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Sear, Sauce, and Serve

Mastering High-Heat, High-Flavor Cooking

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Step one: Sear your main ingredient to perfection using one of four methods. Step two: Sauce the main ingredient with your favorite flavored sauce. Step three: Serve a spectacular meal in no time.
Following this formula, Sear, Sauce, and Serve empowers readers to become a calm and thoroughly proficient cook, running the show in their own kitchens every night of the week. Rosenfeld teaches the principles of cooking over high heat with different types of foods — beef, chicken, fish, or vegetables — and provides more than 250 sauce recipes for while you sear and after you sear. Helpful illustrations guide you through the instructions.
High-heat cooking saves you time and the easy teaching methods encourage healthy home cooking. There is even a chapter on using affordable cuts of meat to fit any budget. By mastering the techniques you are free to be creative to come up with your own recipe to fit your mood.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from June 27, 2011
      Chef, restaurant owner, and food writer Rosenfeld's (150 Things to Make with Roast Chicken) three-step approach to cooking could come off as gimmicky, but instead makes for a terrifically accessible and varied book for cooks interested in broadening their skill sets and repertoire. Though segments on the cooking aspect, such as grilling chicken, burgers, and sautéing ground meat, may seem overwritten and overly complicated to even casual cooks, Rosenfeld's heart is in the right placeâthe book is peppered with tips on choosing the right fish, adding smoke to a gas grill, how to use alcohol-based ingredients in sauces and more. Readers who choose to skip his detailed protein tutelage can fall back on his detailed and useful charts on various cooking methods for proteins including prep notes and doneness. But the heart of the book, and where it truly excels, is in Rosenfeld's superlative collection of sauces, most of which require just a handful of readily available ingredients. Approachable enough for the novice and varied enough for veteran cooks, this is a terrific collection that deserves some shelf space for cooks interested in expanding their repertoire.

    • Library Journal

      June 15, 2011

      For cooks who love choices, food writer and restaurant owner Rosenfeld's (150 Things To Make with Roast Chicken) latest cookbook is magic. He introduces four high-heat cooking techniques (saute, stir-fry, broil, and grill); a range of meat, fish, and vegetables; and more than 250 sauce recipes, e.g., Mandarin Orange and Mint Glaze, Spiced Pineapple-Rum Glaze, and Rosemary Lemon Cream. Illustrations showing how to stuff a boneless breast and how to cut up a whole chicken are helpful. Comparable to Lucy Vaserfirer's recent Seared to Perfection, Rosenfeld's book might be more appropriate for practiced cooks who like to experiment.

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • Kindle Book
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Languages

  • English

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