The
Make-Ahead
Cook
8 Smart Strategies for Dinner Tonight
BY THE EDITORS AT
Americas Test Kitchen
Copyright 2014 by the Editors at
Americas Test Kitchen
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
AMERICAS TEST KITCHEN
17 Station Street, Brookline, MA 02445
Library of Congress
Cataloging-in-Publication Data
The make-ahead cook : 8 smart strategies for dinner tonight / by the editors at Americas Test Kitchen.
pages cm
Includes index.
Kindle ISBN 978-1-940352-09-1
1. Dinners and dining. 2. Make-ahead cooking. I. Americas Test Kitchen (Firm)
TX737.M366 2014
641.555--dc23
2014014386
Manufactured in the United States
of America
10987654321
Distributed by Americas Test Kitchen
17 Station Street, Brookline, MA 02445
EDITORIAL DIRECTOR: Jack Bishop
EDITORIAL DIRECTOR, BOOKS: Elizabeth Carduff
EXECUTIVE FOOD EDITOR: Julia Collin Davison
SENIOR EDITORS: Suzannah McFerran and Dan Zuccarello
ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Alyssa King
ASSISTANT EDITOR: Melissa Herrick
EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Kate Edeker
TEST COOKS: Danielle DeSiato-Hallman, Sara Mayer, Sebastian Nava, Stephanie Pixley, and Meaghen Walsh
DESIGN DIRECTOR: Amy Klee
ART DIRECTOR: Greg Galvan
DESIGNER: Allison Pfiffner
PHOTOGRAPHY DIRECTOR: Julie Cote
ASSOCIATE ART DIRECTOR, PHOTOGRAPHY: Steve Klise
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER: Daniel J. van Ackere
ADDITIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY BY: Keller + Keller and Carl Tremblay
CAST PHOTO: Christopher Churchill
FOOD STYLING: Catrine Kelty and Marie Piraino
PHOTO SHOOT KITCHEN TEAM:
ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Chris OConnor
TEST COOK: Daniel Cellucci
ASSISTANT TEST COOK: Cecelia Jenkins
PRODUCTION DIRECTOR: Guy Rochford
SENIOR PRODUCTION MANAGER: Jessica Quirk
SENIOR PROJECT MANAGER: Alice Carpenter
PRODUCTION AND TRAFFIC COORDINATOR: Britt Dresser
WORKFLOW AND DIGITAL ASSET MANAGER: Andrew Mannone
SENIOR COLOR AND IMAGING SPECIALIST: Lauren Pettapiece
PRODUCTION AND IMAGING SPECIALISTS: Heather Dube and Lauren Robbins
COPYEDITOR: Barbara Wood
PROOFREADER: Christine Corcoran Cox
INDEXER: Elizabeth Parson
PICTURED ON COVER:
Contents
by Christopher Kimball
Ready-to-Cook Meals
Make-Ahead Stews and Braises
Oven-Ready Casseroles
Ready-to-Serve Entres
One Grocery Bag Makes Three Dinners
Big Roasts Plus Creative Second Meals
Easy Slow-Cooker Favorites
Big-Batch Suppers
Navigating this E-Book
This eBook includes a that allows you to jump to any chapter. And each chapter has its own table of contents with links to every recipe in the chapter.
We have also created a that lists all the recipes in the book, divided by chapter, in one place. You can access the Recipe Index from the Table of Contents. (It also appears at the end of the book.) Each title in the Recipe Index is a link that will take you directly to that recipe.
This cookbook is filled with sidebars; throughout the book there are links to this material where appropriate.
Most eBook reading devices also offer a search function that allows you to type in exactly what you are looking for. Please read the documentation for your particular eBook reader for more information on its search function and any other navigational features it may offer.
Welcome to Americas Test Kitchen
This book has been tested, written, and edited by the folks at Americas Test Kitchen, a very real 2,500-square-foot kitchen located just outside of Boston. It is the home of Cooks Illustrated magazine and Cooks Country magazine and is the Monday-through-Friday destination for more than four dozen test cooks, editors, food scientists, tasters, and cookware specialists. Our mission is to test recipes over and over again until we understand how and why they work and until we arrive at the best version.
We start the process of testing a recipe with a complete lack of conviction, which means that we accept no claim, no theory, no technique, and no recipe at face value. We simply assemble as many variations as possible, test a half-dozen of the most promising, and taste the results blind. We then construct our own hybrid recipe and continue to test it, varying ingredients, techniques, and cooking times until we reach a consensus. The result, we hope, is the best version of a particular recipe, but we realize that only you can be the final judge of our success (or failure). As we like to say in the test kitchen, We make the mistakesso you dont have to.
All of this would not be possible without a belief that good cooking, much like good music, is indeed based on a foundation of objective technique. Some people like spicy foods and others dont, but there is a right way to saut, there is a best way to cook a pot roast, and there are measurable scientific principles involved in producing perfectly beaten, stable egg whites. This is our ultimate goal: to investigate the fundamental principles of cooking so that you become a better cook. It is as simple as that.
If youre curious to see what goes on behind the scenes at Americas Test Kitchen, check out our daily blog, The Feed at AmericasTestKitchenFeed.com, which features kitchen snapshots, exclusive recipes, video tips, and much more. You can watch us work (in our actual test kitchen) by tuning in to Americas Test Kitchen (AmericasTestKitchen.com) or Cooks Country from Americas Test Kitchen (CooksCountryTV.com) on public television. Tune in to Americas Test Kitchen Radio (AmericasTestKitchen.com) on public radio to listen to insights, tips, and techniques that illuminate the truth about real home cooking. Want to hone your cooking skills or finally learn how to bakefrom an Americas Test Kitchen test cook? Enroll in a cooking class at our online cooking school at OnlineCookingSchool.com. And find information about subscribing to Cooks Illustrated magazine at CooksIllustrated.com or Cooks Country magazine at CooksCountry.com. Both magazines are published every other month. However you choose to visit us, we welcome you into our kitchen, where you can stand by our side as we test our way to the best recipes in America.
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Preface
On my first day working for Vermont farmer Charlie Bentley, he asked me to do something simpleherd a cow and her newborn calf into the barn. So, with the sort of confidence born out of ignorance that only a 10-year-old can muster, I set out into the milkweed-speckled field to do what he had asked. Fifteen minutes later, bruised and my shirt torn by scuttling under barbed wire to escape being gored by the angry mother, I was rescued by Charlie, with a leather milking strap in one hand and the sort of confidence that is earned the hard way: through experience. The cow and calf ambled back to the barn without a hint of rebellion.
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