Cooking for good times Super delicious, super simple

Paul Kahan, 1962-

Book - 2019

"Chicago chef Paul Kahan is legendary for inviting people over and cooking up amazing food while everyone--including him--is hanging out in the kitchen, talking, and having a great time. How does he do it? First, master a repertoire of twelve core tactics (roast some roots, make some dough, roast a whole fish, braise a pork shoulder, make a simple dessert, and more). Next, change out the supporting ingredients to create a half dozen variations that make the recipes seem new. Last, open two bottles of pretty good wine (Kahan includes easy-to-find recommendations), fill everyone's glasses, and enjoy the company while you finish getting the meal on the table. With recipes ranging from Roasted Chicken with Smashed Potatoes and Green S...auce to Farro with Charred Cauliflower and Oranges and to Steak with Radicchio, Honey-Roasted Squash, and Pumpkin Seed Pesto, plus more than 125 mouth-watering photographs, this is a playbook that is guaranteed to make hosting more relaxing, fun, and delicious"--

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Published
California ; New York : Lorena Jones Books, an imprint of Ten Speed Press [2019]
Language
English
Corporate Author
Peden + Munk
Main Author
Paul Kahan, 1962- (author)
Corporate Author
Peden + Munk (photographer)
Other Authors
Perry Hendrix (author), Rachel Holtzman
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
277 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 29 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780399578588
  • Sharing food we like with people we like
  • Make some food to eat while you cook
  • Add some cured meats and grilled sausage
  • Buy some greens
  • Roast some roots (and marinate them!)
  • Toss together some old bread : Panzanellas
  • Make some grains : Salads and tabboulehs
  • Melt some cheese : Raclette
  • Make some pizza dough
  • Roast a whole fish
  • Roast a yard bird
  • Braise a pork shoulder
  • Cook a steak, any steak
  • Make a simple dessert.
Review by Booklist Review

Chicago chef-restaurateur Kahan's second cookbook offers lush, hearty, recipes and suggested wine pairings, always with an eye toward the experience of both cooking and eating. Notes are reminiscent of the charmingly rambling emails friends might send while advising how to prepare their signature dishes: crammed with tips, personality, vast knowledge, reassurances, and a well-placed boast or two. The titular ""simple"" dishes are not necessarily simplistic: recipes are well thought out, ample, and rich with practiced flavor combinations and unfussy boldness, framed with a clear narrative presentation. Instagram-worthy full-page photos not just of the food but of friends enjoying it in gorgeous, rustic settings will nudge readers to plan a backyard gathering of their own. Indeed the ""good times"" of the title are times of gathering and togetherness. Brusque, instructive section headings (""Make Some Food to Eat While You Cook""; ""Buy Some Greens""; ""Cook a Steak, Any Steak"") illustrate the just-do-it mentality of diving in and bodily making these meals happen. A cookbook good for dreaming but ready to be pressed into service.--Heather Booth Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this entertaining cookbook, Chicago chef Kahan (Cheers to the Publican, Repast and Present) celebrates sharing family-style meals with friends and family. Many of the chapters start with a core recipe followed by several fun twists. For instance, after readers master a basic pizza recipe, they will be inspired to incorporate exciting toppings, such as honey-roasted winter squash and kale pesto; roasted eggplant, smoked mozzarella, and hot honey; and mortadella, taleggio, and charred bitter greens. He devotes another chapter to salads, instructing how to select different types of greens organized in different categories (neutral, bitter, and herbs) and sharing enticing salad creations--such as charred radicchio with arugula, cherries, and parmigiano, as well as mixed greens with roasted shallot vinaigrette, nuts, and shaved cheese. The roasted whole fish chapter has plenty of ideas, most notably serving it alongside shrimp with a romesco and warm pepper vinaigrette, and succinctly shares the process of butchering fish. The most memorable recipes come from the panzanella chapter, in which Kahan transforms the classic bread salad with renditions adding roasted leeks, pecans, and apple; tomatoes, green beans, olives, and anchovies; or dandelion greens, honey-roasted squash, and pear. Kahan's flavorful guide will help readers create memorable meals with ease. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Sometimes we all need direction--just tell us what to do and more important, how to do it. That is the aim of this new book by the executive chef of Avec (Cheers to the Publican) in Chicago. He lays it out in 13 basic options, such as "roast some roots," "braise a pork shoulder," "make some pizza dough." Each of these primary ideas is spelled out, with several variations on the theme. Directions and illustrations are specific and easy to follow, with serving suggestions, and even specific brands of products recommended in some cases. This book is the opposite of "cheffy." Almost nothing is assumed, and regular ingredients available to the home cook are virtually always listed (other than the "sheet" of gelatin mentioned for the panna cotta). The main drawback is the somewhat limited palate of foods. For example, only two desserts are included, the aforementioned panna cotta and an olive oil cake. While these may take care of all your dessert needs, if they don't, you will need to look elsewhere. VERDICT Good for minimalists, aspiring novice cooks, and Avec fans. Purchase where there is interest.--Susan Hurst, Miami Univ. Libs., Oxford, OH

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

SHARING FOOD WE LIKE WITH PEOPLE WE LIKE WHEN I STARTED THINKING ABOUT what I wanted to do for my second book--long before the first book was close to done--I kept coming back to what had been the inspiration for my restaurant avec. There was something about that place that had been a part of my life beyond my work that I wanted to somehow translate. In the beginning, before avec became avec, we just wanted a little wine bar next to Blackbird to make some money off the wine. But the food was so good, it ended up being about the wine and superdelicious, super-straightforward, super-shareable dishes. And that's really what it's about at its core--avec = with. Whenever someone hasn't been in to eat and wants to know what kind of restaurant avec is, I tell them that it's kind of like the best dinner party everyone wishes they could have--there's great music, tons of wine, and the food just keeps coming out in waves, all served family style. There's really no designation between appetizers and entrées--you don't need to have the charred asparagus salad first and there's no reason you can't eat our signature "deluxe" focaccia with Taleggio cheese alongside your main course. And while some people like to label our food as European or Mediterranean, I'll be the first to tell you that avec is an American restaurant. Avec chef Perry Hendrix and I are two Midwestern boys making food in the Midwest. All of our ingredients come from the region, or ideally as close to here as possible. But we also like adding ingredients that contribute great flavor, such as za'atar or sumac or harissa. We don't necessarily do things the way someone's grandmother did it, and our muhammara might not be the most traditional one there is, but nothing's off-limits. And nothing is overworked. The food itself is simple; there's not one dish coming out of the kitchen that takes longer than three or four minutes once the order goes in. Just like when you're cooking at home, everything is prepped in advance, and many of our staple (and most well-known) dishes--brined and braised pork shoulder, whole roasted fish, marinated roasted beets--are based on the same tried-and-true methods that we've been using since we opened, with the addition of maybe three or four different components (vinaigrettes, aiolis, and other schmears, spreads, and crunchy things) that get adjusted with the seasons. It's completely about getting friends together and sharing a great meal, not tweaky food. But this book isn't about avec the restaurant; it's about avec the idea. And the idea that inspired avec and its communal, convivial vibe started with my wife, Mary. Before I had the honor of calling her my wife, or even my girlfriend, Mary was in a horrible motorcycle accident in Le Mans, France. (Hang in there; there's a good payoff coming!) The story didn't start there, though. It started with Mary sitting outside of her office on South Michigan Avenue, eating her lunch. A guy walked up and introduced himself--his name was Jürg Frehner, and he was traveling around the United States. They got to talking, and over the course of the few weeks that he was in Chicago, he and Mary met up, went out for drinks, and she showed him around. (Luckily he had a serious girlfriend and this was truly platonic--or things would have turned out really different for me. . . .)  When it was time for Jürg to leave, he invited Mary to come see him in Europe and bike around France. So fast-forward to Le Mans, where he and Mary were hit head-on by a truck, sustained very serious injuries, and were medevaced to a hospital in Gais, Switzerland--a little cow town in the Swiss Alps near the Austrian border where Jürg had family. Mary convalesced there for about six weeks, healing from a broken arm and hoping to continue her journey. She ended up meeting a woman named Verena, who had just returned to town, was between jobs, and whose partner was in the military as part of his mandatory service. She had nothing to do, and Mary had nothing to do, so the two of them would go out and get into trouble (but not too much trouble), drinking at the bierstube and hanging out with Verena's friends (who have since become our very close friends and have intermarried with our friends from the States, leading to an unprecedented Chicago-Gais connection). Not long after Mary came back to Chicago, she met me. At the time I was working for Erwin Drechsler at Metropolis Café, and he eventually agreed to send me to Europe for my first-ever trip. So as our starting point, Mary decided she would take me back to Switzerland to visit Verena.  It was 10:30 AM on a Sunday when Verena picked us up at the Zurich airport, but she still had a bottle of Champagne for us to drink while she drove the two and a half hours in a snowstorm back to Gais. Within an hour of getting back to her house--a fourhundred-year-old farmhouse with a beautiful wine cellar in the barn, to hold all the great wine she and her partner loved to bring back from Italy, and a big, wood-burning oven in the kitchen--a parade of people started to pour in. It turns out we were about to majorly benefit from two Swiss traditions. The first tradition was that Sundays were for visiting. People all over the town would wander between the houses-- sometimes for miles through forests and multiple feet of snow--just to socialize, share a little spread of food, and drink some wine. The second was that, in order to help visitors beat their jet lag, hosts would arrange for people to come over every couple of hours to visit. This also involved eating and drinking wine.  Over the course of our first afternoon there, about thirty people must have come by and, between arrivals, Verena and her partner would refresh the wine, of which we must have gone through fifteen, twenty, bottles. We were also pulling delicious, simple dishes from the oven, plunking them down on the table right in the pots they'd been cooking in. We sliced off hunks of bread, toasted them until they were this side of charred, rubbed 'em with garlic, and put them out for people to top off with cured meats and all the condiments in tubes that the Swiss can't get enough of. (Seriously, their mustards and mayo and relishes and this Marmite-type stuff all come in tubes.) That's where the seed was planted for avec. It's where the seed was planted for how I cook now whenever I host people at my own home. And it's ultimately the foundation of this book. Excerpted from Cooking for Good Times: Super Delicious, Super Simple [a Cookbook] by Paul Kahan, Rachel Holtzman, Perry Hendrix All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.