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Learn to COOK - One Spice, Two Spice: American Food, Indian Flavors

One Spice, Two Spice: American Food, Indian Flavors
List Price: $35.95
Our Price: $26.89
Your Save: $ 9.06 ( 25% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: William Morrow Cookbooks
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5

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Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 641.5954
EAN: 9780060735012
ISBN: 0060735015
Label: William Morrow Cookbooks
Manufacturer: William Morrow Cookbooks
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 320
Publication Date: 2006-11-01
Publisher: William Morrow Cookbooks
Release Date: 2006-10-24
Studio: William Morrow Cookbooks

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Editorial Reviews:

Floyd Cardoz, chef and co-owner of New York City's Tabla restaurant, is one of the most exciting innovators working behind a stove today. And now, for the first time, he shares the extraordinary recipes that have established his reputation. In them Cardoz is able to make the quantum leap between the American palate and his taste memories—the food of his childhood in Bombay and Goa. The collection, One Spice, Two Spice, is an amalgam of two cuisines by a man who has mastered the flavors of each.

This volume of more than 140 recipes is a gift to all home cooks who enjoy the flavors of India but are intimidated by the unusual and numerous spices required to prepare these dishes. Here, Cardoz renders those spices user friendly in a down-to-earth primer and glossary. Then, in the recipe notes, he shows you how to easily integrate these new flavors into everyday meals and dinner-party fare. The techniques—sautéing, panfrying, braising, poaching, and roasting—are not new. The results, however, are astonishing.

Imagine crisp panfried black pepper shrimp, meaty sea scallops seared and served in a satiny sweet-sour glaze, asparagus and morels sautéed in a spicy blend of shallot, ginger, and chile—all of which can be made in no time flat. Other recipes—steak rubbed with crushed peppercorns and coriander, cumin, and mustard seeds, duck bathed in an aromatic orange curry, lamb meatballs filled with an herbaceous combination of fresh figs, cilantro, and mint and then napped with a lush, lustrous green sauce—may require more marinating or cooking time, but the trade-off is Cardoz's three-star-restaurant cooking at home.

One Spice, Two Spice is more than a cookbook. It is a gateway to a different way of thinking about the food on your plate, and it brings Indian flavors into the modern American repetoire.




Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: One Spice, Two Spice delivers.
Comment: Title: One Spice, Two Spice
Format: Paperback Cookbook
Authors: Floyd Cardoz with Jane Daniels Lear
ISBN: 0-06-073501-5
Published By: HarperCollins Publisher
Review By: Diana Rohini LaVigne, Indian Life & Style Magazine

One Spice, Two Spice is a wonderful adaptation of Indian cooking for the American palette. Beginning with the essentials needed for cooking with Indian spices, this cookbook is easy to read with large print and provides very detailed instructions on how to bring together simple ingredients to make exotic dishes with Indian flair.

Rice dishes are an especially fantastic array and complement the entrées featured in the book. Entrees include chicken, fish and vegetable dishes with wide selections of recipes to keep cooks happy trying new things daily.

There is no shortage of recipes in the 298-page One Spice, Two Spice cookbook. The recipes are easy to understand and woven with simple exotic graphics that allude to the origin of the spices used. Henna like graphics and mosaic patterns mark the inside pages of this wonderful addition to any one's cookbook library.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5
Summary: Murder by publisher (who should know better)
Comment: I love the title. I love the idea of cooking American food with Indian spices. However, this book seems dedicated to keeping its secrets from the public.

Amateur art direction gives us pages printed in brown and lime, with page numbers in unreadable screened lime. Squares of too-heavy lime green are plopped over the brown type lists of ingredients, making them totally unreadable. Throughout the book, the type lines are too long for the page width, leaving much information lost somewhere in the spine. None of this crowding is necessary, as there are plenty of white pages that could have been utilized. Nice crisp black type in a larger size might have saved this book from the Unreadable category in spite of the cheap paper its printed on and the smudgy looking color photos. But no. We're left to stand in our kitchens with magnifying glasses and flashlights. The joy of cooking it's not. If I were the author, I'd be seriously ticked. Seriously.



Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Far from Exquisite
Comment: I really wanted to love this book but found myself disappointed. On the positive side, the author, a chef at a New York eatery, Tabla, sounds like a very interesting person. His introductions to the recipes share both his personal story and a little history about the recipe. Unfortunately, none of the recipes I tried justified the time or expense and effort in securing some of the more exotic ingredients. This is not to say that they were bad, they were fair to good. The lamb and chicken recipes were acceptable as was the cucumber soup. The book is heavy on fish but again, the result did not justify the effort. I was disappointed that there were no dessert recipes.

The book contains photographs but they have that dated feel one gets from the promotional magazines they keep in hotels. They are okay but far from exquisite, which describes this book.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Great Investment
Comment: Simply, it's a GREAT book. There are very few books of this category an d caliber in the market ( internationally). It may not be so very simple for a home maker to re create most of the dishes, but, cooking is a about an individual's personality. So, use the ideas contained and get an insight about what all went into the making of the great restaurant Tabla. A great learning tool for an avid cook who want s to play with the nuances of Indian cuisine - with a western perspective. I am sure this book and if there are more to follow will gather a place of importance in the world of Indian culinary references in the western hemisphere
I really wished the authors had put in some more pictures and nicer ( modernized) versions of their renditions at Tabla
Buy the book from amazon. com and not the third party =- you can make use of the free shipping program that amazon has ( if you buy something else too!)
AJ
( its a "kid's review since I did not want to give my identity... so, take it for what it's worth)


Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: American Food with an Indian Kick!
Comment: I love the way this cookbook brings together two different cultures to produce amazing recipes. I actaully found this book easy to understand because of the full detailed glossary that explains all the indian spices (which not many indian cookbooks do!) My personal favorite recipe is the black pepper shrimp. I have tried this dish at the restaurant, Tabla, and would never think it is possible to make at home but it turns out that it's a really easy dish to prepare. If you want American food with an Indian kick I highly recommend this book!


Buy it now at abc-fishing.com!

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