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Susan Crowther - The No Recipe Cookbook: A Beginners Guide to the Art of Cooking

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Susan Crowther The No Recipe Cookbook: A Beginners Guide to the Art of Cooking
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The No Recipe Cookbook: A Beginners Guide to the Art of Cooking: summary, description and annotation

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What has happened to cooking? Where has it gone? For most people, it is left to the experts in restaurants and on television. Thanks to the constant availability of takeout, frozen dinners, and fast food restaurants, for the majority of Americans, cooking has become a spectator sportan entertaining activity you watch on television, but not something to try at home.
The No Recipe Cookbook is a warm and funny instructional guide that addresses this issue head-on. Rather than simply collecting recipes, author, chef, caterer, and nutritionist Susan Crowther offers people something even more usefulan understanding of how to cook.
The No Recipe Cookbook is a commonsensical and creative approach to preparing delicious meals, focusing on principles, intuition, and integrity. Cooking is also explored holistically, incorporating aspects such as local ingredients and green cooking. Each page explores culinary virtues of patience, adaptability, and love next to principles, utensils, and procedures.
From preparing simple salad dressings to simmering soup stocks to kneading dough for bread, Crowther takes the intimidation factor out of cooking by giving readers the basic information and tools they need for culinary success. Once you understand a few basic rules and generally what ingredients in what proportions are necessary for certain dishes, youll be free to confidently experiment with all sorts of culinary creations. With a handful of easy-to-follow cooking time charts and shopping lists, plenty of warm advice, and a pinch of humor, Crowther welcomes aspiring cooks on a fun and exciting culinary adventure.
208 pages
Publisher: Skyhorse (1 July 2013)

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The
NO RECIPE
COOKBOOK

The No Recipe Cookbook A Beginners Guide to the Art of Cooking - image 1

The No Recipe Cookbook A Beginners Guide to the Art of Cooking - image 2

The No Recipe Cookbook A Beginners Guide to the Art of Cooking - image 3

The
NO RECIPE
COOKBOOK

The No Recipe Cookbook A Beginners Guide to the Art of Cooking - image 4

A Beginners Guide to the

ART OF COOKING

Susan Crowther

Foreword by Master Chef Roland G. Henin

PHOTOGRAPHY
by Julie Fallone

PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS

by Maisie Crowther and the Brattleboro Senior Center

Water-based Media Group, and Marcia Fagelson

Picture 5

Skyhorse Publishing

Picture 6

For Sam,
who started it all.


Keep pushing, son.

Copyright 2013 by Susan Crowther

All Rights Reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without the express written consent of the publisher, except in the case of brief excerpts in critical reviews or articles. All inquiries should be addressed to Skyhorse Publishing, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018.

Skyhorse Publishing books may be purchased in bulk at special discounts for sales promotion, corporate gifts, fund-raising, or educational purposes. Special editions can also be created to specifications. For details, contact the Special Sales Department, Skyhorse Publishing, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018 or info@skyhorsepublishing.com.

Skyhorse and Skyhorse Publishing are registered trademarks of Skyhorse Publishing, Inc., a Delaware corporation.

Visit our website at www.skyhorsepublishing.com.

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication

Data is available on file.

ISBN: 978-1-62087-616-9

Printed in China

Picture 7

Appreciation and gratitude extend to the following people

Technical Gratitude~

The Brattleboro Senior Center Water-based Media Group, led by Maisie Crowther, and my mommy, Marcia Fagelson: for their prolific and enthusiastic contribution of the illustrations; Julie Fallone, food photography: for her intuitive culinary images and chronic Getting of me; Coni Porter, initial book design and layout: for teaching me how to sail the ship (and often supplying the wind); Tanya Taylor Rubenstein, loving drill sergeant: for pushing me to Get Serious while honoring my voice; Bernice Mennis, editor, teacher, and gentle mentor: for walking into the Brattleboro Food Co-op on the day that I really really firmly decided that I was either quitting this project for good or else God had better do something; Jim Fallone, publishing guru: for guiding me through the self-publishing (and then publishing) process and offering experience and wisdom that would have taken me years to compile; Carolyn Kasper, neighbor and art-pal: for answering every single solitary design question with patience, kindness, and ease. Happy thanks extend to Abigail Gehring Lawrence for... well, liking my book!~ and giving it a chance. Ms. Gehring and Skyhorse Publishing have been supportive, courteous, and generous with integrity, every step of the way. Hokey be damned: thank you, for making my dream come true.

Im published! Im a real author!!

Inspirational Gratitude~

Marlene Beadle, of Marlenes Market and Deli: providing the environment and experience for the original concept; Desha Peacock, creator of The Desha Show: for following her dream and reminding me to move along my path; Jim & Julie (again) Fallone: for their encouragement, advice, humor, bizarre forms of empathy, and endless band names; Tiffany Williams, who always spent some of her own tutorial time asking me about my project and encouraging me. Thanks, gal. Michelle Liechti: for believing in me and recommending me to her good friend, Abigail; Julie Forsythe: in breath and smile; Robert Sargent Fay, mentor and friend: for being a staunch defender of integrity; Kathy DAlessio, life coach, big sister, and Italian ballbuster: for providing the external belief when I kept 86ing mine away; Lucas my son: for remembering that I was writing a book and actually asking me once or twice about how the project was going (a typically cognitively impossible feat for an 18-year-old American male); and to huzzy Mark Crowther, proofreader, egger-onner, and etc. policeidentifying 47 unnecessary etceteras. Also, for keeping the coffee hot and in the mug while I sat on my duff and finished the albatross.

Picture 8

Special gratitude extends to~

the excellent chefs, formerly of the

Culinary Institute of America (CIA), Century Plaza, and Caf du Parc:

Master Chef Roland Henin, Chef Bagna,

Master Chef Raymond Hofmeister, and Chef Pierre Latuberne.

Your excellence makes the culinary
world a finer kitchen
.

Thank you.

The No Recipe Cookbook A Beginners Guide to the Art of Cooking - image 9

The No Recipe Cookbook A Beginners Guide to the Art of Cooking - image 10

Table of Contents
THE NO RECIPE COOKBOOK

F OREWORD BY M ASTER CHEF R OLAND G H ENIN Well with all of this - photo 11

F OREWORD BY M ASTER CHEF R OLAND G H ENIN Well with all of this - photo 12

F OREWORD BY
M ASTER CHEF
R OLAND G. H ENIN

Well... with all of this hysteria related to foods in Americasome good and some badit was bound to finally happen. Someone in this country just wrote a fabulous book about foods and what is the most important part of the cooking process. No Recipe Cookbook, or cooking without recipes... What a novel" idea! And from Susie Crowther, a former student, on top of that... simply amazing!

Yes, I say finally, because the last one in existenceas far as I know, possibly the only one that has ever existedwas written in the 1960s by an extraordinary chef: Ma Gastronomie, by Fernand Point, Chef Owner of La Pyramide in Vienne, in the suburb of Lyon. La Pyramide was, in Chef Point's day, possibly one of the very best restaurants in the world and where many of the Bocuse Gang famous chefs did their apprenticeships.

It is simply amazing that today so many people cook strictly by recipes as - photo 13

It is simply amazing that, today, so many people cook strictly by recipes, as this is so unnaturalso mechanical, so anticlimactic. Hell, even a computer, I am sure, could be programmed to do it. And, the big question is, really, why is this?

I would certainly understand an apprentice starting out in the professiona beginner cook, someone just starting out in the kitchenusing recipes as a guide, as a crutch possibly, such as the two training wheels that came with my young sons first bike. But guess what? As soon as he got his balance figured out, as soon as he felt that he could express his own decisions, his own will, and own control over his bike... then

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