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In the Hands of a Chef

Cooking with Jody Adams of Rialto Restaurant

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The acclaimed Boston chef teaches how to be a better home cook with this collection of Italian- and Mediterranean-inspired dishes.
How do great chefs make their food taste better? Is it the ingredients they use? Their cooking techniques and equipment? That's part of the answer. But the real secret is that truly great chefs follow their instincts—the kitchens in their heads. Now, in her first cookbook, Jody Adams, the award–winning chef/co-owner of Boston's Rialto, teaches you how to follow your own instincts and make the transition from passionate eater to passionate cook.
In the Hands of a Chef shares Jody's favorite dishes, those she prepares for family and friends in her home kitchen. By teaching the basics of artisanal cooking, or making good food from scratch, she gives cooks a solid foundation for cooking like a chef. She tells readers what to look for when buying ingredients, what equipment is essential, and how a dish should look and taste while being prepared.
Above all, Jody encourages readers to trust their instincts and follow them to create a cooking style that feels right, using recipes as the building blocks for their own creations.
From starters, seasonal soups, salads, and main courses to desserts, Jody reinvents Mediterranean foods using unconventional ingredients, many from New England. For a boost of summer flavor, grilled tomatoes add depth to gazpacho. To vary the flavor of simple salads—from a Minted Romaine Salad with Grapes, Ricotta Salata, and Toasted Almonds to Arugula and Portobella Mushroom Salad—one or two seasonal ingredients are added to the usual recipes. Drawing inspiration from Italian tradition, Jody offers up innovative pasta and grains dishes. Ravioli, pappardelle, gnocchi, and linguine are served up with Mediterranean flavors and ingredients—tomatoes, olives, figs, chestnuts, fresh greens, wild mushrooms, Parmesan cheese—for home-style meals any time of the year. Yet much of Jody's cooking is pure American in flavor. Dessert classics are reinvented with new twists, such as Super-Creamy Rice Pudding with Passion Fruit Sauce and Heather's Cranberry Chocolate Pecan Tart. Here, too, are Jody's signature dishes, including Roasted Marinated Long Island Duck with Green Olive and Balsamic Vinegar Sauce and Soupe de Poisson, which Jacques Pépin calls the best version outside of France.
Intended to make you wish you had more time to spend in the kitchen, this book is an inspiration as well as an essential resource for every cook. Why be just a good cook when you can be a great one? Put yourself in the hands of Jody Adams with In the Hands of a Chef.
"The recipes are clearly written and certainly delectable." —Publishers Weekly
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 3, 2001
      Adams, chef at Boston's acclaimed restaurant Rialto, identifies two popular cookbook approaches—easy and elaborate—and calls for a third: "artisanal home food." As lovely as this sounds, this book also falls under the heading of complicated. However, Rialto's fans will cheer at the chapter of signature recipes like Soupe de Poisson and Roasted Marinated Long Island Duck with Green Olive and Balsamic Vinegar Sauce. Smoked Salmon Rolls with Arugula, Mascarpone, Chives and Capers and sophisticated entrées like Grilled Bluefish with Pomegranate Glaze and Cucumber-Yogurt Sauce are perfect for dinner parties. Terrific sides like Beet and Spinach Salad with Goat Cheese and Grilled Fresh Figs double as light lunches. Helpful sidebars explain, for example, how not to overcook pork, but instructions on "How to Break Down a Duck" are confusing. Recipe titles read like advanced Tai Chi maneuvers: Acquacotta—Porcini Broth with Soft Polenta, Taleggio, and a Poached Egg... and truffle oil, if the authors hadn't run out of space. There are some exceptions to the elaborate rule, such as Roasted Tomato and Farro Soup, Oliver's Chicken Stew and Orzo in Chicken Broth with Many Greens and Asiago. The pasta chapter includes homemade pastas, and a pizza chapter with fairly simple recipes, but the book gets its mileage out of more elaborate dishes like Fried Rabbit in Hazelnut Crumbs with Peaches and Braised Oxtails with White Beans. In the end, the recipes are clearly written and certainly delectable. Illus. not seen by PW.

    • Booklist

      February 15, 2002
      \deflang1033\pard\plain\f3\fs24 The home cook often falls victim to restaurant chefs whose cookbooks require long-simmered stocks and unusual or expensive ingredients. Jody Adams of Boston's Rialto Restaurant has produced a cookbook offering unique flavor combinations without impossible challenges. Adams' cooking relies on imaginative flavorings. Broccoli and cauliflower combine with garlic and curry for a vegetable dish anything but unassertive. Ravioli stuffed with whole poached eggs might seem beyond a home cook's competence, but Adams shows how to make them ahead to minimize last-minute cooking frenzy. Salmon with walnuts and dried cranberries dresses up what might ordinarily be a commonplace seafood entr\'e9e. Occasionally Adams asks too much, as in her recipe for Chicken cooked under a brick that uses four burners of a range, leaving no room for any accompaniments on top of a standard stove. Clearly not a craver of sweets, Adams appends just a few dessert recipes to her hefty selection of appetizers and main courses. (Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2002, American Library Association.)

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