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Food of Singapore (Food of the World Cookbooks)

Djoko Wibisono, David Wong

Food of Singapore (Food of the World Cookbooks) Djoko Wibisono, David Wong List Price: $18.95
By: Periplus Editions
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

great recipes I can stay home and eat good food now. 4 out of 5 stars.
7 of 7 people found this review helpful.

This book gives a good range of some favorite Singaporean dishes. The recipes are easy to follow and are fantastic to suprise the family with on those special nights. I have always been in awe of good chefs and although I will need many more years of cooking to be good, this book gives those of us a hand at making some exquisite meals, without running down to the local restaurant.

Editorial Review:

This volume presents both traditional and contemporary recipes - classic favourites such as chili crab, popiah, rojak, hokkien fried noodles and new dishes such as tea-smoked seabass and stingray in banana leaf. It also includes a detailed introduction to Singapore's dynamic cultural and culinary traditions, a glossary of local ingredients and colour photographs of each recipe.

Vegetarian Table: Japan

Victoria Wise

Vegetarian Table: Japan Victoria Wise List Price: $16.95
By: Chronicle Books
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 2 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

I love Japanese food 3 out of 5 stars.
6 of 7 people found this review helpful.

and I'm a vegetarian, so I was excited to see this books. Most Japanese recipes include some sort of fish product so this book was a good find. The recipes concentrate mainly on low-fat dishes where I would have like to see a combonation of low and moderate fat recipes. I also would have like to see more info on vegetarian versions of sushi, tempura , you know, Japanese fast food. But still, a good book--probably one of the few of its kind.

Editorial Review:

Bargain Books are non-returnable.

"An exciting new perspective on a cherished cuisine" (The San Francisco Chronicle), the Vegetarian Table series celebrates the rich diversity of flavors, fruits and vegetables, grains and legumes, and the variety of enticing spices found all over the world, providing the perfect opportunity for indulging the vegetarian palate. Lavishly illustrated with stunning full-color photography and text by some of the finest food writers in the industry, this popular Chronicle Books series is now available in paperback. Featuring distinctive vegetarian recipes for appetizers, soups and salads, pastas and noodles, main dishes, breads, and desserts, the cuisines are as delicious as they are exotic. The Vegetarian Table series offers an enticing and nutritious way to bring the sumptuous food and flavors from around the globe to any vegetarian table—wherever it may be.

Japanese Cooking for the American Table

Susan Fuller Slack

Japanese Cooking for the American Table Susan Fuller Slack List Price: $15.95
By: HP Trade
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 4 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

The Only Japanese Cookbook You'll Ever Need 5 out of 5 stars.
21 of 22 people found this review helpful.

Whether you are mildly intrigued by Japanese cuisine or an enthusiastic aficionado, a beginning cook or a dedicated chef, Susan Slack's masterful JAPANESE COOKING is that rarely found wonder: a good read, a gracious and welcoming guide to unfamiliar cooking techniques and ingredients and, best of all, a compendium of delicious recipes that can be easily prepared in the American kitchen.

Slack, who lived in Japan, guides you through the intricacies of Japanese cooking with an easy grace that makes learning new techniques, new flavor combinations, new ingredients a pleasure rather than a daunting puzzle. Her chapter on how to make garnishes is worth the price of the book. She also tells you how to compose a Japanese meal, how to serve and eat it. She discusses the history of chopsticks and the etiquette surrounding them.

Slack's chapter on sashimi and sushi answered my questions about these two dishes that often daunt us Westerners, unsure about eating raw fish. She gives the easy secrets of making them and follows with a wealth of recipes, not only for the expected raw and cooked fish, but for sushi made with teriyaki walnuts or avocado and a Korean recipe I love using beef tenderloin. With Slack's crystal clear instructions, these recipes work every time. Typical of the fun aspect of this book is a little table of "Sushi Lingo" which will let you surprise your waiter the next time you order at a sushi bar.

If you like to entertain a bit differently, you'll love her chapter on Bento -the elegant Japanese lacquer or porcelain compartmented "lunch boxes" for imaginative picnics, luncheons or suppers. If you don't own these containers, and most of us don't, she tells how to make them out of decorated baskets or small boxes which you cover with decorated paper or wrap in a square of soft material, a scarf or bandanna. The menus for filling the boxes are lovely using recipes from elsewhere in the book as well as the bento chapter.

The joy of using Slack's book is that she makes everything so easy and doable. She discusses Japanese cooking equipment and tells you what to substitute for what you don't have or don't want to buy. Most important of all, is her careful explanation of ingredients, important because most recipes, if they are authentic, will call for something not commonly found in the American kitchen. She discusses each ingredient in detail, tells you what it looks like and how to use it, so it is no longer intimidating. Fortunately, with the rise in interest in Japanese cooking, many Japanese ingredients are now found in the Oriental section of supermarkets and the oriental groceries that have grown up in urban communities. There is a list of sources for ordering ingredients you cannot find.

I want to emphasize what I said in the beginning: this is not just a cookbook, it's a wonderful read. JAPANESE COOKING is loaded with history and the author's own richly evocative memories of her days in Japan. She takes you to colorful markets, to country inns where food is robust and to elegant urban restaurants where it is sophisticated subtle. In addition, each chapter and recipe is preceded by a bit of history, of how to, or a memory. Throughout the book are graceful haiku written by the author. This book is all things to all cooks. You will thank me for urging you to read it and use it.

Editorial Review:

For today's busy lifestyle, Susan Fuller Slack offers the complete guide to preparing classic Japanese cuisine with American and Japanese cooking techniques, accompanied by fascinating details about the historical and cultural origins of each dish. Illustrations.

A Feast for the Eyes: The Japanese Art of Food Arrangement

Yoshio Tsuchiya

A Feast for the Eyes: The Japanese Art of Food Arrangement Yoshio Tsuchiya List Price: $39.95
By: Kodansha America
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

An art and ceramics book that includes food service 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

Wonderful book. As a potter and a cook, I find so much to look at and think about.Some color, a number of b & W pics of great Japanese pottery and food service items. Thoughtful ideas about how to present food in an artful way considering season, beauty. Great if you can find it.

Editorial Review:

Surveys the various styles of Japanese tableware and describes the Japanese methods of arranging and serving food.

The Sushi Book

Celeste Heiter

The Sushi Book Celeste Heiter Amazon Price: $15.16
List Price: $18.95
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By: ThingsAsian Press
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Feast for the Eyes and Mind 5 out of 5 stars.
2 of 2 people found this review helpful.

This is a very painful book to read. Yes, I made the agonizing mistake of turning its pages on an empty stomach. The sexy sushi pictures and accompanying enthralling descriptions were too much. The gastric juices oozed out freely. And noisily.

Tuna sushi (maguro) Yellowtail sushi (hamachi), salmon sushi (sake), halibut sushi (hirame), scallop sushi ( hotategai), raw shrimp (ama ebi) - gastronomic beauties all. And prepared in various styles; sashimi, nigiri, makizushi, gunkan, temaki, etc. Without sounding too much like `Bubba' from Forrest Gump, rest assured that those terms are backed up by artistically prepared close-ups and genuine in every way. But you have see (or taste) them to believe them.

Though one might walk past the ubiquitous sushi bar today as might a McDonald's outlet, nothing could be a more tragic thing to do. In The Sushi Book, the author brings us to see sushi making and eating as an art form; which is not stretching reality at all; for sushi is indeed an integral part of Japanese culture. What Ms Heiter claims as `Japan's greatest gift to mankind,' sushi is indeed a gourmet that is worth a book not only by virtue of its diversity and flexibility but its beautiful simplicity.

Despite all that, the origins of sushi were humble. I was surprised to find out that sushi does not even originate from Japan; but was actually a form of fish-curing technique from Southeast Asia! Yes, it is that sort of book; serious and playful at the same time.

For some westerners, eating sushi is an adventure. And it should be. From entering the sushi bar to placing your order to tasting the morsel, you are embarking on a culture crafted by a tradition that spans generations. Sushi etiquette is exhausting and may intimidate the beginner; and the author spares no details. (Celeste Heither is a Californian who has spent considerable time in Japan herself). `Don't spear a sushi with your chopsticks'. `Never lick your chopsticks'. `Never wipe your face with the oshiburi towel'...etc. Hopefully after this book, you won't be committing as many faux pas as you used to. I know I wouldn't...hopefully.

Even if you don't like sushi to begin with but are merely intrigued by it, this book is still for you. The chapter `Extreme sushi' describes the bizarre and outrageous. Naked sushi, for one, is served on the bodies of naked women. Fugu or blowfish, is a sushi bar rarity which is super expensive and also contains a lethal poison. To quote Ms Heiter; `Only in Japan'.

Apart from how to eat, it is vitally important to know where to eat. Disappointed by your first sushi bar experience? It is helpful to know how to spot the strengths and weaknesses of an establishment. Knowing a few Japanese words wouldn't hurt either. The Sushi Book provides all these and more.


Ms Heiter tells us about the rigorous, samurai-like discipline that is needed in honing a sushi chef. Thankfully, she also included a chapter on how to make your own sushi at home; without the punishing course under the steely glare of the shokunin, or sushi master. What to buy, how to assess quality, freshness and how to store the ingredients; it is idiot-proof, I think.

In summary, from sushi beverages to sushi anecdotes, The Sushi Book serves its title well; and is an excellent guide to lead the sushi-curious to be sushi fans as well as to elevate the sushi enthusiasts to be Sushi Connoisseurs.

Editorial Review:

Everything about sushi. How to choose, order, eat. How to make it at home. The history, evolution and art of sushi. How to become a sushi chef. Nutritional value, health and safety concerns. The pronunciation guide, together with a 39-page sushi glossary, and a reverse dictionary, are especially helpful in identifying and ordering sushi. Beautifully photographed in leading sushi restaurants.

Japanese Home Cooking: Quick, Easy, Delicious Recipes to Make at Home (Essential Asian Kitchen Series)

Shunsuke Fukushima

Japanese Home Cooking: Quick, Easy, Delicious Recipes to Make at Home (Essential Asian Kitchen Series) Shunsuke Fukushima List Price: $19.95
By: Periplus Editions
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Wonderful introduction to Japanese home cooking! 4 out of 5 stars.
12 of 12 people found this review helpful.

I LOVE this cookbook! It's a great introduction to simple Japanese cooking at home, with VERY detailed directions and beautiful color photos to show how the end result should look. For example, when Fukushima talks about deep-frying, he doesn't tell you to just add enough oil for frying - as most cookbooks assume you know - he specifies 3 inches of oil, along with the specific frying temperature. Not that this book is about deepfrying - outside of the Tempura and Tonkatsu recipes, he does a wonderful job covering the side dishes ubiquitous at a Japanese table - the pickled cucumbers, cold spinach in sesame dressing, and other dishes that are so wonderfully cooling in the heat of summer. The broiled eggplant is delicious - a much healthier way to eat eggplant (outside of the usual frying or smothering in cheese) and still be able to taste the original vegetable flavor. My only reason for not giving this book 5 stars? I wanted MORE recipes to be included!

Favorite Japanese Dishes (Quick & Easy)

Yukiko Moriyama

Favorite Japanese Dishes (Quick & Easy) Yukiko Moriyama Amazon Price: $11.01
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By: Japan Publications Trading
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Japanese home cooking 4 out of 5 stars.
10 of 10 people found this review helpful.

"Favorite Japanese Dishes" is the second "Quick and Easy" cookbook that I have bought, and I remain impressed with the series. There is a good variety of dishes, and very simple instructions for cooking.

This one focuses on five fundamental styles of Japanese cooking, basically what a Japanese family would eat at home on a day-to-day basis. Shabu-shabu are generally meat dishes cooked in a metal hot pot, Sukiyaki is both meat and seafood cooked in either a metal or a ceramic nabe pot. Tempura is battered and fried...well anything, really. Teppan-yaki is thin slices of meat and vegetables cooked on a metal hot plate. Teriyaki is a slow style of cooking fish and meats that produces a distinctive taste.

Shabu-shabu, Sukiyaki and Teppan-yaki are all very social means of cooking, where everyone sits around a bubbling pot or hot plate and cooks their own meal at a table. They are really great ways to have a dinner party, even better in the winter when you can huddle around a hot dish.

Each style has a good sample of different ingredients using the same method. There is typically a beef dish, a pork dish, a chicken dish and a seafood dish. While I haven't tried everything, the Seafood sukiyaki is amazing, as is the salmon teriyaki.

"Favorite Japanese Dishes" is probably not a very good cookbook for vegetarians, as almost all of the dishes have meat or seafood of some sort. The exception is tempura, which can be cooked with pretty much anything.

Editorial Review:

This book is the 8th in a series of cookbooks designed to introduce simple ways to make some of the worlds most interesting and delicious cuisines. Quick & Easy Favorite Japanese Dishes brings together delicious recipes for the five most popular Japanese dishes: Shabu Shabu, Sukityaki, Tempura, Teppanyaki, and Teriyaki. It contains not only description of ingredients, preparation and instructions but also 600 illustrations, to support the step-by-step processes. One can safely say that this is the very book that embodies the motto "Quick & Easy."

Simple Japanese: With East/West Flavors

Silla Bjerrum

Simple Japanese: With East/West Flavors Silla Bjerrum Amazon Price: $22.76
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Editorial Review:

London-based executive sushi chef and entrepreneur Silla Bjerrum, best known as the cofounder of the Feng Sushi take-out chain, is committed to making sushi accessible to everyone and using simple, fresh ingredients. Her first cookbook, Simple Japanese, features more than 100 healthful, easy-to-follow recipes for Japanese.  

 

Calling upon the talent of photographer Lars Ranek, Simple Japanese demystifies sushi, sashimi, tempura, and noodle dishes; full-page photo-spreads guide readers in recreating their favorite dishes or testing out Bjerrum’s suggestions for more unusual recipes. To simplify Japanese cooking, Bjerrum structures the book with the skill of a teacher creating a syllabus – starting with a list of essential kitchen tools. After revealing the secret to making flawless sushi rice, there's a section on choreographing sashimi. The sushi-nigiri section presents Thai-style gravadlax nigiri, a Scandinavian salmon sushi with an Asian twist. The chapter on sushi-maki include instructions on rolling traditional and inside-out, Bjerrum highlights a recipe for California sunset maki. Although traditional Japanese meals don’t end with dessert, readers will be delighted to learn that modern Japanese fusion does -  green tea cheesecake with ginger biscuits is suggested.

 

For readers who want to learn more about the ingredients in these Japanese fusion recipes, a resource is provided at the back of the book. There’s also a list of 12 U.S. stores that carry Japanese ingredients. 

 

Japanese Cooking (The Essential Asian Kitchen)

Shunsuke Fukushima

Japanese Cooking (The Essential Asian Kitchen) Shunsuke Fukushima Amazon Price: $17.12
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Editorial Review:

Japanese food can be intimidating to the novice, as sushi, sashimi, tempura and udon have nothing in common with most Western fare. A user-friendly cookbook is a must for anyone interested in experimenting with Japanese dishes, and Japanese Cooking is an excellent starting point. With simple, step-by-step directions, Japanese Cooking clearly illustrates how to make a broad range of traditional dishes: rice, soups, tempura, teriyaki, noodles, tofu, a variety of vegetables, desserts and, of course, sushi.

A First Book of Japanese Cooking

Masako Yamaoka

A First Book of Japanese Cooking Masako Yamaoka List Price: $19.95
By: Kodansha International (JPN)
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Good Book--But Beginner Beware! 4 out of 5 stars.
16 of 16 people found this review helpful.

I bought this book while I was in Japan thinking it would be an easy introduction to Japanese cooking that an inspired but unskilled beginner like me could take on--that was a mistake! The book has lots of detailed description and ideas, including illustrations, but the author certainly doesn't cut corners for simplicity. Traditional Japanese home cooking takes time, preparation and practice, and for the most part the recipes in this book are no exception. However, if you're a fairly experienced cook already, and want to get a taste of what Japanese cuisine in all about, then this book is probably what you're looking for.

Easy to use, and a great way to start cooking Japanese! 5 out of 5 stars.
7 of 18 people found this review helpful.

This is a great book to get started with. It gives wonderful descriptions of the various ingredients, and it's instructions are easy to follow.

Editorial Review:

Simple, easy-to-follow family-style recipes designed for Western cooks wanting to prepare Japanese food at home. All ingredients in the book are readily available outside Japan, and clear-cut techniques and line drawings provide guidance.

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