51 new of 85 responses total.
i saw the cookbook about a week ago, and called my parents instantly to tell them that it would make a WONDERFUL x-mas present. the next night, they stopped by work to say hi, and my mother was hiding a bag under her jacket (enough was sticking out to see that it was from barnes and noble), and she made the commant that if i wanted to use their NEW discount card there, to go ahead. i think this nmeans that i'm getting the book for x-mas. :) (my parents are really cool about stuff like that....:)
In my family, nobody can figure out what anybody else wanted so nobody gave anyone presents. It made life a lot easier when growing up. Now I have to remember silly things like getting *cards* for people for their birthdays. I still forget 99% of the time and send off a rushed e-mail. I know it's just because of my different upbringing but still, I can't help feeling guilty when looking at the nice jewelry that a very special someone has since gotten for me...
I did a little test on this, and it doesn't look like it will be all that hard to do. Can't laser print, but I can make it look really nice, or maybe someone can take the formatted pages and run from there.
Cool! Jim, go for it! Yell if you want a volunteer to edit/proofread/ whatever. Neat!
A Grex cookbook would be a really neat project. I'm sure we could find plenty more volunteers in we asked. (Hey, I'd even volunteer, but I'm not sure what I could do.)
Actually, the prohect has turned into a nightmare for me. I don't have the appropriate software/patience for this sort of thing.
Is this cookbook made up of the recipes in the Grex recipe archives, or are there other sources, too?
The ones in the archives.
Instead of going back into archives would it be any easier to assemble a Grex cookbook by asking everyone who cares to to submit three (current) favorite recipies. I'd think the recipies might be somewhat healthier as this has been the trend over the past 4 or 5 years. Also, you'd tend to get only the best recipies this way - tried and true favorites.
s/recipes/recipies. I think I made too many pies yesterday and my typos are a dead giveaway.
My comments above in now way suggest I'd be able to organize this project. ;-)
I'm currently putting together a 'cookbook' into a 'hard copy' format from recipes that I've gathered from online... Mostly stuff I've gathered over the years from AOL but I also want to include stuff from here, too [hmm, I'm going to have to go back and find the command of how to use the archives, will also reread some of the current active items]. Of course, I'll make myself a copy, too. Depending on how this comes out, I'd be happy to make this available to people here, if interested! The recipes WILL all be from online sources, just not all Grex-Online stuff. I haven't a clue yet as to how much it will cost for printing, bindings, etc.
Ah, _The Virtual Gourmet_.
I've been thinking to update the Grex recipe archives in January, with all recipes posted in this conference through the end of 1996. (If someone else is willing to do this, that would be great too! It would consist of doing a "read all" on the kitchen conference and then using commands like "extract kitchen 33 47 > veggie/tofu.burgers-robh" to add robh's tofu burger recipe to the recipe archives. [Disclaimer: As I understand it, robh wouldn't be caught dead eating a tofu burger. ;) ]) Would that be helpful to a cookbook project?
I'd have no problem eating a tofu burger, provided there was lots of meat on the burger as well. >8)
(Remember, you're talking to the person who actually ate a hot-fudge-sundae burger back when Silverman's used to serve them. Compared to that, a tofu-and-meat burger would be Nirvana.)
to drift just a bit, if you want a Sander's hot fudge sundae, go to Kerby's at Briarwood. There reasonable as well.
<abchan wonders what a hot fudge sundae burger is or if she really wants to know>
<robh thinks that abchan can figure it out with minimal effort, if she tries, which she might not want to>
<abchan wonders if it's a literal description in which case, she probably didn't want to know>
Pretty much, yep. Silverman's used to have several dozen varieties of hamburger, including the dreaded icer-cream-sundae burger: a hamburger with vanilla ice cream and hot fudge sauce as condiments. I had one once. (I didn't put the pickle on the burger too, though, as that would have been gross. >8)
<abchan makes a face> I like burgers and I like sundaes. But not at the same time. Although they do all end up in your stomach, my stomach can handle the combo. My tastebuds don't want to.
Mollie Katzen has a new cookbook out, _Vegetable Heaven_, and she will be at Borders (Ann Arbor) on Thursday, November 6, 7:30 p.m. to give a short talk and sign books. Mollie wrote a number of wonderful vegetarian cookbooks, including some of the earliest Moosewood cookbooks.
Ooo, yummy! I will plan to be there. Thanks for the news!
Mary, John, Jan and I were there to hear Mollie Katzen speak. But Mollie Katzen was sick, so she only signed books and didn't speak to the group. Ouch -- doing book tours is rough.
But I did take the time to look through her new coobook and it does like like a nice one. I'll probably buy it at some point if the couple of recipes I wrote down come out.
The closest thing i have to a regular cookbook is the New Doubleday Cookbook. Big, fairly current, and full of good information. However....it contains *way* too many bombs. Times for hard-boiling eggs that would only work out in Death Valley or with a pressure cooker. Recipes that need 3 times as much of their main ingredient (& it's clear from context that it's NOT a typo). What is other people's experience with this sort of thing? Do serious cookbooks try to pack in more recipes than they can try or proof-read?
My recipe for foolproof hard boiled eggs: Eggs Water Add eggs to cold water. Put on heat. When liquid boils turn off the gas and cover. Let stand for 25 mins. When timer goes off, peel under cold water. Works every time.
We don't have gas. The timing is different with electric, might be only 15 minutes. We soak for a few minutes in cold water to loosen the shell. We cover it before turning on the heat, it conserves energy and time, and keeps the place from steaming up. If you add purple onion skins the eggs turn brown.
For good basic cookbooks, stick with Joy of Cooking or Better Homes and Gardens. And before you buy one, borrow it from your library and actually cook from it for a few weeks.
Joy of cooking is wonderful -- but it's not really a good starter book for a new cook. Much of the food is exotic and the authors tend to assume your have a maid to clean up after you and a staff of servents to serve your guests. ;) Then again, I've never had a dismal failure from it.
You can never fail from Betty Crocker...but go to the library sale and buy a copy from the 70's ...they are much better then the new ones...
I agree. Betty's recipes are exceedingly well tested. And they are reputed to have been tested with each ingredient doubled and halved, to make sure that even if you mess up, the results are still likely to be edible.
Another one worth considering is James Beard's American Cookery.
resp:64 resp:68 agreed and agreed but resp:65 not agreed. I had a friend tell me about the Joy of Cooking series: Ed 1, I think was put out by the mother, Ed 2 was the mother and daughter, and Ed 3 was the grandson, I think. Edition 2, from what I had been told, is the easiest to work with. Some of the recipes are indeed exotic, but.. if you have some very rudimentary skills and follow the recipes carefully, you should be fine. Edition 3 assumes the reader knows nothing about cooking and goes into a lot of detail. It wasn't recommended to me because apparently, it can't be pragmatically used on a daily basis. May be more of a textbook approach. void recommended _Help! My Apartment Has A Kitchen_ to jep in an agora item a while back, and since Julie and I bought the book a while back, I'd have to say I second the motion. This looks like an excellent book for folks that have had very little exposure to cooking.
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_Dad's Own Cook Book_ is another great cookbook primer. Sadly, it came to us from my own father. He really can't cook to save his life-- he only does a few dishes like spaghetti and such. Mom bought it in hopes he'd learn more, but it didn't work, apparently.
Thanks for the info on the three editions. I have not seen 3.
I think I've only got the second edition as well, and I didn't get mine that long ago. Interesting. I'll have to take another look at it when I get home.
Hmmm, the 3rd ed. was very, very recent. I've seen it, but didn't take the good time to read through it. It belonged to the friend of mine. I think most people refer to 2nd ed.
The 3rd edition isn't anywhere near as cool as the earlier ones. I'd avoid it.
What don't you like about it? I still haven't seen a copy.
It isn't as quirky, and it focuses on modern trends. They've taken out (or modified for the low fat, high carb crowd) a lot of the classic recipes, supposedly, as well as some of the obscure stuff -- stuff I'll probably never use, like how to prepare a grouse, but that I'd be glad I have somewhere if it ever comes up. I've only glanced at it, but the reviews I've read are pretty universally negative when compared to the original.
I just checked it out on Amazon -- it's got its supporters, too. You might look at the reviews.
From what my friend told me, 3rd ed. assumes you know nothing about cooking and gets very elaborate from there. He recommended 2nd ed. just because of that-- if you can follow a recipe, it will have most of what you need.
The reviews on Amazon are pretty interesting. It really sounds like the 3rd ed. isn't a substitute for the 2nd, but it's a good supplement.
That may well be.
I'm definitely a big fan of the obscure game recipes in the 2nd ed. It's always good to know that I remember how to cook beaver tail properly. But realistically, I don't think I'll ever need to know that. But I do like the focus in the 2nd ed. on "ordinary" recipes. I can find out all I need to know about trendy ingredients or exotic food from magazines and whatnot. Now I'm really curious.
That's kind of my feeling. It sounds like they added a lot of trendy stuff at the expense of depth on the classic material. I certainly don't mind recipes for Thai or Mexican food -- but when I want them, I'd prefer to go to a specialist cookbook that will have the depth I want on those specific cuisines. I wouldn't go to Joy of Cooking for that.
Yesterday, I got _The_Magic_of_Fire_, even though I don't have a fireplace, after hearing about it on "The Splendid Table" on WUOM a few weeks back. I don't know when I'll get to try the recipes, so far it's been fun to read.
mentioned somewhat in another item, thinking about buying a Frugal Gourmet cookbook, but not sure which one?
You have several choices: