22nd Dec2012

3 Incredible Cookbooks

by Janina

If you are looking for something incredible to give a food lover this holiday season look no further!! Here at Logos Books & Records we have picked up, loved, and tested some of the best cookbooks from this season!

I want to start by talking about Thomas Keller’s Bouchon Bakery. Thomas Keller is the author of Ad Hoc at Home, Bouchon, The French Laundry, Under Pressure, as well as a couple of compendiums. He has 11 restaurants and bakeries around the country, and his last book Ad Hoc at Home has been a Logos favorite for years! Bouchon Bakery leaves a lasting impression the second you see it. An oversized cookbook filled with stunning photographs and step by step instruction to creating professional desserts in your own home. Each recipe includes weight and US cooking measurements and the book covers everything from standard cakes and tarts to fancier puff pastries, cream pastries and doughnuts, to bread. Loaded with salty, caramelized, sweets and tricks like “bicycle cutters” this book is a must have for any seasoned or aspiring baker! And to make it even more appealing, we have limited signed copies available!

Bouchon Bakery (Limited Signed First Edition)
Artisan Books
400 Pages, color photographs, 11 x 1.4 x 11 inches
$50.00

Every year a new book comes out on how to bake beautiful loaves of bread. In 2009 we featured an article on Jim Lahey’s fantastic book on no-kneed bread recipes called My Bread. Then in 2010 San Francisco’s Tartine released their beautiful bread book which continues to impress bread lovers today (it remains our best selling bread book!), and last year Mark Vetri, our favorite Philadelphia chef released his book Rustic Italian Cooking which features a chapter on bread that is unmatched, going into great detail about wheat varieties, gluten contents, and the importance of a good starter. These are bread books you could curl up in bed with, that you could read into the late hours of the night, and Flour Water Salt Yeast fits seamlessly among them. Filled with beautiful photographs and and short essays on things like the difference between weight and volume measurements, time and temperature, pre-ferments, handling, proofing, this book contains everything you could ever want to know about baking bread and enough recipes to last you a lifetime.

Flour Water Salt Yeast
10 Speed Press
272 Pages, Color Photographs, 8 x 1.1 x 10 inches
$35.00

Burma: Rivers of Flavor, by Naomi Duguid is quickly becoming a favorite around Independent Bookstores. Written for advanced and adventurous chefs, Burma is filled with obscure but mouthwatering ingredients, (and a glossary with information on how to find them!), full page matte photographs, over 100 recipes and anecdotes about her adventures with the food and country. It is as much a travel and photo book as it is a cookbook, and it sacrifices nothing in the recipes. Salads, soups, curries, vegetables, meats and sweets, it covers everything using traditional ingredients and substitutions when you can’t find them. A truly phenomenal book.

Burma: Rivers of Flavor
Artisan Books
384 pages, Color Photographs 7.5 x 1.6 x 9.2 inches
$35.00

 

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22nd Feb2012

Rustic Italian Food – Marc Vetri and David Joachim

by Janina

It’s no secret that Marc Vetri is my favorite chef. It’s a pretty common thing when you spend some time working in the food industry in Philadelphia since he is both renowned for being a fantastic cook, clever, interesting, inspiring, but also an amazing man to work for. I met countless people who had spent years waiting for something in one of his restaurants to open up, but they don’t open up. It’s a job you never leave. SO. Needless to say I was unbelievably excited when I found out he had another cookbook, this time based on the style of Italian cooking he highlights at his restaurant Osteria: rustic.

What makes Marc Vetri’s food so fantastic is that he cooks it perfectly without over complicating it. I still remember the first time I ordered the antipasta platter at Osteria: a large wooden platter with piles of individually cooked meats and vegetables, many of them seasoned exclusively with salt and oil so that you could taste the flavors of the food more than the seasoning. His new cookbook takes this style of cuisine and pairs it with remarkable explanations on the chemistry of cooking, the history of food, and what makes each dish unique. My first night with this cookbook I curled up in bed and read everything there was to read about bread, the importance of different kinds of yeasts (dry vs fresh vs wild), the different types of flours and their uses (what kind of wheat the flour comes from and what their gluten content is), and the different methods for rising and baking. Each section (Bread and Pizzas, Pastas, Salumi, Pickles and Preserves, Meats and Fish, Simple Vegetables and Sides, Rustic Desserts, Sauces) has an introduction equal in care, and each recipe is marked with easy to understand explanations that take a huge amount of mystery out of cooking.

From the website:

Slow-cooked meats, homemade breads, flavorful pastas…these are the traditional comfort-food classics that Italians have been roasting, baking, curing, and making in their own kitchens for generations–dishes that people actually want to cook and eat. In Rustic Italian Food, acclaimed Philadelphia chef Marc Vetri celebrates the handcrafted cuisine of Italy, advocating a hands-on, back-to-the-basics approach to cooking. Home cooks of every skill level will revel in the 120 recipes, such as sweet Fig and Chestnut Bread, rich Spinach and Ricotta Gnocchi, savory Slow-Roasted Lamb Shoulder, and fragrant Apple Fritters. Rustic Italian Food is also an education in kitchen fundamentals, with detailed, step-by-step instructions for making terrines, dry-cured salami, and cooked sausage; a thorough guide to bread and pasta making; and a primer on classic Italian preserves and sauces. Much more than just a collection of recipes, in this book Marc Vetri connects us directly to the essence of Italian food.

Now Available at Logos:
Rustic Italian Food
Marc Vetri with David Joachim
$35.00

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19th Dec2010

4 Excellent Cookbooks from Norton

by Janina

I have to admit that as an avid food enthusiast and food writer I have a surprising lack of interest in owning cookbooks. I love to look through them for ideas, but I often find it more fulfilling to create a recipe than to follow one. However, this is not the case with an armful  of books that Norton has published over the past year.

My Calabria: Rustic Family Cooking from Italy’s Undiscovered South is an amazing book filled with incredible recipes and methods for making your own… well, everything. Using family recipes and methods, Rosetta Constantino illustrates how to collect and dry your own herbs, make your own preserved meats, dry your own fruits and vegetables, make cheese and bread, hand roll pasta and infuse your own liqueurs. All this alongside delightful  dishes for breakfast, lunch, dinner, dessert, and appetizers. Each recipe is steeped in Calabrian tradition and beautifully presented with photographs by Sarah Remington and commentary written with Janet Fletcher. I guarantee you that even the cook who thinks they can make everything will have a million things to learn from this book. $35.00

The Perfect Finish: Special Desserts For Every Occasion is written by pastry chef Bill Yosses and New York Times food writer Melissa Clark. This is my favorite cookbook this season. I lack a lot of confidence in baking, mostly because I am not a huge fan of sweets so I rarely look for a reason make cakes or cookies etc. The few things I love to make tend to be a little salty or caramelized. Well, this is an entire book of recipes like that. Every single page has something remarkable and delicious on it. This is not a cookbook filled sugary sweets you expect to find in most pastry shops, this is a cookbook filled with deserts you expect to find at a high end restaurant, or indeed, the White House where Yosses is the current pastry chef. The combination of beautiful and amazing recipes and Melissa Clark’s easy to follow writing makes this an absolute gem. Particularly his recipe for making flat, chewy, chocolate chip cookies, a recipe I have since made dozens of times and been told by everyone who tries them that they are the best cookies they have ever had. $35.00

Speaking of the New York Times, this year Amanda Hesser recently released the Essential New York Times Cook Book: Classic Recipes for a New Century, a book she tested over 1,400 recipes to write. Collected from recipes printed in the New York Times over the last 150 years, this book has everything. I mean literally everything. Cocktails, snacks, soups salads, whole sections on potatoes, corn and legumes, 3 sections on different types of meat, breakfast and brunch, bread, baking, frozen deserts, sandwiches, savory pies, and that is less than half the list in the contents. It’s as if the New York Times decided to do a celebrity version of the Joy of Cooking, with recipes from favorite food writers like Julia Child, Mark Bittman & Jamie Oliver. Each recipe was hand picked her after surveying devoted New York Times readers for their favorite recipes, an absolute must have for any food lover. $40.00

Jim Lahey’s recipe for no kneed bread remains my favorite bread of all time. It is something I still make on a weekly basis, even after 4 years. My Bread is an expansion on the recipe he released to the New York Times years ago, covering a wide variety of grains and variations for everything from crusty loaf bread to pizzas to foccacia, and an entire section on sandwiches. I cannot recommend this book enough. For any bread lover, even those with an acute fear of baking, this recipe is hands down the best. $29.95

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10th Aug2010

News This Week – Favorite Fiction in Recipes

by Janina

This week Savuer posted recipes from some of their favorite fiction titles. Check them out!

The Joy Luck Club: Eggplant in Garlic Sauce

Eat Pray Love: Cacio e Pepe Pasta Sauce

Le Grand Bouffe: Jacques Pepin’s Apple Tart

Chocolat: Chocolate Truffles

Willy Wonka: Chocolate Sauce

Dim Sum Funeral: Pork Bao

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06th Jul2010

Mark Bittman’s 101 Summer Grilling Recipes

by Janina

Every year Mark Bittman does 101 summer recipes for his column, The Minimalist, in the New York Times. This year’s 101 recipes focuses on grilling, and they are just as amazing as his previous summer lists.  Written more as a list of ideas and flavor combinations than actual recipes with short how-to explanations, this article is loved by foodies all around.  Like all of his recipes, these are simple, elegant, clever ways to cook with fresh delicious ingredients.  If you have ever been curious about his cookbooks, this is an excellent introduction to his recipes.

Mark Bittman Books Now Available At Logos!

How to Cook Everything: 2,000 Simple Recipes for Great Food
$35.00

How to Cook Everything Vegetarian: Simple Meatless Recipes for Great Food
$35.00

Food Matters
$15.00

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29th Jan2010

NEW! Home Brewing Section!

by Janina

Logos has just received a bunch of New Books on brewing beer from Brewers Publication! So many, in fact, that we have created a new section dedicated specifically to brewing.  Come check it out!

Some titles include:

Wild Brews by Jeff Sparrow, Brew Like a Monk by Stan Hieronymous, Brewing Classic Styles by Jamil Zainasheff, Compleat Meadmaker by Ken Schramm, Farmhouse Ales by Phil Markowski, How to Brew by John J. Palmer, New Brewing Lager Beer by Gregory J. Noonan, Pale Ale by Terry Foster, Radical Brewing by Randy Mosher, and Sacred and Herbal Healing Beers by Stephen Harrod Buhner.

Feel free to ask the Logos staff for brewing advice, too! We have quite a few home brewers in our midst!

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24th Sep2009

Molecular Gastronomy by Hervé This

by Janina

For this week’s books in motion we bring you quick clip from Hervé This’ Molecular Gastronomy to Culinary Constructivism.  In his previous book, Molecular Gastronomy: Exploring the Science of Flavor, This explores the science behind the functions and interactions of food.  This is not a book about how to make aromas or foam, but a book for understanding the science of food.  Truly, these are books for the food geek that just wants to know it all (like me!)

hervethis

Now Available at Logos!
Molecular Gastronomy
by Hervé This
Paperback
$16.95

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20th Sep2009

My Bread by Jim Lahey | A Recipe

by Janina

my breadIt is easy for me to recommend My Bread because I have been using Jim Lahey’s recipe for no knead bread ever since it was published in the New York Times almost 3 years ago.  It is a flawlessly simple recipe as well as versatile. It is based on the idea that modern bread recipes are all about saving time, putting your own labor into the bread to get what would normally take a day in a matter of hours.  Instead, Lahey’s method lets time and yeast do the work.  I have recommended his basic recipe to countless friends and acquaintances, and rarely have been met with anything less than extreme enthusiasm. And let me just say. I am not a baker.  I preserve, I cook, I make everything I can from scratch, from tomato sauce to pesto, to jams and pickles to yogurt and kombucha. But I very rarely bake.  Cookies, cakes, pies, breads, unless it’s a casserole I usually leave it to my boyfriend, so it’s no surprise that he is the one who initially discovered this recipe; but over the years I have learned to love this one particular baking project, and to make it my own.  It’s what I have always called a Fougasse (due to the shaping and haphazard baking method I use), and Jim Lahey has perfected into a Pizza Bianca.  It’s a beautiful upscale version of my very simple but very delicious adaptation. His book includes 40+ bread variations, recipes for sandwich ingredients from meats to spreads to vegetable preparation,  recipes for his classic panini, and what to do with left over stale bread.  In my eyes, this the bread book to end all bread books.

As part of my recommendation for this book, I’d like to share my enthusiasm for it’s publication by posting my adaptation for the Fougasse.

(cross posted on bramblings)

The Fougasse:

Adapted from Jim Lahey’s recipe via Mark Bittman  in the New York Times

fougasse 03

Introduction: A Fougasse is a traditional French hearth bread shaped into an ear of wheat.  A hearth bread, is a bread used to tell the temperature of an oven.  They are simple breads that rarely fail, and can be cooked at a variety of temperatures, making them perfect finicky ovens and spacey bakers.  The full time for this recipe from start to finish is anywhere from 6-18 hours depending on the weather.  Most of this will be resting time, with only about 15-20 minutes for baking, and about 10 minutes of work.

Ingredients:

3 cups of all purpose flour (plus extra for dusting)

1/4 teaspoon of active dry yeast (instant is fine)

1 1/4 teaspoons of sea salt

olive oil

1 Tablespoon coarse sea salt

1-2 sprigs of fresh rosemary

Method:

  • in a large bowl combine all ingredients, adding almost all of the water- reserve a little just in case the air is damp, and if you use it all and need a little more that’s okay too.  It should be shaggy and sticky but not particularly wet or well formed.
  • cover with plastic wrap until bubbles form along the surface, anywhere from 6-18 hours.

SIDE NOTE: To give you an idea here, living in Philadelphia where we see some extremes from dry cold weather to damp hot weather, we would let the bread rest for around 18 hours in the dead of winter when we kept our house very cool and dry, and 6 hours in the middle of summer when it was extremely humid and our average house temperature was about 85-90.  In my experience, during lesser extremes you usually end up waiting about 10-12 hours.

  • when the top of the dough is flat and dappled with bubbles, dump it onto a well floured work surface and fold it over on itself twice, covering it again with the same piece of plastic, and let it rest 15 minutes.
  • in the mean time, get out a baking sheet and line it with parchment, or oil a cookie sheet generously with olive oil.
  • after the dough has rested, begin stretching it into a giant triangular shape and place it on the parchment or oiled baking pan.  you may find it easier to stretch it once it is on the pan
  • dust it lightly with flour and cover it again with plastic, allowing it to rest until well risen (usually about 1-2 hours).  It will look puffy when it is ready

fougasse 01

  • preheat your oven to 475 F
  • remove the plastic (don’t worry if it sticks!) and drizzle generously with olive oil, and sprinkle liberally with a coarse sea salt
  • remove the leaves from a couple of sprigs of fresh rosemary, and sprinkle them around the dough
  • with a sharp knife, slice upwards from the center, starting at the wide edge and working up
  • bake 15-20 minutes or until golden
  • serve immediately

Available At Logos
My Bread: The Revolutionary No-Work, No-Knead Method

by Jim Layhey with Rick Flaste Founder of the Sullivan Street Bakery
$29.95

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23rd Jul2009

Mark Bittman’s 101 Summer Salads

by Janina

Food_MattersMark Bittman, author of Food Matters: A Guide to Conscious Eating with More Than 75 Recipes and columnist for the New York Times Food section has released his yearly 101 summer recipes: 101 Simple Salads for the Season.  Last year’s picnic recipes blew me away, and I have been impatiently awaiting the new 101 release every since.  I can admit it. I have a crush on Mark Bittman. The recipes are exactly what I like. Simple and descriptive, instead of complicated and precise.  Give me a list of ingredients and a couple of verbs and I’m ready to go, give me a tally of tsps cups cook times and oven temperatures and my eyes start to glaze over.  For this reason, the 101 recipes, which are short descriptive paragraphs, more like ideas than recipes, have become my favorite cookbook of sorts.  Including ideas such as carrots and blueberries, couscous oranges and honey, salted raw asparagus slivers, fennel and prune plums, his combinations are both exotic and common sense.  I find myself saying over and over “wow! that sounds amazing!” paired immediately afterward with “of course! how simple!”  The article also features a video link where you can see him making several salad dressings, including my favorite: lemon, salt, and olive oil.  I have to admit that sometimes reading Mark Bittman’s column is simply a justification for the way I like to eat and prepare food; but what an excellent justification it is!

If you like recipes and want more, check out his book Food Matters, available now at Logos.

Food Matters: A Guide to Conscious Eating with More Than 75 Recipes
Mark Bittman
$25.00

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