Sunday, November 29, 2009

Ladies Aid Cook Book or The Book of Tea

Ladies' Aid Cook Book

Author: Applewood Books

The recipes contained in this 1909 volume were compiled by the Ladies of the Ladies's Aid Society of the Dinuba (Calif.) Presbyterian Church.



Books about: Qigong Fever or Immortality

The Book of Tea

Author: Kakuzo Okakura

Written in English by a Japanese scholar in 1906, The Book of Tea is an elegant attempt to explain the philosophy of the Japanese Tea Ceremony, with its Taoist and Zen Buddhist roots, to a Western audience in clear and simple terms.

Booknews

Kakuzo was a leading figure in Japanese art and culture at the end of the 19th century, and this book, first published in 1906, is a classic treatise explicating the philosophical nuances of tea and the tea ceremony in Japanese culture. This edition contains an introduction by Liza Dalby who was the first American trained as a Geisha in the 1970s, and elegant photos by Daniel Proctor. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)



Saturday, November 28, 2009

Winesoft or Decadent Cookbook

Winesoft: El software para aficionados al vino

Author: Oriol Segarra

This user's tool and reference guide for both connoisseurs and casual wine enthusiasts. It is accompanied by a CD intended for archiving a personal wine collection.



Interesting textbook: Jim Cramers Stay Mad for Life or Getting to Yes

Decadent Cookbook: Recipes of Obsession and Excess

Author: Medlar Lucan

The spirits of Caligula and the Marquis de Sade haunt this viciously witty send-up of "la grande bouffe." The morbid minded and the terminally degenerate will especially enjoy such scandalous chapters as "I Can Recommend the Poodle" and "Blood, the Vital Ingredient." The decadent gourmand can't help but go wrong with this celebrated collection of recipes, an ideal gift for the terminally degenerate.



Table of Contents:
Introduction9
1Dinner with Caligula13
2The Grand Inquisitor's Breakfast31
3The Edible Galleon51
4The Gastronomic Mausoleum67
5Blood, the Vital Ingredient83
6Corruption and Decay105
7I Can Recommend the Poodle115
8The Decadent Sausage139
9The Marquis de Sade's Sweet Tooth161
10The Impossible Pudding177
11Angels and Devils197
12Postscript: Amblongus in Calabria215
13Conversion Table221

Friday, November 27, 2009

Low Carbohydrate Cooking for Health or Domestic Cookery Useful Receipts and Hints to Young Housekeepers

Low Carbohydrate Cooking for Health (Kitchen Doctor Series)

Author: Anne Charlish

Discover the benefits of a low-carbohydrate diet and learn how to avoid common ailments such as hormonal imbalance, weight gain, chronic fatigue, diabetes and heart disease.



Read also Das Schaffen Wirksamer Mannschaften: Ein Guide für Mitglieder und Führer

Domestic Cookery, Useful Receipts, and Hints to Young Housekeepers

Author: Elizabeth E Lea

Elizabeth Lea's 1859 work aims to help young housekeepers with the necessary practical information needed to fulfill everyday household duties



Thursday, November 26, 2009

Delia Collection or Smart Chicken

Delia Collection: Soup

Author: Delia Smith

Delia Smith is Britain's reigning queen of cooking, with more than 18 million copies of her cookbooks now in print. In The Delia Collection, she has chosen and compiled, by featured ingredient, her most popular recipes--updating the classics and adding some that are brand new. These are books aimed at experienced cooks as well as kitchen novices, who will be guided by a trusted hand through superb, no-fail recipes.

Author Comments: In compiling these collections, I have chosen what I think are the best and most popular recipes and, at the same time, have added some that are completely new. It is my hope that those who have not previously tried my recipes will now have smaller collections to sample, and that those dedicated followers will appreciate an ordered library to provide easy access and a reminder of what has gone before and may have been forgotten.



Look this: Energía, Ambiente, y Cambio climático

Smart Chicken: 101 Tasty and Healthy Poultry Dishes, Plus Stuffings and Accompaniments

Author: Jane Kinderlehrer

Recommended by Julia Child, these tasty offerings include roast capon with onions and prunes, chicken with pistachios and sweet rice, turkey and broccoli fritatta, Moroccan chicken stew and more.



Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Encyclopedia of Food and Color Additives or Move over Martha

Encyclopedia of Food and Color Additives

Author: George A Burdock

This 3-volume set provides all the answers to technical, legal, and regulatory questions in clear, nontechnical language. Information once scattered among the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), other government and technical publications, or only available through the Freedom of Information Act, is made easily accessible. You will find descriptions of all substances listed in the Everything Added to Food in the U.S. (EAFUS) database, including categories and substances not considered to be "additives," such as corn oil. All data is clearly organized in alphabetical or numerical order, so having only minimal knowledge about any additive, you can locate it instantly. The Encyclopedia provides you with a quick, understandable description of what each additive is and what it does, where it comes from, when its use might be limited, and how it is manufactured and used.
•What? FDA or PAFA name. List of Synonyms. Current CAS Number. Other CAS Numbers. Empirical Formula. Specifications.
•Where? Description. Natural Occurrence. Natural Sources.
•When? GRAS status. Regulatory Notes. Table of Regulatory Citations.
•How? Purity. Functional Use in Food.You get all this data, plus an index by CAS number and synonym to make your research even easier.



New interesting textbook: The Musicians Internet or SharePoint Office Pocket Guide

Move over Martha: Bringing a Ray of Sunshine Your Way Every Day

Author: Dixie Ray

Regardless of the size, location or makeup of a family, one tie binds like no other: food. Good cooking makes memories a little sweeter, and Dixie Ray helps everyday chefs learn the tips and tricks that can turn any meal into an unforgettable occasion with her new cookbook, Move Over Martha: Bringing a Ray of Sunshine Your Way Every Day (now available through Authorhouse).
     Ray's book is designed to help beginning cooks and those whose skills in the kitchen do not quite rival a master chef's. Her easy recipes forego five-star fare and replace it with items much more likely to be found on the average table. Favorites like grilled pork chops, deviled eggs, baked ham and peach cobbler can be found, along with a host of helpful hints like how to time food preparation so each meal is served hot and fresh.
     "Good cooking is one major expression of the care and concern a person can show for the rest of their family," says Ray. She also provides information not found in most other cookbooks; she shows the chef-to-be how to make cooking fun.
     "I wrote this book to offer to anyone who is looking for another perspective and method of achieving not only terrific cooking but also living a fuller life," she says. "[It] is designed for people who are brand new to being on their own, have never cooked before for whatever reason and have to learn now, and are looking for some practical guidance in the mystical arena of food preparation."
     Recipes begin not with a list of ingredients but with a brief anecdote. Rays' conversational style immediately eases the novice cook's nerves as she explains each step in narrative form. She also lists standard items that should be stocked in every pantry and includes a list of the utensils no cook should be without.
     "I want [readers] to feel as if I am in the kitchen by their side coaching and guiding them through the whole process and making it fun for them at the same time," she says.
     By her own admission, Ray was a "military brat" whose growing up years were spent in many different places, especially the South. She is a self-taught cook who spent more than 30 years becoming "pretty good at it".