Izard (author)
Other Authors
Rachel Holtzman (author), Huge Galdones (photographer), Johanna Lowe (contributor)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
271 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
ISBN
9780451495945
  • Brunching
  • Girl & the grill
  • Gimme meat
  • Eating with the fishes
  • Veggies are fun, too!
  • Keeping it sweet
  • Pickled things.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Izard, the first woman to win Top Chef, presents an eclectic collection of over-the-top recipes, such as Cheez-Its tossed in melted chocolate and peanut butter and paired with toasted marshmallows, positioned as a cookbook for entertaining guests. Favorite dishes from her three Chicago restaurants inventively cross-pollinate cuisines: the pickled vegetables from a classic Vietnamese banh mi sandwich top a hamburger. Sidebars provide information on unusual ingredients that add zing, such as powdered honey. Unusual cuts of meat also come into play, such as goat neck marinated and roasted for five hours, then served with a tart pickled-watermelon-rind salad. The book's recipes are divided by type of gathering (brunch, cookout), which often feels random. Some recipe titles are annoyingly cutesy: "sesame-horsey mayo" served with duck hearts is mayonnaise punched up with horseradish, soy sauce, sesame oil, and fermented black beans, and "razzle" is an unnecessary euphemism for the North African ras el hanout spice mix. The results, however, are worthwhile: a ragout of ground pork, peanuts, tamarind, miso, and harissa and a soybean noodle salad flavored with yuzu and tossed with cabbage, bean sprouts, and herbs are typical of strong food that needs no gimmicks. When Izard stops trying so hard to be clever and simply cooks, the results are partyworthy and intriguing. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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