Coming October 2018: “The Beer Kitchen”

September 6, 2019 · Posted in Cookbook · Comment 

Some cool cookbook images:

Coming October 2018: “The Beer Kitchen”
cookbook
Image by Thomas Cizauskas
The Beer Kitchen: the art & science of cooking, & pairing, with beer
☞ by British beer writer Melissa Cole
Announced 27 July 2018.

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I don’t usually post adverts, but here are five reasons I’ve done so.

1) cooking with beer
2) the science of cooking with beer
3) vegetarian recipes (accompanying those for carnivores)
4) cheese and beer
5) written by Melissa Cole

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▶ "I have a huge passion for beer and food matching, but I also love cooking with beer and hate bad science, so I’ve combined all those things to create a book that I sincerely hope will become spattered with grease, smeared with chocolate and get generally battered (but hopefully not deep fried!) through use.

I believe there’ll be something for nearly everyone in there, and I’ve tried to keep it really accessible by breaking it down into four different sections: So Simple, Some Effort, Show Off and Say Cheese.

Inside you’ll find a wide range of options from dishes for dedicated carnivores, to vegetarian & vegan recipes, to sweet-toothed temptations and some more refined dishes, that take beer beyond the dull and cliched ‘dude food’ arena."

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▶ Read more at Ms. Cole’s blog, "Taking the Beard Out of Beer!".
▶ "The Beer Kitchen" will be published in October 2018, in the U.K. but will also available for pre-sale in the U.S., via Jeff Bezos, err, Amazon.

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▶ Image uploaded by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.
▶ For a larger image, type ‘L’ (without the quotation marks).
— Follow on web: YoursForGoodFermentables.com.
— Follow on Twitter: @Cizauskas.
— Follow on Facebook: YoursForGoodFermentables.
— Follow on Instagram: @tcizauskas.

dorrance_a-d716_090
cookbook
Image by Schlesinger Library, RIAS, Harvard University
Description: Susie G. Larned Dorrance Recipe Book. Manuscript recipes.

Repository: Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America.

Collection: Susie G. Larned Dorrance Recipe Book

Call Number: A/D716

Catalog Record: id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/001925901/catalog

Questions? Ask a Schlesinger Librarian

Day 159 – Organized!

August 30, 2019 · Posted in Cookbook · Comment 

Check out these cookbook images:

Day 159 – Organized!
cookbook
Image by Karin Beil
June 8, 2010 – I should have taken a before and after shot of this cupboard! It was one of those kitchen cupboards where you take your life into your own hands when opening the door. Today is the day it finally got organized! I still have more cookbooks than I need, but at least now they only take up the top shelf. The bottom shelf has no doors and now has a basket for cell phone chargers, keys, etc.

Persimmon pudding
cookbook
Image by gazelystare

Toronto Life Cookbook Event at CFC
cookbook
Image by Canadian Film Centre
Toronto Life and CFC celebrated the premiere edition of Toronto Life Cookbook, featuring 100 recipes from the city’s best chefs. Guests sampled a variety of culinary food and drink offerings made from recipes from the Cookbook.

The evening also marked the unveiling of the Miele Kitchen,
designed by J.F. Brennan, and the GlucksteinHome design project at Windfields Estate.

To learn more about CFC, please visit: www.cfccreates.com

Photo by: George Pimentel

Vegan Chocolate – Orange Torte

August 22, 2019 · Posted in Cookbook · Comment 

A few nice cookbook images I found:

Vegan Chocolate – Orange Torte
cookbook
Image by yummysmellsca
Adapted from Vegan Chocolate by Fran Costigan, this torte is full of orange, fruity olive oil, almond and chocolate notes that will satisfy any chocoholic – not to mention it’s egg-free, dairy free and a source of whole grains! The chocolate-orange ganache on it’s own is to die for too, especially if you’re a Terry’s fan 🙂

www.yummysmells.ca/2014/07/vegan-chocolate-orange-torte.html

Pitaya aka Dragonfruit
cookbook
Image by Vanessa Pike-Russell
Currently in season, the Dragonfruit is one of the strangest looking fruits I have ever seen. The first time I heard of them was in the ingredients list of the Power-c Vitamin Water containing Dragongruit by Glaceau. The fruit of several cactus species, most importantly of the genus Hylocereus(sweet pitayas) is usually either a vibrant red or yellow with white flesh and small black pips inside. Shaped somewhat like an artichoke, the red species is the more commonly found in Australia.

Recently I was told about a dragonfruit farm in in Queensland owned by Mary Vassallo, a very talented lady who has authored two cookbooks on Maltese Cooking. She and her husband has been growing pitaya on their farm and sent me some photos of their harvest.

( Read more )

Nice Cookbook photos

August 13, 2019 · Posted in Cookbook · Comment 

A few nice cookbook images I found:

Birthday Cookbook
cookbook
Image by jereandreagan

Vegetarian Cookbooks
cookbook
Image by Birame
IM’d to my wife to show that they had a whole section. Reviewed 9/20/2014

Peshastin Pinnacles, Chelan County, Washington
cookbook
Image by Conspiracy.of.Cartographers
I’ve taken this shot maybe a dozen times. I absolutely love it. This photo isn’t exactly perfect – I’m not sure about the processing. I think I like this old stock in HC-110 stand. I’ve tried processing it as per the data sheet’s instructions – HC-110B for 4.5minutes, but I really didn’t care for that.

I don’t really like processing any b&w film for less than five minutes. Seven to ten is ideal. I follow the agitation rule of once per minute if it’s over five minutes long. More agitation than that makes it too contrasty for my liking. Additionally, the shorter the development time, the more room there is for error, especially at the end (for me, anyway).

This is covered in Anchell & Troop’s essential ‘Film Developing Cookbook’:

‘If the tank development time is less than six minutes a two tank system should always be used. The first tank should contain the developer, the second tank should contain the stop bath or water rinse. shortly before development is complete the light should be turned off and the lid removed from the tank. At the moment that development is complete the film should be pulled out of the tank, drained for ten seconds, then immediately immersed into the second tank. If a water rinse is used instead of an acid stop bath it should be a running water rinse for at least one minute or five complete changes. This method will ensure against streaking and uneven development. It can also be used with longer development times.’

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Since I don’t have a darkroom, I can’t take the reels from the developing tank and put them into a stop tank. But because long development times usually require less concentrated developers, it isn’t as difficult to stop the developer with a fairly normal washing (I use water, not an acid stop).

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‘Daylight Melted’

Camera: Seneca Chautauqua (c1905)
Film: Kodak Ektapan 4162 (x-01/81); 50iso
Process: Rodinal 1+50; 9min

Peshastin Pinnacles, Chelan County, Washington

Nice Cookbook photos

August 8, 2019 · Posted in Cookbook · Comment 

A few nice cookbook images I found:

Baby Shower Cupcakes
cookbook
Image by pkingDesign
Lions, pigs, mice, and sheep! Stella and her friends made them, inspired by and improved from a Martha Stewart cookbook.

cover stonesoup FREE e-cookbook
cookbook
Image by jules:stonesoup
FREE downolad at stonesoup | minimalist home cooking

Chicken in Samfaina Sauce
cookbook
Image by BlueBec

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