Daniel Boulud's Cafe Boulud Cookbook: French-American Recipes for the Home Cook Review

Daniel Boulud's Cafe Boulud Cookbook: French-American Recipes for the Home Cook
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is by far the best cookbook of the year (French Laundry 2nd IMHO). Not only are the recipes within the grasp of the average home cook, but they taste great as well. I've eaten at Daniel and Cafe Boulud and and more than a few of the dishes I've enjoyed at the restaurants are in this book. I've cooked over a dozen dishes and haven't had a disappointment yet. Most, if not all ingredients are easily accessible and no exotic kitchen tools or highly advanced cooking techniques are neccessary for 90% of the recipes. If you love to cook and eat, this book is a must have.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Daniel Boulud's Cafe Boulud Cookbook: French-American Recipes for the Home Cook



Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about Daniel Boulud's Cafe Boulud Cookbook: French-American Recipes for the Home Cook

Read More...

Cafe Society: Socialites, Patrons, and Artists 1920-1960 Review

Cafe Society: Socialites, Patrons, and Artists 1920-1960
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The cover featuring Barbara Hutton is merely a prelude to the visual treats and text that awaits.
The photography is terrific and is generously featured throughout the pages. The range of subjects are also broad.
There's something delicious about society's beautiful people remaining elusive, especially in this vulgar, new age of social media and reality television.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Cafe Society: Socialites, Patrons, and Artists 1920-1960

Aristocrats, millionaires, painters, fashion designers, choreographers, and musicians of the café society fox-trot aboard cruise liners and mingle at dazzling parties in Paris. Exclusive, extravagant, and beautiful, these cosmopolitan socialites were the patrons who galvanized the phenomenal success of the greatest creators of the early twentieth century. It was a whirlwind of sumptuously decorated villas and yachts, up-and-coming haute couture and jewelry designers, and elite evening parties, immortalized by fashion photographers like Cecil Beaton. Combining elegance and fantasy, the members of the café society enjoyed a sophisticated, avant-garde lifestyle. Some of the century's most original talents—from Cole Porter to Yves Saint Laurent—stepped into the limelight via the café society. Through archival photographs and period documents, this volume recounts in historical detail the intrigue and impact generated around the world by this stylish jet-set.

Buy NowGet 38% OFF

Click here for more information about Cafe Society: Socialites, Patrons, and Artists 1920-1960

Read More...

Chez Panisse Café Cookbook Review

Chez Panisse Café Cookbook
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
My foodie friends in Berkeley jokingly refer to Alice's books as "food porn". I have actually cooked a couple of the recipes and, while they are correct, they are exhausting. In Berkeley, CA, where the author's restaurant is thriving, it is easy to get the interesting and seasonal ingredients that are described in the book. However, the complexity of preparation of the recipes makes the book less acessible to most readers and home cooks.
The illustrations are lovely, as are the narratives. It is fun to just read the book and fantasize about being a hemp-clad, kinder version of Martha Stewart. However, it is not the most practical cookbook to stick in the cookbook holder when putting the family's meal together.
The real lesson behind this book is that foods that are in season taste better, are less expensive, and are fun to eat. Changing the menu as the seasons change keeps the experience of dining and cooking interesting and entertaining. Also, buying seasonal food is better for the environment than flying foods out of season from another hemisphere.
Take that wisdom, go to your store and get seasonal fruits and vegetables and use an easier and more accessible cookbook like, "The Joy of Cooking". But do keep this one on the coffeetable for those days you want to fantasize about being a world class hippie chef.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Chez Panisse Café Cookbook



Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about Chez Panisse Café Cookbook

Read More...

Buster Midnight's Cafe Review

Buster Midnight's Cafe
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Everyone will love Buster Midnight's Cafe. I found this book while browsing the Contemporary Literature section of a bookstore in Manhattan and was intrigued by both it's title and it's cover. I was so engrossed in the story from the very start that I was regretful each time my train arrived to or from work.
Sandra Dallas' use of the vernacular and her unique ability to make us laugh and cry while maintaining the suspense of the story was heartwarming. You will come to love every character in this book for who they are and for the very special relationship they share.
Set in a coal mining town, Butte, Montana, beginning at the end of the depression and continuing through WWII, these characters are down to earth, imperfect and lovable. Sandra Dallas has an uncanny way of telling her story and everyone I have recommended this book to has returned to me with thanks for the recommendation and as much love for the story as I had.
I read it three times and I'm looking forward to reading it again.
You may also want to read Dallas', "The Diary of Mattie Spencer" which I also found compelling. Her, "Persian Pickle Club" failed to hold my attention though. But SIX stars for Buster and Mattie!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Buster Midnight's Cafe



Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about Buster Midnight's Cafe

Read More...

Cafe Flora Cookbook Review

Cafe Flora Cookbook
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I wonder: what am I doing writing a review for a cookbook? I rarely write Amazon reviews and the few reviews I have written are related to a completely different genre of book. Plus, I've only recently taken a renewed interest in being in the kitchen - I don't suppose that makes me an "expert" by any stretch of the imagination.
But I wanted to share my opinion of this book with other readers. It's fantastic and the recipes are delicious.
Never before have I enjoyed a cookbook so much. Reading through the table of contents was enough to get my palate fired up. At the time of this writing, I've created over a dozen of the recipes in this book, and each one is a sure winner, not one is a reject. I might have tried more recipes by now, but the temptation to go back to a dish I've already tried is just too great. (We've done the Coconut Tofu with Sweet Chili Dipping sauce four times, now.)
How about a really wonderful Portobello Wellington with Madeira Sauce? Now THAT was a Thanksgiving dinner! Yam and Mushroom Enchiladas with Smoky Tomato Sauce? Spinach, Mushroom, and Gorgonzola in Puff Pastry with Red Pepper Coulis? Despite what I - a carnivore - have always thought, vegetarian cooking can be great. That's a claim I've never been able to make regarding any other vegetarian or vegan cookbook.
The book is extremely well laid out with timing suggestions, "prepare ahead" ideas, and handy tips for getting through the process without any unexpected surprises. Each recipe is preceded by a good description that makes you want to try it immediately. If a recipe has multiple components, each is presented as a logical and timed subsection of the overall plate.
I only wish I knew about this restaurant when I visited Seattle last year. Next time... next time.
Five Stars for the book that got me back into the kitchen after a long hiatus. Feel free to contact me with any questions, but I'll be busy cooking up the next Flora meal.
~R~

Click Here to see more reviews about: Cafe Flora Cookbook



Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about Cafe Flora Cookbook

Read More...

Mind Café Review

Mind Café
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Mind Cafe was, to say the least, a short story that will make you stop and think. Rosie is a woman who has been a human vegetable ever since an accident happened when she was 24 years old. She's been kept alive on machines, watching the rest of her family and friends grow old while she simply exists. She can communicate slightly with the outside world, but all she really wants to do is either experience a miraculous healing or die. This story deals with her actions in a place she calls the "mind cafe," a location inside her mind where she can be visited by loved ones and do almost anything a normal person can do.
There were a few typos in addition to a few sections that could have been developed or explained a bit more, but overall, this was a very emotional read that makes you connect with Rosie. It doesn't attempt to push any agendas on the reader such as religion or euthanasia, so you don't have to be worried about that. I highly recommend this short story to those who enjoy a somewhat sad story that makes you think a bit. It's a very good read, worth the few minutes that it will take you to read it.
Warnings - Mild Language

Click Here to see more reviews about: Mind Café

The Mind Café: death's waiting room and the only refuge for a woman trapped in her body after a tragic accident leaves her unable to do anything but watch the world and think.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Mind Café

Read More...

The Union Square Cafe Cookbook: 160 Favorite Recipes from New York's Acclaimed Restaurant Review

The Union Square Cafe Cookbook: 160 Favorite Recipes from New York's Acclaimed Restaurant
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I usually avoid restaurant cookbooks because the recipes involve hard-to-obtain ingredients and time-consuming preparations. But The Union Square Cafe Cookbook is that rare exception: not only do the recipes actually taste like the dishes in the restaurant, but the ingredients are readily available at your all-purpose grocery or gourmet deli, and the preparations are user-friendly. Fresh ingredients, simply prepared in unusual combinations. A gem.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Union Square Cafe Cookbook: 160 Favorite Recipes from New York's Acclaimed Restaurant



Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about The Union Square Cafe Cookbook: 160 Favorite Recipes from New York's Acclaimed Restaurant

Read More...

Macarons: Authentic French Cookie Recipes from the Macaron Cafe Review

Macarons: Authentic French Cookie Recipes from the Macaron Cafe
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I have two Macaron books, this one and the one by Hisako Ogita. I like to make bullet points:
* Hisako's book looked slightly complicated. I've been baking for 25 years but never did a macaron. I knew they were harder than my usual cupcake so for some reason Hisako's book made me not try it right away. This book is VERY small, but in a good way. First, you can read the whole thing in 10 minutes to learn how to make a macaron. Second, it's easy to understand what she is telling you to do. Third, her pictures of her bakery look nice.
* She tells you how to make a basic French or Italian macaron shell. No frills. Good for a beginner macaronist like me. Essential. However, since it has no frills, I'm glad I have Hisako's book because Hisako actually tells you how to flavor a shell. Even with no extra flavor, the basic shell is crazy tasty though! Let me repeat, good for a beginner first time macarooner!
* What I don't like:
1. she calls for 2.5" circles. I made templates. Puzzled when I couldn't get the large number of macaron shells on a half sheet like she said, I pressed on. I believe this is a typo in the book. My macarons were HUGE. I like big cookies so it wasn't a big deal, but frankly, I think 1.5" is too small, 2" is just right, and 2.5" is too big. My husband found a true to scale picture of her macarons from her cafe and they are 2" in size...(three fingers thick). Hisako's are 2.5 cm large, so did she get her units wrong since she is French? I don't know. Her oven timing and temperatures were perfect for my extra large 2.5 " macarons though.
2. I added too much egg white powder since I live in Houston Tx. Perhaps, adding how much you should put in based on relative humidity would be helpful? That sounded nerdy. I think I will accept the blame for this oops :P
3. Other reviewers are right: she does not tell you how to decorate the macarons as nicely as she does. Nuts :(
4. I made my macarons pink with a dark chocolate ganache. It was VERY tasty. However, my ganache did not solidify in 30 minutes like she says it would. I had to pop it in the fridge. She also never mentions to double boil it. I prefer double boiling (putting it in a glass bowl over a pot of semi-boiling water) because it doesn't burn the milk or chocolate. That's just me. I was surprised she didn't mention that trick. It does taste extremely good though :)
5. Over and over she says use a Pastry 8 tip. I have the Ateco complete large round tip set and the Wiltons like 60+ tip pack. I don't have a number 8! Anyways, for a 2.5 " circle, I had to use my biggest tip. I don't know if others had that problem.
6. NEW ADDITION TO REVIEW: Just made macarons again with 2" circles. Oven baking time was way too high this time. I think 9 minutes works better but I can't say for sure because I kept lowering my time with each batch. I made the chocolate orange ganache. I believe the recipe is OFF. I put in the recommended 1 tsp of orange extract and 1 orange peel zested and my macarons now have a bitter initial taste to them that I hate. I'm quite unhappy with today's batch :(. I'm guessing it's best to use 1/4 a teaspoon of extract to be safe. 2" macarons are better :)
I'm adding a picture to my review of my first attempt at macarons. Check it out. Hope this was helpful.
I'm very glad I bought the book, even with the "flaws". Who knows if it was her book or me... It's still a wonderful beginner macaroner book.
ANOTHER NEW ADDITION TO REVIEW (7/17/2011)
* Hey guys, I found a book that tops this one for a basic recipe. With Macarons I could never get the cookie perfect. I suggest trying Mad About Macarons! for your after-beginner book. It still took me 5 tries to get the cookie perfect but I just did it today. The book is by Jill Colonna. I mix recipes from the Macarons book with this book, for fillings and stuff. But for the cookie part, I use this new book. The ingredient ratios are different, you need a few more tools, but it tells you how to get perfect macaron circles and I no longer get cracks or oil stains or burnt shells! I'll write a sep review for that book so please see that. THANKS!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Macarons: Authentic French Cookie Recipes from the Macaron Cafe

PRAISE FOR AUTHOR CECILE CANNONE'S MACARONS:
"Feather-light, at once crunchy and chewy, and distinguished by rich buttercream filling."
- The New York Times
"Rival those in Paris."
- Zagat
"Addictive."
- Time Out New YorkCuter than a cupcake and more delicious, the adorable macaron is très en vogue. Now you can make these crowd-pleasing cookies at home! Packed with helpful and inspiring color photos, this book offers everything you need to bake stunning macarons, including:
♥Step-by-step instructions for baking perfect shells♥Simple tricks for making smooth, melt-in-your-mouth fillings♥Decorating tips for dazzling, artistic cookies♥Delectable flavors from chocolate and espresso to lemon and pistachio

Buy NowGet 43% OFF

Click here for more information about Macarons: Authentic French Cookie Recipes from the Macaron Cafe

Read More...

The Mitsitam Cafe Cookbook: Recipes from the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian Review

The Mitsitam Cafe Cookbook: Recipes from the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is a beautifully done cookbook; but it is more than that. It is an instruction manual for some modern varied cuisine in the tradition of indigenous American foods.
If you have never eaten at the National Museum of the American Indian on the Mall in DC you are missing a colossal treat. Not only is the food better than anything else you will find on the Mall or nearby, at this highly rated restaurant but it is an education and there are always buffalo burgers and chicken finger type food for the non adventurous.
Chef Richard Hetzler has created a grand restaurant and has brought together recipes that are available at the Mitsitam Café on a rotating basis, he had others test cook them in amounts for home use, rather than the gallons of soup and such that he normally uses. The recipes can be a bit more difficult than a simple cookbook; but much of the difficulty lies in obtaining some of the ingredients, such as; quinoa or juniper berries; but there is also a section on ingredients and sources and one that gives online supplies.
Many recipes will also have ingredients that one can easily find such as chilies, tomatoes, corn, beans.
Included are: appetizers, soups, salads (do not miss the smoked duck salad), main courses, side dishes, sauces and salsa, breads, including fry bread, dessert with a popular Indian pudding, drinks and basic recipes and techniques. There is an index and recipes are also listed by Native American Cultural Area. There are some pictures and information is given about the dishes included.
Richard Hetzler has been with the museum since its opening and has created a marvelous place to eat and a cookbook to match.
With the movement toward more natural food and sustainable ingredients, many will appreciate this cookbook; as well as cookbook collectors and even educators that would like to have foods to demonstrate indigenous food. Those who wish to make dishes that taste wonderful but are probably different from much else that you have created should be sure to purchase this excellent book.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Mitsitam Cafe Cookbook: Recipes from the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian



Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about The Mitsitam Cafe Cookbook: Recipes from the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian

Read More...

Joe Café Review

Joe Café
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
JD Mader spins a dark, introspective crime thriller about the nature of evil. Both introspective and suspenseful, this short novel takes the reader into a sordid world of strip clubs, cheap hotels, and mafia hitmen. Gruesome scenes contrast with the beauty of fishing on a tranquil lake. Deep psychological character development stands next to sudden flashes of action. The characters are developed with care--even the mobsters seem like flesh and blood (as opposed to cardboard cutouts). With a few unexpected twists in this upside-down moral universe, Joe Cafe keeps the reader guessing without being trite or glib.
If you're looking for a well-written, powerful crime novel that keeps you thinking, buy Joe Cafe. You won't regret it.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Joe Café

The murder at Joe Café is an abomination. It stops the entire universe. For Michael, it tarnishes everything, including his badge. For Chet and his hostage, it is the beginning of a chase that will lead them through dingy motels and the darkest corridors of their minds. Dogan just wants Sara back. Jimmy the Cat wants to make up for all the time he has wasted. Frankie wants to live a 'moral' life, erasing everyone in his path who does not live up to his standards. Conventional notions of good and evil quickly blur as they are all forced to look into the mirrors they have avoided for so long. Chilling and horrifying, whimsical and wretched, Joe Café's cast of broken characters try to find their way in a world they never understood to begin with...for the Chens, it is easy. They are dead.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Joe Café

Read More...

The Why Cafe Review

The Why Cafe
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The Why Café by John Stelecky is a story of a man who happens onto an all night café and finds 3 compelling questions on a menu. Why Are You Here? Do You Fear Death? Are You Fulfilled? Sparked by a fun and interesting midnight conversation, he begins to contemplate his purpose for existing, his PFE.
Until we know what our PFE is and discover activities that help us fulfill it, we waste time and energy on lots of things. Those who don't take steps to discover and fulfill their PFE are those who fear death. We are fulfilled by working toward our PFE. What would life be like if you were always doing the things you wanted to do, and feeling passionate about it? Events would begin falling synchronistically in place to help support you along the way, and you'd notice one lucky coincidence unfold after another. You'd begin seeing the world with new eyes, and noticing new opportunities.
This isn't a heavy self help book; this is a delightful story with fun and compelling insights. After reading it, you too will be well on your way to finding your own PFE.Andrea de Michaelis, Publisher Horizons Magazine, Spiritual Solutions For Florida Since 1992 www.horizonsmagazine.com

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Why Cafe



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Why Cafe

Read More...

Cafe Europa: Life After Communism Review

Cafe Europa: Life After Communism
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Drakulic delivers another series of short essays, in the style of her earlier "How We Survived Communism". In "Café Europa", the reader is carried from Croatia across western Europe during the few short years since Croatia emerged from war as an independent state, caught somewhere between its Balkan history and its European ambitions. She ruminates on subjects as far afield as her distaste for the word "we" because of its communist overtones, which leads to the verdict that the western concept of "I", of self-reliance and modernity in a civil state, is a notion still to be embraced in eastern Europe. It is for precisely the same reason that she admires Americans their fetish for perfect teeth, because they represent self-respect and independence from shoddy state-sponsored dental care.
Many of the essays in the book deal with the peculiar talent in eastern Europe for hiding and forgetting the past, thereby evading responsibility and missing the opportunity to learn from it. This flair for forgetfulness causes Drakulic's mother to fear for the sanctity of her husband's grave, marked by a communist star vulnerable to those who would destroy symbols of forty years of communism. It is this same talent that allows fascist "Ustasha" symbols from the 1940s to be revived in the 1990s under the guise of nationalism. The same phenomenon that impels each generation of politicians to rename streets and plazas in order to avoid any public recognition of historical figures whose views place them, at least temporarily, on the wrong side of today's political fences. It is this same failure of history that forces a Croatian journalist to mince words and ask facile questions during an exclusive interview with Dinko Sakic, the notorious concentration camp commander.
Drakulic is a bit exasperated when, on a visit to Israel, she is barraged with questions about Croatia's fascist role during World War II. "To grow up under communism means to live forever in the present. Once the final social order had been established, there was no need to look backwards - or forwards, for that matter.... Perhaps this is the reason why we are now, with this recent war, sentenced to live in the past. Sometimes I ask myself whether this is the punishment for our lack of interest in history, for our fear, silence and irresponsibility towards ourselves. For our ingnorance." She realizes that Croatia as a society has failed to examine and integrate the lessons of its fascist period, and this failure, this willful forgetfulness, is itself a type of evil complicity perpetually spawning new crises, including the high-tension ethnic conflicts that yielded the 1991-1995 wars.
The only jarring note is the essay titled "Why I Never Visited Moscow", in which Drakulic bemoans the fact that she has been categorized as an eastern European writer. This seems a bit hypocritical given that all of "Café Europa" including the very cover blurbs, much like her previous books, is premised on the fact that she is a particularly talented eastern European writer and astute social critic who has interesting and insightful things to say about the region. Perhaps Drakulic, who has won awards, fame, and money with her admirable accounts of eastern Europe, is being a bit self-righteous when she complains about being viewed as an eastern European writer.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Cafe Europa: Life After Communism



Buy NowGet 36% OFF

Click here for more information about Cafe Europa: Life After Communism

Read More...

The Van Gogh Cafe Review

The Van Gogh Cafe
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I just finished reading the Van Gogh Cafe to the kids in my fifth grade class today. This is the fourth time I have read it to my classes, and I never fail to be amazed and delighted by the images and magic Cynthia Rylant infuses into her story about a very unusual cafe in Flowers, Kansas. Each little story within this slim volume is like a jewel. Rylant wields her pen as skillfully as Vincent Van Gogh did his brush and palette knife, and no matter how many times I read it, the hair on the back of my neck prickles in anticipation of the unexpected, the "marvel ous."
I HIGHLY recommend this book to chldren and to anyone, child or adult who needs to be transported to a place where a porcelain hen sits smiling, and a sign reads Bless All Dogs.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Van Gogh Cafe



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Van Gogh Cafe

Read More...

Aloud: Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe Review

Aloud: Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
When I bought my first copy of "Aloud," it was 1994. Four years later I have given numerous copies away of this anthology that brings American poetry audiences home. This home is one filled with anger, laughter, skepticism, worry, joy, love, dreaming and observation built with the tools of post-modern exploration. "Aloud" is where poets and readers begin to understand the 1990's.
As a lover of poetry, the Nuyorican Poets Cafe takes readers on a ride to life as it is, not as it was in the traditional poetry we grew up reading in school. This is a significant reason why I use this anthology to teach my college students that poetry DOES speak to you, IS about you and IS written by people like you. Poetry has a glorious tradition and the 'now' poetry of "Aloud" demands a place in that tradition.
If you truly love poetry, you will truly become a lover of this text. My only disappointment is that there isn't another anthology from this haven of rhythm and soul. I'm keeping my fingers crossed for a sequel.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Aloud: Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe



Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about Aloud: Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe

Read More...

Flour: Spectacular Recipes from Boston's Flour Bakery + Cafe Review

Flour: Spectacular Recipes from Boston's Flour Bakery + Cafe
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The book begins with a baking overview of sorts. It gives an explanation of techniques that will be used throughout the book. Then, it goes over baking equipment. Next, the book has a short discussion of ingredients. The section on ingredients offers quite a bit of information on things like the right temperature for the ingredients and reasons why unsalted butter is better than salter butter in the recipes. After that, the book has Joanne's Top 12 Baking Tips with explanations for each tip. The author also has quite a few explanations on the science behind the tip or technique throughout the book.
The book covers breakfast treats, cookies, cakes, pies & tarts, other sweets, and breads. Each chapter has popular treats (i.e. red velvet cake, sticky buns, and chocolate chunk cookies, which are wonderful) and also has more unique recipes, too (i.e. hazelnut-almond dacquoise, lemon marshmallow meringue pie, and rosemary shortbread). There are also recipes to make homemade versions of popular, American treats, such as oreos, pop tarts, and fig newtons.
One downside to this book is that there are few pictures. For example, only about four of the twenty-five recipes in the cookie section have a picture, which is a shame because the pictures in the book are beautiful. One note - the carrot cake recipe calls for baking the cupcakes for 50 minutes, but mine were done after 25 minutes. I'm not sure whether that was a typo or whether I just have a hot oven.
*Update 11/7/10* The chocolate chunk cookies were some of the best chocolate chip cookies that I've ever made. I also really liked the Chunky Lola cookies. The surprise hit so far, though, was the cornmeal lime cookies. They were surprisingly addictive and the perfect end to a Latin-flavored meal.
*Update 12/13/10* I took this cookbook home for the holidays. We made a huge batch of the sticky sticky buns, and they were incredibly rich and so yummy. They taste like a cross between a honey bun and a traditional sticky bun. A couple notes - One, you may want to put a cookie sheet under the rolls as they cook. We had quite a mess to clean up when the goo from one of the rolls bubbled over. Second, baking the rolls in a glass pan seemed to help them cook more evenly than baking them in a metal pan.
*Update 1/27/11* After reading reviews of other cookbooks on here, I felt that I should note that this book has the ingredients listed by weight and by volume (i.e. grams and cups). I know that a lack of weight measurements can be a make or break issue for some people with a cookbook, so I wanted to make it clear that this book does have measurements listed both ways.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Flour: Spectacular Recipes from Boston's Flour Bakery + Cafe

Every day 1,500 Bostonians can't resist buying sweet, simple treats such as Homemade Pop-Tarts, from an alumna of Harvard with a degree in economics. From Brioche au Chocolat and Lemon Raspberry Cake to perfect croissants, Flour Bakery-owner Joanne Chang's repertoire of baked goods is deep and satisfying. While at Harvard she discovered that nothing made her happier than baking cookies leading her on a path that eventually resulted in a sticky bun triumph over Bobby Flay on the Food Network'sThrowdown. Almost 150 Flour recipes such as Milky Way Tart and Dried Fruit Focaccia are included, plus Joanne's essential baking tips, making this mouthwatering collection an accessible, instant classic cookbook for the home baker.

Buy NowGet 43% OFF

Click here for more information about Flour: Spectacular Recipes from Boston's Flour Bakery + Cafe

Read More...

Fannie Flagg's Original Whistle Stop Cafe Cookbook: Featuring : Fried Green Tomatoes, Southern Barbecue, Banana Split Cake, and Many Other Great Recipes Review

Read More...

Fleeing Famous (SpellBound Cafe) Review

Fleeing Famous (SpellBound Cafe)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Fleeing Famous (SpellBound Cafe) is about a young woman who want's to take control of her life with confidence and is tired of not living up to who her snooty rich celebrity parents and sister "Harper" (who get's all the praise for following in her parent's footsteps) wants her to be. Moxie does not want any part of being anything like her parent's or sister. She has been made to feel inferior and lack's confidence at who she is at this point in her life.
Moxie get's lost while driving from her parent's mansion (palace) and finds a wonderful town "Sugar Hollow Harbor" (unknown to anyone of us) and her descriptions of the town she just discovered and the wonderful smells of food as she is driving through this town and the descriptions of all the character's makes you feel that you are sitting beside her & Bob while driving through this town ,noticing the street names pertain to food. The food description's make your mouth water and you feel like you are watching a tv foodie network.
These two authors, Moxie Baker and Laura Freed have a great style of writing as this story is fun, magical, has great witches, a wonderful atmosphere, and a story about being able to have confidence with the help of Sadie and Rowdy.
I love Sadie and Rowdy, owners of the "Spellbound Cafe" they would make wonderful friends to us all.
This is the 1st book of what I hope will become a series. A 5 star for sure. Great job Moxie and Laura, you 2 indie author's, IMO have a great writing future ahead of you. Please keep em' coming!!!
PS
( I have packed my bag's and I am driving around looking for "Sugar Hollow Harbor" I would move there in a second)

Click Here to see more reviews about: Fleeing Famous (SpellBound Cafe)

Fleeing Famous, loosely based on true events, is the often funny, mostly quirky story of how one woman finds her destiny (and assorted muffins, cakes, and pies) on the road she takes to avoid it. For Moxie Baker (not her real name), growing up the daughter of a famous Rockstar and a 3 time Oscar winning mother, life was no picnic. Moxie longs to escape the celebrity shenanigans of her dysfunctional parents and spoiled wanna- be reality star sister, Harper. When Moxie accidentally finds herself in Sugar Hollow Harbor, a sleepy town that promises: “You'll find sweetness in our shadows," she decides to reinvent herself. Ah - but the truth, and Moxie's sister, threatens to expose Moxie and unravel her new, delicious life. Fleeing Famous launches the Spellbound Café fiction series: Stories about the magic of food, the power of friendship, and the mysticism of fortunate events.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Fleeing Famous (SpellBound Cafe)

Read More...