Cook it up Bold moves for family foods

Alex Guarnaschelli, 1969-

Book - 2023

"Through seventy-five witty and informative recipes, Alex and Ava share a repertoire of dishes that define their modern family meals: bold flavored, comforting, satisfying, and always supremely delicious. Side by side, they cook their way through family favorites like Alex's renowned cookbook editor/mom's famous Blueberry Pie and Nanny Ida's Crisp Potato Latkes and offer sound cooking advice for achieving the fluffiest frittatas (add water, never milk) and how to properly season and mix a chicken meatball mixture so the meatballs stay juicy (spread the mixture up around the sides of the bowl and then season). There's even a bonus recipe for dog biscuits, inspired by Alex and Ava's family dog, Leon!"--

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Published
New York : Clarkson Potter/Publishers [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Alex Guarnaschelli, 1969- (author)
Other Authors
Ava Clark (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
239 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780593577981
  • Introduction
  • Getting Started: A Manifesto for Cooking with Confidence
  • Start with a Stocked Pantry
  • Breakfast According to Ava
  • Migas: Tortillas + Scrambled Eggs
  • Poached Eggs + Avocado on Ciabatta
  • Sausage + Egg Frittata
  • Aquafaba Waffles
  • The Special Café Quiche
  • Fluffy Beyond Pancakes
  • Acai Bowl with Honey-Toasted Cacao
  • Dragon Fruit Salad with Lime
  • Healthy but Good Smoothie
  • Cheddar Biscuits with Chili-Crunch Butter
  • Lunch Box
  • Vegetable Summer Rolls
  • Roasted Vegetable Sandwich with Tahini-Coriander Dressing
  • Shrimp Cocktail
  • Souped-Up Chicken Ramen
  • Miso-Glazed Salmon Bowl with Rice + Cucumber
  • Dan Dan Noodles
  • Vegetable Fried Rice
  • Sandwiches, Tartines + Tacos
  • Burgers with Onion Jam + Homemade Thousand Island
  • Fried Chicken Cutlet Sandwich with Sriracha Mayo
  • Steak Tacos with Cabbage
  • Poblano + Cheese Tacos
  • Ricotta + Tomato Crostini
  • Smoked Salmon Tartine with Scallion Cream Cheese
  • Snacks + Hors D'
  • Ava's Marinated Cucumbers
  • Tzatziki "Ants on a Log"
  • Mozzarella Sticks with Tomato Dipping Sauce
  • Kimchi Pancakes
  • Baked Chicken Wings with Garlicky Ranch
  • Tsukune with Yakitori Sauce (Japanese Chicken Meatball Skewers)
  • Pork Dumplings
  • Pastas
  • Ten-Minute Buttery Egg Noodles
  • Aglio e Olio from the Movie Chef
  • Gnocchi Macaroni + Cheese
  • Turkey Bolognese
  • RIcotta-Stuffed Shells
  • Penne alia Vodka
  • Classic Carbonara
  • Fish + Shellfish
  • Tuna Carpaccio
  • Baked Clams with Garlic
  • Lemon + Pecan-Crusted Salmon with Roasted Leeks
  • Swordfish with Lemon-Caper Sauce
  • Seared Scallops with Remoulade
  • Classic Shrimp Scampi
  • Whole Roasted Fish à la Ava
  • It's Time For Some Meat
  • Ava's Cowboy Rib Eye + Baked Fingerling Potatoes
  • Braised Short Ribs with Red Wine + Vegetables
  • Marinated Skirt Steak with Feta + Herbs
  • Whole Roasted Chicken with Potatoes
  • Beef Tenderloin au Poivre
  • Cast-iron Paprika Chicken
  • Mustardy Chicken Thighs
  • Ava's Vegetables + Sides
  • Green Beans Amandine
  • Shallot-Garlic Bread
  • Nanny Ida's Potato Latkes
  • Slow-Cooked Farro with Balsamic
  • My Grandpa's Broccoli with Balsamic
  • Braised Savoy Cabbage with Tomato + Spices
  • Triple-Cooked Potatoes
  • Desserts
  • Pavlova with Strawberries
  • Pumpkin Bread
  • Dark Chocolate Cookies
  • Layered "Banoffee" Banana Pudding Icebox Cake
  • Strawberry Skillet Crisp
  • Eggless Chocolate Mousse
  • Baked Apples with Brown Sugar + Orange Liqueur
  • Candy Apples
  • Frozen Peanut Butter Pie
  • Not Grandma's Blueberry Pie
  • Black + White Cupcakes
  • Vanilla Birthday Cake with Chocolate Ganache
  • Bonus Recipe: Leon's Dog Biscuits
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Chef and TV personality Alex Guarnaschelli joins forces with teen daughter Ava Clark to offer unpretentious recipes for every meal that will keep families busy in the kitchen. "You'll usually find my mom flipping through old cookbooks and thinking about Julia Child, while I watch cool cooking videos on my phone," writes Ava, explaining the generation gap evident in their distinct approaches to harvesting culinary inspiration. They bridge the gap by respecting and learning from one other: Ava adapts recipes like gnocchi macaroni and cheese that she learned growing up in her mom's restaurant, Butter, while Alex marvels at how Ava, lacking any formal training, turned into a home cook. Recipes stick closely to quintessential American comfort foods--think quiche, burgers, shallot-garlic bread, baked chicken wings, mozzarella sticks, and cupcakes--with occasional Asian-inspired fare like dan dan noodles and kimchi pancakes. This is an appealing offering for fans of the Chopped presenter who seek to engage kids in meal preparation while encouraging them to trust their own cooking instincts.

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

Iron Chef star Guarnaschelli (Cook with Me) and debut author Clark, her 15-year-old daughter, collaborate on this bighearted and wide-ranging collection of their favorite family recipes. "Whereas I learned to cook in school," Guarnaschelli writes, "Ava just cooks--always with curiosity and with so much confidence." While not limiting itself to a readership of young chefs, the collection is partly designed to inspire other teenagers to follow suit. The recipes in each section are arranged from least to most challenging, accumulating cooking techniques along the way. The breakfast chapter, for example, starts with tortillas and scrambled eggs (a recipe from Ava, inspired by a TikTok video), then offers instructions for perfect poached eggs (tip: add apple cider vinegar to the water) and quiche, while the chapter on pasta opens with 10-minute buttery egg noodles and ends with pasta carbonara. Seafood dishes encourage cooks to practice their knife skills with tuna carpaccio (but first with tomatoes) while the section on meat includes a whole roasted chicken with potatoes ("My mom says this chicken tastes like being in Paris (eye roll)," writes Ava.) Family influences are clear throughout--the burger with onion jam and thousand island dressing, for example, has "at least two generations of Guarnaschellis behind it"--and add a cozy, genuine feeling to the proceedings. Chefs of all ages will be inspired. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Introduction Ava's relationship to food fascinates me. I know she is my daughter, but she's actually somewhat of an enigma to me. Whereas I learned to cook in school and via the work-your-way-up-the-ranks classic French brigade system, Ava just cooks--always with curiosity and with so much confidence. I think the biggest (and most exciting) surprise for me as her mom has been watching her slowly turn into a home cook. As a chef who grew up in a house with two parents who constantly cooked, my relationship to food is loaded with meaning. I have food memories with my parents, decades of repetitive cooking in restaurants, and years of judging and cooking on television under my belt. I almost can't pick up an egg without considering twenty-five dishes I've tasted or the twelve ways I want to cook it. Ava comes to the table far less inhibited; she adds small touches that seem obvious and natural to her--things she didn't learn from me, by the way. TikTok, TV, and restaurants have been her cooking schools. For example, she'll go into the kitchen and cook up scrambled eggs, fry some capers on the side, then gently mix them in. She'll cook bacon for a BLT carefully, strip by strip, and then smear homemade herb butter on the toasted bread before sandwiching it together. By comparison, I didn't even know how to cook bacon when I was a young teenager. Ava and I share a compulsion to cook--we love to do it--and it comes naturally to us. Cooking is in our DNA. And our followers on social media like to watch us cook together--and are always asking Ava (and asking me about Ava) what she's cooking and how she's cooking it. When we were approached about collaborating on a cookbook, she was sitting at the kitchen counter eating a burger with a small makeshift batch of jalapeño and roasted pepper jam on top. It smelled so good. "How did you make that, Ava?" I asked. She stared at me for a second and smiled. "I don't know, Mom. You're the Iron Chef around here. Aren't you supposed to be answering my questions about food?" Truth is, from a dragon fruit salad with a squeeze of lime and a drizzle of honey (page 42) to kimchi pancakes made from scratch (page 103), Ava represents the next generation of cooks who will explore the kitchen with great curiosity. On the contrary, I think I represent my family's history (experiences that are not limited to parents--cousins, family friends, stepparents, and neighbors also count in this equation). Ava and I talked a lot about how this book should be. We tossed around the idea of how cool it would be to make it an ode to the fundamentals of cooking, so that any kid could get started developing their own repertoire of dishes in the kitchen. But the truth is that we just want kids and adults to cook together and share their ideas with one another. Ave told me, "I don't want kids to think they have to just cook kid food, Mom, okay?" We obviously encourage parents and friends to participate and help in the process. There are some recipes that even require or recommend a little adult assistance, and we call out those moments. (Adults can be good for moments where safety comes into play.) Ava has cooked with some of my friends, boyfriends, and other family members. Influences and support can come in many forms, and we always recommend it. Cooking is even more fun when done with and for the people you love. You just need to start. Somewhere. And Ava and I both hope you begin here, with us. Let's cook--and better yet, let's eat. Alex + Ava Excerpted from Cook It Up: Bold Moves for Family Foods: a Cookbook by Alex Guarnaschelli, Ava Clark 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.