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Prepare recipes from Atlanta's best restaurants, hotels, and caterers right in your own kitchen! Thanks to many of the city's most talented chefs, even kitchen novices can prepare such delectable dishes as Crabcakes with Three Sauces and Ravioli with Spinach and Walnuts. Profits benefit Atlanta's Food Bank.
Over 370 recipes from 122 Louisiana chefs, restaurants and bed and breakfast inns found in 56 cities and towns all over the state. Included are restaurants owned by world-famous TV chef Emeril Lagasse, nationally known chef and author Paul Prudhomme and Louisiana's only two French master chefs, Michel Marcais and Rene Bajeaux. Arranged by areas, this guide is a great traveling companion to find the most unique dining experiences in Louisiana.
From the chef/restaurateur of a Bon Appétit “Top American Restaurant,” southern fare with a Mexican flair that is “thrifty, practical and delicious” (New York Times). USA Today called Taqueria del Sol “a runaway success.” Bon Appétit wrote: “Move over, Chipotle!” The fast-casual food of Eddie Hernandez, the James Beard-nominated chef/co-owner of the restaurant, lands on the commonalities of Southern and Mexican food, with dishes like Memphis barbecue pork tacos, chicken pot pie served in a “bowl” of a puffed tortilla, turnip greens in “pot likker” spiked with chiles, or the “Eddie Palmer,” sweet tea with a jab of tequila. Eddie never hesitates to break with purists to make food taste better, adding sugar to creamy grits to balance the jalapeños, or substituting tomatillos in fried green tomatoes for a more delicate texture. Throughout, “Eddie’s Way” sidebars show how to make each dish even more special. “Eddie Hernandez cooks my type of food—honest, thrifty, and full of flavor—using fresh, inexpensive, and ordinary ingredients.” —Jacques Pépin “In our world, Eddie is a culinary innovator as inspiring as Thomas Keller, René Redzepi, or Madhur Jaffrey.” —Matt Lee and Ted Lee, authors, The Lee Bros. Charleston Kitchen “From refried black-eyed peas to chicken–green chile potpies in puffy tortilla shells, Turnip Greens & Tortillas showcases honest and joyous cooking from the modern South.” —John T. Edge, author, The Potlikker Papers: A Food History of the Modern South “This book resonates with recipes that glorify home cooking from the South as well as Mexico and melds them together in a deliciously satisfying way.” —Nathalie Dupree, author, Mastering the Art of Southern Cooking
We invite people into our homes to mark special occasions or to share warm companionship of time and food together. Whatever our reasons, food shared with friends must be our best. Every meal can be cause for Puttin? on the Peachtree. Inducted into the McIlhenny Hall of Fame, an award given for book sales that exceed 100,000 copies.
In her debut memoir, Lingenfelser serves up heartfelt stories and easy-to-execute recipes from her Savannah kitchen. Written with the courage of her convictions and a pinch of audacity, Some Kinda Good is the perfect book for anyone who dares to dream and acts on those instincts. Good food and good company, that's what it's all about!
A sophisticated collection of 120 lesser-known Venetian specialties from London's edgy Soho district restaurant is complemented by sumptuous photography and includes such option as warm duck salad with beets and walnuts, crispy baby pizzas with zucchini and warm autumn fruits with amaretto cream. 25,000 first printing.