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Ina Garten - The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook

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Ina Garten The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook

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For more than twenty years, Barefoot Contessa, the acclaimed specialty food store, has been cooking and baking extraordinary dishes for enthusiastic customers in the Hamptons. For many of those years, people have tried to get the exuberant owner, Ina Garten, to share the secrets of her store. Finally, the energy and style that make Barefoot Contessa such a special place are shown here, with dozens of recipes and more than 160 breathtaking photographs, in The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook. Inas most popular recipes use familiar ingredients, but they taste even better than you would expect. Her Pan-Fried Onion Dip is the real thing, with slowly car-amelized onions and fresh sour cream. Tomato soup is created from oven-roasted tomatoes and fresh basil to intensify the flavors. Meat loaf is as good as your grandmothers, but its healthier because its made with ground turkey and fresh herbs. The light and flaky Maple-Oatmeal Scones are baked with rolled oats, whole wheat, and real maple syrup. Now these and other famous Barefoot Contessa recipes can be prepared at home. Ina says that before she owned a specialty food store she often spent a week making dinner for six friends. Her experience at Barefoot Contessa has given her hundreds of ideas for creating wonderful parties in a few hours. And theyre all in this book. Crab Cakes with Rmoulade Sauce can be stored overnight in the refrigerator and sauted just before the guests arrive. Cheddar Corn Chowder can be made days ahead, reheated, and served with a salad and bread for a delicious autumn lunch. The ingredients for Grilled Salmon Salad can all be prepared ahead and tossed together before serving. The batter for the Raspberry Corn Muffins can be mixed a day before and popped into the oven just before breakfast. Ina Garten teaches us how to entertain with style, simplicity, and a relaxed sense of fun. There are notes throughout the book for giving cocktail parties, lunches, and dinner parties where everything is done before the guests arrive. And there are easy instructions for creating gorgeous party platters that dont even require you to cook! With Ina Garten and The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook, you have the perfect recipe for hosting parties that are easy and fun for everyone--including the cook.

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Secrets from the East Hampton speciality food store for simple food and party - photo 1
Secrets from the East Hampton speciality food store for simple food and party - photo 2
Secrets from the East Hampton speciality food store for simple food and party platters you can make at home
By Ina Garten
Photographs by Melanie Acevedo
Copyright 1999 by Ina Garten Foreword copyright 1999 by Martha Stewart - photo 3

Copyright 1999 by Ina Garten
Foreword copyright 1999 by Martha Stewart

Photographs copyright 1999 by Melanie Acevedo

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or
mechanical, including photocopying, recording,
or by any information storage and retrieval system, without
permission in writing from the publisher.

Published by Clarkson Potter/Publishers,
New York, New York.
Member of the Crown Publishing Group.

Random House, Inc.
New York, Toronto, London, Sydney, Auckland
www.randomhouse.com

Clarkson N. Potter is a trademark and Potter and colophon
are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Garten, Ina.

The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook: secrets from the East Hampton specialty food store for simple food and party platters you can make at home /
by Ina Garten: photographs by Melanie Acevedo.1st ed.

1. Cookery. 2. Barefoot Contessa (Store) I. Title.

TX714.G364 1999

641.5dc21 987469

eISBN 978-0-307-95605-7

foreword O ne meets very few people in life who combine real joie de vivre - photo 4
foreword
O ne meets very few people in life who combine real joie de vivre with intense curiosity, an intellectual attitude, and a serious and highly developed sense of humor. When I first encountered Ina Garten I was shopping in Barefoot Contessa, her mouth-watering specialty food store on the East End of Long Island.
Bright-eyed and apple-cheeked, Ina was immediately likable. Following her suggestions, I purchased a few of her home-baked cookies and brownies, some prepared salads, and a couple of excellent cheeses. After a few tastes I breathed a sigh of relief, now feeling assured that I would not starve, living and entertaining on the East End.
Ina and I discovered we shared many interests, most notably cooking and gardening and entertaining, as well as designing and building. Inas husband, Jeffrey, was as friendly and interesting as Ina, and I felt a sense of comfort in their company.
When Ina and I met we were both involved with entrepreneurial ventures, and we were also both designing and building new old homes in East Hampton. Our conversations and discussions usually took place over relaxed breakfasts, casual lunches, or delicious dinners. It took a while, but I finally understood what motivated Ina, realizing that here was a true kindred spirit with really similar but unique talents.
Ive had almost ten years to study Inas culinary skills and philosophy about food and foodstuffs, and to taste her cooking, and I think that we are all lucky to finally have this cookbook so that we can all share these really good and tasty recipes. There is a liveliness in Inas cooking, a total lack of finickiness, a reliance on the freshest and best, and a casualness that I know will be appealing to everyone who uses her book. Inas love of farm-grown vegetables, backyard garden flowers and herbs, and locally produced poultry and eggs is vividly evident throughout these pages. Her intuitive cleverness in knowing what we would all likecoconut cupcakes, or maple oatmeal scones, or roasted chickenis beautifully balanced by a very special, practical approach that makes entertaining undaunting and understandable. Inas friendliness and her love of coddling people are so refreshing. The colorful photographs and the bright palette of the typography and book design accentuate Inas own brilliant artistry, and her way with food is certain to become an important part of our way with food.

Martha Stewart
East Hampton
1999
For my adorable husband Jeffrey who always encouraged me to do what I loved - photo 5
For my adorable husband, Jeffrey,
who always encouraged me to do
what I loved and who cheerfully
ate all those test brownies
thank you S o many people helped me create this book and I would like to - photo 6
thank you
S o many people helped me create this book and I would like to thank them. First, to my dear friend, Frank Newbold, who harassed me until I agreed to start writing. I never imagined it would be so interesting. Second, to all the extraordinary people who have helped me build Barefoot Contessa: Diana Stratta, who started it all and patiently taught me how to slice smoked salmon, plus all the hundreds of wonderful people who have been with Barefoot Contessa over the last twenty years. Most important are Parker Hodges and Amy Baiata, my partners, Suzanna Guiliano, my friend and sage (as well as accountant), Harry Goodale, Paul Hodges, Shawn Miller, Alex Lazen, Peter Ranft, and Larry Hayden, who have been my other family for so long. And third, to the amazing team of people who helped me photograph this book: Melanie Acevedo, the photographer, whose eye is unequaled; Rori Spinelli, who can make a bowl of soup from a recipe for ten quarts and have it turn out absolutely perfect and beautiful; and Denise Canter, whose styling made each photograph exciting. We had a ball together and I thank them for making it all so excellent and fun.
Many other people were kind enough to contribute recipes: Devon Fredericks and Susan Costner, who started Loaves and Fishes in Sagaponack, New York; Eli Zabar from E.A.T., The Vinegar Factory, and Across the Street in New York City; Sarah Chase of The Open House Cookbook; and Brent Newsom from Brent Newsom Catering in Bridgehampton, New York. Some people let us photograph their family farms: Jim and Jennifer Pike from Pike Farms in Sagaponack, New York; Eileen and Sal Iacono from Iacono Farm in East Hampton, New York; and John, Evelyn, and Jennifer Halsey from The Milk Pail orchard in Watermill, New York. And many lent their extraordinary wares: in New York City, thanks to Herbie Schinderman from Ann Morris Antiques, Peri Wolfman from Wolfman-Gold & Good Company, Vito Giallo and Ebby Weaver at Vito Giallo Antiques, and the terrific folks at Crate & Barrel; in East Hampton, thanks to Denise Rebaudo from Curly Willow, Morley Miller from Zona, Maria Brennan from The Grand Acquisitor; and in Bridgehampton, Jane Rivkin from Kitchen Classics.
I would also like to thank Stephen Drucker, my friend and editor-in-chief of Martha Stewart Living, for convincing me that I really know the secrets for giving a party that is fun and for helping me put it on paper. To Cecily Stranahan, who helped me put my ideas into words. To my wonderful agent, Pam Bernstein, who believed in me from the start, and most of all, to my incomparable editor, Roy Finamore at Clarkson Potter, who guided me so brilliantly and is so much fun at lunch.
And especially, thanks to Martha Stewart, who instilled in all of us the rubric that the simplest idea is often the most delicious and beautiful; you have been a wonderful and generous friend.
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