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Mark Bittman - The Minimalist Cooks Dinner: More Than 100 Recipes for Fast Weeknight Meals and Casual Entertaining

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The Minimalist Cooks Dinner: More Than 100 Recipes for Fast Weeknight Meals and Casual Entertaining: summary, description and annotation

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Amazon.com Review *The Minimalist Cooks Dinner* collects two years of recipes from Mark Bittmans popular *New York Times* column, The Minimalist, which cleverly caters to the modern gourmet whose expectations are high but time is limited. In a hundred-odd recipes that cover the end-of-the-day meal gamut from soups and sides to entres, Bittman packs strong flavor into a few ingredients so that food lovers can return home from a long day at work and make a meal thats satisfying but not exhausting. With less introductory text but more side notes than Bittmans previous cookbooks (*The Minimalist Cooks at Home* and the new classic, *How to Cook Everything*), *The Minimalist Cooks Dinner* commences with a section of 12 soups and stews--ranging from a truly spare miso soup to the richer Black-Eyed Pea Soup with Ham and Watercress--and then covers pasta, pizza, entres (with shellfish, fish, poultry, or meat), salads, and starchy sides. Easy dishes such as Steak with Chimichurri Sauce (simply parsley, raw garlic, lemon juice, crushed red pepper, and olive oil), Fish Simmered in Spicy Soy Sauce (soy, sugar, scallions, and chile), or Scallops with Almonds (cayenne, almonds, white wine, and butter) are startlingly delicious, especially considering they take at most 30 minutes to prepare. But perhaps this cookbooks best asset, particularly for less-experienced cooks, are the crucial Keys to Success and the improvisational With Minimal Effort side bars, which respectively offer additional instruction and suggestions for quick ways to enhance the original dish. While not as comprehensive as Bittmans bestselling *How to Cook Everything* or *The Minimalist Cooks at Home*, this is an expertly refined collection that presents perfect, almost effortless meals for every night of the week. *--Rebecca Wright* From Publishers Weekly Recipes from the past two years of The Minimalist, Bittmans widely read weekly food column in the New York Times, shape this latest collection from the author of the phenomenally popular How to Cook Everything. Cementing his reputation for quick, uncomplicated and rewardingly tasty fare within reach of any cook, Bittman overflows with inspiration in the basic recipes and in the suggestions that can be undertaken With Minimal Effort accompanying each one. For example, tinkering with Vichyssoise with Garlic, he proposes adding tomato and basil as one variation. To speed up a pasta meal, why not cook Pasta, Risotto Style? Adding stock a ladle at a time to a cut pasta yields a creamy dish without having to wait for a gallon of water to boil. Black Skillet Mussels couldnt be easier: heat a heavy skillet, add mussels and, when they open, eat. Suggested variations include a side sauce of butter, Tabasco and lemon juice. Combining unusual flavors comes naturally to Bittman, as in Roast Fish with Meat Sauce or Pot Roast with Cranberries, in which the meat quickly caramelizes with its dusting of sugar. Chicken-Mushroom Cutlets with Parmesan are basically chickenburgers gussied up temptingly with parmesan, porcini and garlic. The headnotes are much shorter than those in last years The Minimalist Cooks at Home, but each recipe now brings pointers in the form of Keys to Success as well as suggested wines. Cooks with discerning tastes but little time will be very glad to add this to their library. (On-sale Sept. 11) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

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The Minimalist Cooks Dinner More Than 100 Recipes for Fast Weeknight Meals and Casual Entertaining - photo 1

The Minimalist Cooks Dinner More Than 100 Recipes for Fast Weeknight Meals and Casual Entertaining - photo 2

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The Minimalists place of birth and permanent home is The New York T - photo 5

The Minimalists place of birth and permanent home is The New York Times and it - photo 6

The Minimalists place of birth and permanent home is The New York Times and it - photo 7

The Minimalists place of birth and permanent home is The New York Times, and it is my editors there, Michalene Busico and Regina Schrambling, to whom I am most grateful. Ill always be indebted to Trish Hall and Rick Flaste, the Times editors who were not only responsible for the columns inception but were and remain supportive and encouraging.

The Minimalist Cooks Dinner is the work of the great folks at Broadway Books, most notably Jennifer Josephy, Steve Rubin, and Tammy Blake.

Many home cooks, fellow food-writers, and chefs all over the country and the world have given me great ideas for the Mini, and Ive thanked them in the appropriate places. My friend Ed Schneider, whose daily correspondence challenges me and keeps me on my toes, and my coauthor Jean-Georges Vongerichtena minimalists maximalistdeserve special mention.

Thanks as usual to Angela Miller, who is always there for me, not only as an agent but as a friend; to the ever-tolerant John Willoughby; and to the loving Alisa Smith. And, especially this year, I was blessed to count among my friends David Paskin, Pamela Hort, John Ringwald, Semeon Tsalbins, Joe and Kim McGrath, Bill Shinker and Susan Moldow, Mitchell Orfuss, Naomi Glauberman, John Bancroft, Madeline Meacham, Fred Zolna, and Sherry Slade. Karen Baar was the source of a large chunk of the inspiration and creativity that go into the Minimalist; for this and many other things Ill always be grateful.

Mark Bittman

These hundred-odd recipes represent about two years of my New York Ti - photo 8

These hundred-odd recipes represent about two years of my New York Times - photo 9

These hundred-odd recipes represent about two years of my New York Times - photo 10

These hundred-odd recipes represent about two years of my New York Times column, an average of a recipe a week. They have a couple of things in common. First of all, that they were developed at the rate of one a week is no coincidence, since almost all appeared in my weekly column, The Minimalist. Second, they are intended to be easy, often simple, and usually quick (those that are not quick spread out a little bit of work over a few hours).

If they are successful, if they provide you with satisfying dishes with a minimum of effort, its thanks in large part to the fact that I am lucky enough to work on just one recipe a week. There were times in my career as a food writer when I was obligated to come up with twelve recipes a week; this simply cannot be done on a regular basis without begging and borrowing recipes from friends, chefs, and fellow food writers, and submitting them without testing or changing.

I still beg and borrow ideas, and from the same sources. But these days I take those ideas home, to my average suburban kitchen with its average equipment, and work them to death, until Im satisfied that they cant be made any simpler or easier without sacrificing too much of their essence.

If this sounds like a compromise, it is. Cooking, like most everything else in life, is exactly that. We never have as much time as we like, we rarely have the perfect ingredients, and few of usmyself included, lest you doubt ithave the skills to measure up to truly demanding recipes. My job, as I see it, is to show you the little path I blaze, the route that makes things faster, more flexible, and easier.

Sometimes I am accused of going too far, and failing to retain a recipes soul, losing too much of its vitality in the process of simplifying it. I try to take this objection into account and remedy it by offering a wide range of substitutions and variations, ways to make recipes more complex, slightly fancier, more sophisticated, or just different.

Simple, as a friend of mine said to me, need not mean simple-minded. As much thought and work may go into figuring out a great three-ingredient, 30-minute recipe as one that includes thirty ingredients and takes 3 hours. The fact that the preparation and execution is faster and easier does not make the recipe less sophisticated, complex, or desirableindeed, it may make it more so.

The Minimalist Cooks Dinner differs from its predecessor, The Minimalist Cooks at Home, in a few ways. The texts are shorter, the pointer sections more substantial. Furthermore, I have included serving and wine suggestions as well as a chapter of quick, easy side dishes, so that you can easily complete a meal based on one of the recipes here. But I want to stress that these serving suggestions are exactly thata list of dishes that I think might well serve to complement the main course. You might want more, less, different, or none, and by all means I encourage you to go your own way.

Thats what home cooking is about.

The Minimalist Cooks Dinner More Than 100 Recipes for Fast Weeknight Meals and Casual Entertaining - photo 11

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The Minimalist Cooks Dinner More Than 100 Recipes for Fast Weeknight Meals and Casual Entertaining - photo 13

Vichyssoise with Garlic TIME 40 to 60 minutes plus time to c - photo 14

Vichyssoise with Garlic TIME 40 to 60 minutes plus time to chill MAKES 4 - photo 15

Vichyssoise with Garlic TIME 40 to 60 minutes plus time to chill MAKES 4 - photo 16

Vichyssoise
with Garlic

TIME: 40 to 60 minutes, plus time to chill

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