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Learn to COOK - Sublime Smoke: Bold New Flavors Inspired by the Old Art of Barbecue

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List Price: $18.95
Our Price: $12.89
Your Save: $ 6.06 ( 32% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Harvard Common Press
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 641 EAN: 9781558322929 ISBN: 1558322922 Label: Harvard Common Press Manufacturer: Harvard Common Press Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 400 Publication Date: 2004-04 Publisher: Harvard Common Press Studio: Harvard Common Press
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Editorial Reviews:
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Building on the traditional basics laid out in their best-selling Smoke & Spice, the Jamisons delve into a lighter approach to smoking, with an emphasis on leaner meats along with chicken, fish, and vegetables. The result is a delicious food that incorporates an imaginative variety of ingredients.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Good cookbook, but shouldn't be your first Smoker cookbook Comment: I love my smoker, and a few years after buying it we're still using it regularly. Soon after buying the hardware, I picked up a copy of the Jamison's Smoke & Spice, and it quickly became my primary resource. Absolutely awesome. So I hurried out to buy Sublime Smoke, too, and... not so much.
This cookbook is good, don't get me wrong. It's just not awesome.
If you have a smoker, the original Smoke & Spice is a must because it has all the Expected Things: how to smoke a brisket, trout with lemon, pork or beef ribs (I have a batch of pork ribs doing their overnight dry rub right now), with lots of variations. Those are the recipes you'll want to get comfortable with, and I never had the Jamisons steer me wrong. (On any of their cookbooks, in fact; their breakfast cookbook was among my first Amazon reviews, and I still adore that cookbook.)
Sublime Smoke is more about cooking with smoked foods than it is about smoking, per se. Each of these 200+ recipes expects that you'll smoke something, but it might or might not be the star of the show. And it might not be recognizable as "barbecue." That's fine -- but it probably isn't the way that a new smoker owner wants to explore what she can do with it.
That's not to say I don't like the recipes, because I do. Their Thai sirloin salad was just perfect for a hot summer day when I wanted something both healthy and hearty. And I'll probably get around to making their trout hash one of these days. (The salmon hash from their breakfast book is so wonderful that I'd make any hash they suggest.) The cookbook is best when it does variations on the old standbys, like a three-pepper steak in zinfandel sauce or a Puerto Rican bitter orange pork butt.
But I find that I flip through this cookbook, say, "Yum, that sounds good"--and then I cook something else entirely. I think it's because smoking something as an ingredient is more complexity than I want to take on, or it just takes too long. "Walnut pear salad with smoked garlic vinaigrette" sounds good, doesn't it? But I'm not going to fire up the smoker just for a head of garlic. (Maybe I'll remember to fling in a head when I smoke those pork ribs... but that's more planning than I can handle.) A tarragon tomato soup smokes the tomatoes, which sounds delicious... but am I really going to make this? Not today.
I like this cookbook. In the three-or-so years I've had it, though, I've read it far more than I have cooked from it. If you're new to smoking, by all means pick this up--but don't let it be your initial introduction.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Excellent book on smoking food and recipes Comment: The authors of this book really know what they are talking about. The recipes are delicious, and the cooking times and temperatures are right on target.
Customer Rating:      Summary: About average Comment: Nothing to write home about. The author really tries to err on the side of "fresh" and "light" and "healthy". The result is sort of like reading an extended edition of an issue of Bon Appetit.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A Major Disappointment Comment: Don't waste your money. Their first book. Smoke & Spice, was one of the best I own. The success must have gone to their heads. It's a shame that they will surely make a lot of money for this poor effort only because of the first books quality.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Outdoors cooking companion Comment: This is the book I bought when I first bought a smoker several years ago and it has been very helpful. It serves the needs of the beginner or the more experienced outdoor cook. The recipes are pretty interesting and range from complex to quite simple, with an international flare. Although initially I bought the book to help me with smoking techniques and recipes I have found it extremely helpful as a "normal" cookbook. The sauces, pastes, dressings and marinade suggestions are easily transferred to traditional indoor cooking and I have done so as a result. The recipes also serve as a springboard for one's own creative ideas. Even if you don't have the time to follow the recipes it is fun to read them and imagine. Who knows it may even inspire you to smoke something outdoors! Recommended for all outdoor cooks who want to do something besides bbq on the grill.
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