That sounds so good 100 real-life recipes for every day of the week

Carla Lalli Music

Book - 2021

"100 recipes to match every real-life occasion from the beloved Bon Appetit food editor at large and James Beard Award-winning author of Where Cooking Begins. Everyone deserves to have recipes up their sleeves that they turn to again and again, and Carla Lalli Music believes that these recipes should not only match what's in your pantry, but also should fit every mood and scenario that life throws at you. Since Carla knows that we only cook what we have time for and choose recipes based on what's going to be realistic on a given day, the recipes in That Sounds So Good are organized by situations that we all find ourselves in: quick stovetop suppers and one-pot/one-pan meals for weeknights, nourishing salads and grain bowls if... you want to be a little cleaner, and lazy lunches and all-day stews for the weekend. Readers can find recipes based on their own needs at any given moment, knowing that whatever they choose to cook, the food will be Carla to the core--bold, unique flavors with a straightforward method and swap-friendly ingredients. Through it all, Carla shares strategies that keep cooking effortless and quick, like using the time it takes for water to boil to pick the herbs or toast the nuts you'll use later"--

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Published
New York : Clarkson Potter/Publishers [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Carla Lalli Music (author)
Other Authors
Martin Hyers (photographer)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
287 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
ISBN
9780593138250
  • Introduction
  • Cooking is a feeling that makes you feel things
  • Part I. There's a food for every feeling
  • Chapter 1. ABC: Always Be Cooking
  • Cook in this moment, whichever moment you're in
  • Monday through Thursday: Your time is precious How to get big payoff from short active times
  • Friday and the Weekend: Your time stretches out How to layer prep times over stretches of inactive time
  • Chapter 2. How to Win in Your Kitchen
  • 10 kitchen tools you might not own but could definitely use
  • The pantry that will set you free
  • My schlep-free, totally liberating, waste-reducing strategy for food shopping
  • What I mean when I say "Spin It"
  • Part II. The Recipes (Monday through Thursday)
  • Chapter 3. Stovetop Suppers
  • Pasta with Cacio e Walnut
  • Salt-and-Sugar Pork Rib Chops
  • Steamed Lemongrass Mussels
  • Herbed Rice with Shrimpy-Kimchi Tomato Sauce
  • How-I-Like-It Tuna Salad
  • Pork Burgers with Cabbage Slaw
  • One-Pot Chicken and Rice with Blender Green Sauce
  • Everybody Loves a Chicken Cutlet
  • Fat Noodles with Pan-Roasted Mushrooms and Crushed Herb Sauce
  • Gingery Ground Beef with Lime and Herbs
  • Skirt Steak with Potatoes and Black Pepper-Horseradish Sauce
  • I Love You, Let's Eat
  • Chapter 4. Big Salads
  • Radicchio with Parm Crackers and Dates
  • Crunchy and Juicy Feta Salad
  • Avocado and Fresh Chile Caprese
  • Little Gems with Sugar Snap Peas and a Ranch-y Dressing
  • Roasted Squash aux Lardons
  • Wild Rice with Pomelo, Coconut, and Cashews
  • Sorry, I Like Celery
  • Charred Broccoli with Spicy Avocado Sauce
  • Spicy Cucumber and Watermelon Salad with Pan-Fried Peanuts
  • Watercress with Dijon Vinaigrette
  • Purple Cabbage and Parm
  • Radishes and Croutons with Horseradish Dressing
  • Grab Some Olive Oil
  • Chapter 5. Burning Clean
  • Lentils, Greens, and Marinated Feta
  • Pantry Eggs in Purgatory
  • Fernando's Famous Burned Broccoli
  • 15-Minute Roasted Squash with Spicy Greens and Yogurt
  • Tomato Soup in the Style of Sauce
  • Chickpea Pancakes with Shaved Vegetables
  • Flash-in-the-Pan Chicken with Burst Tomatoes
  • Soft Tofu and Clam Soup
  • Spicy-Tangy Green Beans and Tofu
  • Seared Sweet Potatoes with Kale and Lime Pickle
  • Part III. The Recipes (Friday and the Weekend)
  • Chapter 6. Day Drinking & Lazy Lunches
  • Cold Sliced Steak with Arugula and Parm
  • Tomatoes with Thyme and Fried Capers
  • Spicy Seafood Stew
  • Zucchini Fritter of My Dreams
  • Extremely Green Grain Salad
  • Roasted Red Bell Peppers with Garlic Chips and Sumac
  • The Tandem-Roasted-Chicken Trick
  • Brothy Basil Beans
  • Fried Mushrooms with Zesty Chile Salt
  • Low-and-Slow Spiced Chicken Legs with Garlic Crunch-Crumbs
  • Braised Short Rib Noodle Bowl
  • Chapter 7. I Love to Grill
  • Spice-Crusted Pork Spareribs
  • Crispy Smoky Rice
  • Charred Flatbreads with Whipped Ricotta, Mushrooms, and Scallions
  • Grilled Squid with Blackened Tomatoes
  • Long Beans with Vinegar and Basil
  • Grilled Chicken Legs with Warm Spices
  • Grilled Romaine with Herby Walnut Dressing
  • Not-Scary Grilled Whole Fish
  • Grill-Roasted Turkey Breast
  • Cumin-Fennel Lamb Shoulder
  • Chpater 8. S is for Sunday Soup, Stew & Sauce
  • Pork and Pozole Stew
  • Spaghetti with Melted Cauliflower Sauce
  • Greens, Beans, and Sausage Soup
  • Baked Polenta with Floppy Broccoli
  • Baby's First Ragù
  • Gia's Sunday Ragù
  • Roasted Poultry and Garlic Stock
  • Poached Egg on Toast in Soup
  • Sheet Pan Chicken with Tomatoes and Chickpeas
  • Hands-Off Pork and Beans
  • Aromatic Chicken and Ginger Soup
  • Pork and Beef Stew with Ginger, Tomato, and Kimchi
  • Split Pea Soup and Mustard-Chile Sizzle
  • Black Bean Soup with Topper Whoppers
  • The Lalli Family's Spaghetti and Clams
  • Clams, by Cosmo Music
  • Chapter 9. Give It Up for Vegetables
  • Tomato Confit Bruschetta
  • Fresh Peas and Snap Beans with Bread Crumb Dressing
  • Spiced and Braised Greens
  • Asparagus with Jammy Egg and Pickle Dressing
  • Confit Potatoes with Garlic
  • Broccoli Rabe with Cheese and Chiles
  • Sautéed Brussels with Sesame
  • Double-Roasted Winter Squash with Ginger-Chile Brown Butter
  • Pan-Roasted Carrots with Chorizo Nubbins
  • Potato Insanity
  • Fried Farro with Grated Cauliflower and Shallots
  • Eggplant Parmigiana
  • In Bread Together
  • Chapter 10. Who Wants Desserts?
  • Strawberry-Rhubarb Biscuit Cobbler
  • Pink Party Cookies
  • Warm Barley with Berries
  • Mocha Hazelnut Biscotti
  • Lemon Polenta Sheet Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting
  • Grapefruit-Rosemary Shortbread Cookies
  • Vanilla-Brown Butter Pear Tart
  • Nectarine and Brown Sugar Streusel Crisp
  • Banana Galette with Cashew Frangipane
  • Nuts on the Bottom Caramel Tart
  • Chapter 11. Also on the Table
  • Perfect Pot of Rice
  • Spicy Creamy Sauce
  • Blank-Slate Whole Grains
  • Watermelonade
  • Cynar Spritz
  • Big-Batch Vinaigrette
  • Lemony Yogurt
  • Salsa Very Verde
  • Whipped Aïoli
  • Carole's Fried Bread
  • Soft-Peak Whipped Cream
  • Menu Ideas
  • Thank You
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

James Beard Award--winning chef Lalli Music (Where Cooking Begins) provides "recipes and kitchen encouragement to go with every hunger" in this stellar collection. In her companionable style, she arms readers with the tools to cook efficiently and whenever the inspiration strikes, starting with a helpful tutorial on balancing "inactive" and "active" cooking times (the key is to prep during downtime) and a "waste-reducing strategy for food shopping" that involves relying on a stocked pantry and only going out for perishable things. Recipes are broken down into options for weekdays--where "stovetop suppers" and big salads save the day--and lazy lunches and dinners for the weekend. Weeknight standouts include salt-and-sugar pork rib chops, for which greens are wilted in pork drippings, and a lightning-fast gingery ground beef with lime and herbs. Come Friday night, she leans more luxurious with a cold sliced steak with arugula and parmesan, a spicy seafood stew, and whole grilled fish (pro tip: douse it with oil to avoid sticking). A master planner, she also includes substitutes for every recipe, to avoid "having dinner upended by a single missing ingredient." Bursting with flavor and potential, these everyday recipes are far from everyday. (Oct.)

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

In her most recent work, chef/YouTube personality Music (Where Cooking Begins) draws on the traditions of her close-knit family and her work with America's Test Kitchen. Like Susan Spungen's recent Open Kitchen, this cookbook presents food and cooking as a source of comfort and love. Working with the philosophy that "there's a food for every feeling" and a conversational writing style, Music's cookbook has an easygoing vibe that includes no-fuss directions and straightforward pantry ingredients. Throughout the book, Music includes personal stories that emphasize that breaking bread with others can nourish both stomachs and spirits. There are sections on kitchen tools, stocking a pantry, and food shopping. Each recipe includes tips, ingredient substitutions, and notes about the dish's flavor profile. Divided between weekday and weekend sections, the diverse recipes include zucchini fritters, Sunday ragù, sheet pan chicken, spaghetti with cauliflower sauce, rhubarb cobbler, and sheet cake. VERDICT Thanks to its focus on casual gatherings and the connections we make by breaking bread together, Music's cookbook is sure to be a winner with many readers.--Ginny Wolter

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

Chapter 1 ABC: Always Be Cooking Here's how to celebrate and embrace the act of cooking and eating in your everyday life, no matter what Cook in this moment, whichever moment you're in This book is organized by situation and occasion, rather than by ingredient or recipe type. I've divided a typical week into two buckets: Monday through Thursday, and Friday and the Weekend. My life looks a lot different on a Tuesday evening--after finishing work and catching up with a family that's been scattered all over the place--than it does on a Saturday afternoon, when I might have enough free time to let one of my cats take a nap on my chest. But no matter what day of the week it is, a girl's gotta eat! Within the weekday and weekend sections of this book, the individual chapters are devoted to the sorts of everyday scenarios you and I might find ourselves in--an effort to capture the types of meals that will fit into your actual life. In the weekday chapters, you'll find stovetop suppers and dinner salads, and a chapter on the healthyish recipes that I crave after a weekend of eating and drinking and sleeping in. With many of us juggling work, school, housekeeping, caretaking, and commuting, these weekday dishes make the most of short active times. Half an hour of effort can add up to a complete meal if you know how to prioritize your prep and cook times. By comparison, the weekend section is mostly devoted to recipes with longer cook times and some with larger serving sizes: soups, stews, braises, roasts, and things to grill. That said, even when you do have the downtime to afford to park something on the back of the stove or in a low oven for a couple-few hours, I don't want you to spend more than about half an hour of active cooking time to get that meal going or finish it up. (Grilling is a bit of an exception, since it's one of the few times that cooking overlaps with hanging out. But there are many grilling recipes here that can be made before your friends arrive, if that's how you like to party.) I love having people over, but my overambitious-entertainer phase--when I could be found piping out gougères at 2 a.m. the night before a holiday party--is done. My kind of weekend food isn't annoying, complicated, or technically challenging. I treasure my time off, and I don't want to spend every minute of it standing in one spot, staring at a cutting board. There are also plenty of weekend recipes here for the kinds of weekends where you are really feeling lazy. By all means, make whatever you want on any day you like! I don't bake during the week, which is why the desserts chapter falls in the weekend section of the book, but if you want a cobbler on a Tuesday, I'm not going to stop you. Some of the big salads found in the weekday section make excellent, uncomplicated additions to a mellow lunch on the weekend, and can also be treated as quick-to-prepare vegetable sides to go with a big braise. There's a set of suggested menus on page 281 that I put together to help you mix and match meals from the recipes throughout the book. Monday through Thursday: Your time is precious. How to get big payoff from short active times The recipe instructions in this book are written chronologically, which means that I will rarely call for things to be already prepped in the ingredient list (i.e., "1 cup chopped onions"). Instead, you'll see whole ingredients listed, and I'll talk you through the most efficient moment in which to prep them in the recipe method itself. I am all about balancing inactive and active times, and using inactive time to your benefit when cooking. Despite what you might have heard chefs say about their restaurant mise en place, it doesn't always make sense to prep every single thing before you start cooking. I've set up my recipes so you start the longest-cooking item first, and while that is in process, you'll use the downtime (inactive time) to prep the things that go with it. If I'm going to have rice with a meal, I put that on at the top, then use the 18 minutes it takes the rice to cook to make whatever else will be on the table (see the recipe for Gingery Ground Beef with Lime and Herbs on page 60 for an example of how this works). Rice can sit after it's done, so if it takes me a little longer to finish the other components of the meal, dinner won't suffer. If something needs to marinate, like the tomatoes on page 216, or soak, like the crunchy vegetables in the salad on page 108, I'll prompt you to get that going, then turn to the other ingredients. There are absolutely occasions when you should chop and measure everything before anything hits a skillet, such as when you're making a stir-fry, deep-frying something, or making caramel sauce. There's no downtime built into the steps of those types of recipes, and the dish can be ruined if you try to pause in the middle. When that's the case, I make it clear that you need everything ready before you switch on a burner. These choices and approaches are all about time management and informed prioritizing--and will reduce the overall time you spend making your meals. When making a quick dinner, the inactive and active times overlap neatly; from beginning to end, you can use every minute to your advantage. Take the pork chops on page 41: They are seasoned in the first step and left to sit for a few minutes while you wash the radicchio and slice the onion that go with the pork. After cooking, the chops rest for 10 minutes--a necessary part of their journey!--while you sauté the vegetables in the pork drippings left in the skillet. Once the veggies are done, the pork will be ready to slice and you can eat. Filling inactive time with active steps that keep you moving toward the finish line means you've used time to your advantage. Friday and the Weekend: Your time stretches out. How to layer prep times over stretches of inactive time If weeknight cooking is all about stacking active and inactive times, weekend cooking affords you the chance to front-load a meal with a finite amount of busywork, then lean into truly hands-off methods. In the weekend section, you'll find plenty of cold-weather slow roasts and braises. Ideally, the proteins in these recipes are seasoned (days) ahead of time, then left to gently cook, unattended, while you do whatever you want in some other room. There are also warm-weather vegetable dishes that benefit from long marinating times; set them up when you feel like it and sit down to eat hours later. There are bean dishes accompanied by quick-blitzed pestos to spoon over (see page 138), and an Italian-style steak salad that is best at room temperature (that recipe is on page 122). There are soups that can be reheated gently when you decide it's dinnertime. My grilling recipes are organized around the idea that you can prep your ingredients while the fire heats up, then grill in waves, snacking on things as they are ready, rather than trying to have an entire meal's worth of dishes miraculously char to completion at the same time. The idea that links the weekend recipes is that you can stretch the inactive time to suit the rhythm of your day, bracketing your active involvement so that your free time stays free. Whenever you find yourself with a day devoid of work, school, or other structured commitments, you can take advantage of this approach, and these recipes are incredibly adaptable for anyone who works from home. If you have the flexibility to start a dish in the early part of the day and come back to check on it a few hours later, hands-off recipes are your support crew. When I hear the phrase "project cooking," it makes me think that a lot will be required of me over a long period of time. This is true of cassoulet, Persian rice, shoyu ramen, and orange marmalade. It's fun to cook like that--sometimes. Like when a blizzard is on the way, a major birthday milestone needs celebrating, or you're coming up with distractions so you don't have to finish writing your book. That's not what my style of weekend cooking looks like, though (I never procrastinate). In my home, the weekend is for dishes that taste and feel like a lot went into them, only because they rely on hands-off methods and passive time devoted to flavor development (dry brines, marinated veggies, and slow roasts, for example). They are generously portioned for sharing with friends or to ensure a couple of days' worth of leftovers--perfect for meal preppers and lunch packers. Excerpted from That Sounds So Good: 100 Real-Life Recipes for Every Day of the Week: a Cookbook by Carla Lalli Music 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.