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Marie Simmons - Taste of Honey: The Definitive Guide to Tasting and Cooking with 40 Varietals

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Marie Simmons Taste of Honey: The Definitive Guide to Tasting and Cooking with 40 Varietals
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Taste of Honey: The Definitive Guide to Tasting and Cooking with 40 Varietals: summary, description and annotation

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A Taste of Honey is a fact-filled guide to honey and bees with a comprehensive glossary of 40 varietal honeys and over 60 fresh and easy recipes, both savory and sweet, using these honeys.
Holy honey! Taste of Honey, with its lush photos and delectable recipes, not only teaches how to best use single-origin honey in the kitchen, it reminds us that honey is an almost magical substance, connecting us to our landscape, and to the hardworking honey bee. Marie Simmonss book has made robbing the hive even sweeter.
Novella Carpenter, author ofFarm City
Its rare to see such an information-rich book presented in such a cheery and beautiful package. We also need to know more about this important, timelyand also timeless subject. A well-written tome packed with good recipes comes as no surprise, since this is from Marie Simmons, one of the absolute best food writers around. I read this one cover to cover.
Mollie Katzen, author of Moosewood Cookbook andThe Heart of the Plate
Im a honey collector, too, but unlike Marie, I tend to stick to a drizzle of honey over cheese, toast, or hot cereal and the occasional dessert. There are so many more ideas here for using honey, not only the recipes but the more informal suggestions that follow each chaptermy favorites. And I do hope that the appeal of honey itself with lead us to care more for our struggling bee populations.
Deborah Madison, author of Local Flavors and Vegetable Literacy
Honey is a lot like olive oil; how do you know what type to select from the farmers market or the store shelf? Are all honey bears created equal? What makes one variety of honey different from another? Which is better for baking and which is best for savory dishes? Why is one darker than another in color, what does that mean? All these questions and more will be answered in Taste of Honey. Veteran cookbook author Marie Simmons helps readers understand the life of a bee, and how the terroir of its habitat influences both the color and flavor of the honey it produces. Then she explains how these flavor profiles are best paired with certain ingredients in over 60 sweet and savory simple, delicious recipes. Here is just a sample: Snacks and Breakfast: Flatbread with Melted Manchego, Rosemary and Honey; Honey, Scallion and Cheddar Scones; Honey French Toast with Peaches with Honey and Mint. Main Dishes: Crispy Coconut Shrimp with Tangy Honey Dipping Sauce; Salmon with Honey, Miso and Ginger Glaze; Baby Back Ribs with Chipotle Honey Barbecue Sauce; Cold Chinese Noodles with Peanut Honey Sauce. Salads and Vegetable Side Dishes: Pear, Stilton and Bacon Salad with Honey Dressing and Honey Glazed Pecans; Mango and Celery Salad with Honey and Lime Dressing; Honey Glazed Beets with Cinnamon, Orange and Mint; Roasted Eggplant Slices with Warmed Feta and Honey Drizzle. Sweets: Honey Pear Tart with Honey Butter Sauce; Chunky Peanut Butter and Honey Cookies; Honey Zabaglione; Honey Panna Cotta; Mickis Special Honey Fudge Brownies. Each recipe includes a detailed guide for the type of honey that will work best with it, along with some ideas to experiment with.
In addition to full recipes, there are simple, fast things to do with honey at the end of each recipe chapter called Quick Hits with Honey:
For crackers, celery boats, or sandwich spread combine cup peanut or almond butter and 2 tablespoons buckwheat, sunflower, avocado, or alfalfa honey.
Drizzle lavender, thyme, or star thistle honey on a fruit plate medley of sliced fresh watermelon, cantaloupe, and honeydew.
Serve a ripe pear, cut into thin wedges, with a salty blue veined cheese (Stilton, Roquefort, or Gorgonzola) and a handful of toasted walnuts with a drizzle of chestnut honey.
Season lamb chops with finely chopped rosemary, coarse salt, and freshly ground black pepper and broil. Brush each side with a generous coating of your favorite honey 1 minute before turning.
Dress salad greens with equal parts fresh lemon juice and honey for a quick oil-free dressing.
Stir teaspoon grated orange or lemon zest into 1 cup creamy whole milk ricotta cheese. Top with dusting of ground cinnamon and drizzle with lemon or orange blossom honey.
Youll also find a comprehensive glossary that covers 40 different varietals of honey, as well as information about the healing properties of honey and interesting tidbits about bees and honey throughout history. Seventy-five photographs by Meg Smith capture the intimate life of the bee and all its activity producing honey, along with the gorgeous food you can make with it. This is the book to help you better understand the different flavors of honey and how to use the right one to best complement your next recipe.

Marie Simmons: author's other books


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OTHER BOOKS BY MARIE SIMMONS Fresh Fast Vegetarian Things Cooks Love Sur La - photo 1
OTHER BOOKS BY MARIE SIMMONS Fresh Fast Vegetarian Things Cooks Love Sur La - photo 2

OTHER BOOKS BY MARIE SIMMONS

Fresh & Fast Vegetarian

Things Cooks Love (Sur La Table)

Soups and Stews (Williams-Sonoma)

Fig Heaven

Essentials of Healthful Cooking (Williams-Sonoma)

The Amazing World of Rice

Cookies (Williams-Sonoma)

The Good Egg

Puddings A to Z

Pancakes A to Z

Muffins A to Z

Bar Cookies A to Z

Holiday Celebrations (Williams-Sonoma)

Fresh & Fast

Lighter, Quicker, Better (with Richard Sax)

The Light Touch Cookbook

Rice: the Amazing Grain

365 Ways to Cook Pasta

Italian Light Cooking

Better by Microwave (with Lori Longbotham)

Good Spirits (with Barbara J. Lagowski)

Sharing your thoughts can help us improve our ebooks We would appreciate your - photo 3

Sharing your thoughts can help us improve our ebooks. We would appreciate your feedback. Thank you!

Taste of Honey text copyright 2013 Marie Simmons Photographs copyright 2013 - photo 4

Taste of Honey text copyright 2013 Marie Simmons. Photographs copyright 2013 Meg Smith. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of reprints in the context of reviews.

Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC
an Andrews McMeel Universal company
1130 Walnut Street, Kansas City, Missouri 64106
www.andrewsmcmeel.com

ISBN: 978-1-4494-4138-8

Library of Congress Control Number: 2013930080

Design: Julie Barnes
Photography: Meg Smith
Digital/Photo Assistant: David Escalante and Katie Newburn
Food Stylist: Nani Steele
Prop Stylist: Christine Wolheim

www.mariesimmons.com

ATTENTION: SCHOOLS AND BUSINESSES
Andrews McMeel books are available at quantity discounts with bulk purchase for educational, business, or sales promotional use. For information, please e-mail the Andrews McMeel Special Sales Department:

Permissions
In Which Tigger Comes to the Forest and Has Breakfast by A. A. Milne, from The House at Pooh Corner by A. A. Milne, copyright 1928 by E. P. Dutton, renewed 1956 by A. A. Milne. Used by permission of Dutton Childrens Books, a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

In Which We Are Introduced to Winnie-the-Pooh and Some Bees, and the Stories Begin by A. A. Milne, from Winnie-the-Pooh by A. A. Milne, copyright 1926 by E. P. Dutton, renewed 1954 by A. A. Milne. Used by permission of Dutton Childrens Books, a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

The Poems of Emily Dickinson , Thomas H. Johnson, ed., Cambridge, Mass.: The Bellnap Press of Harvard University Press, copyright 1951, 1955, 1979, 1983 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College.

The Fourth Georgic by Virgil as translated in The Georgics of Virgil by David Ferry. Published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux

At the time of printing, every effort was made by the author to obtain all other permissions.

Contents

acknowledgments

It takes many minds and multiple palates to make a cookbook. The primary instigators of this book are at the top of my thank-you list: Jean Lucas, my editor and the brain behind the idea of writing a cookbook to sort out the different honeys she encountered at her local farmers market; Kirsty Melville, executive vice president and publisher at Andrews McMeel Publishing; and Carole Bidnick, my terrific agent, who suggested that I be the writer for this project.

Heartfelt thanks to the team at Andrews McMeel for the exquisitely designed pages of this book. Thank you to photographer Meg Smith, food stylist Nani Steele, and props from Christine Wolheim for stunningly beautiful work. You, along with your assistants, are all artists. A special thank-you to Rob Keller of Napa Valley Bee Company, beekeeper par excellence, for supplying honey, hives, and the beautiful honey bees for the photographs. Thank you also to my copy editor, Tammie Barker, for giving my work the polish it needed. A special thank-you to Emily Farris in advance of working with her on publicity. I am grateful to all of you.

Without the hard work of others, who spent hours and possibly years documenting the activities in the hive, keeping the bees healthy, working in labs and compiling historical records and references, and writing excellent books about bees and honey, the information in this book would be a bit puny. Several of you are mentioned in the text, and the rest can be found in the . I am grateful for your hard work, for it not only gave me knowledge and understanding but also fired my enthusiasm for honey, bees, and beekeepers to the point where I am now a bit of a beeand honeymaniac.

May Berenbaum, a professor of entomology at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, deserves special mention because it was in one of her many books, Honey, Im Homemade , that I found the precise answer to a nagging question, What is honey? Professor Berenbaums excellent explanationgratefully acknowledged herehelped me write a clear answer to this question. Thank you, Professor Berenbaum, for generously agreeing to vet portions of A Taste of Honey for me.

This book, because it is primarily a guide to honey varieties and a cookbook, translated into many happyand somewhat stickyhours spent in the kitchen tasting, testing, and tasting some more. Just days into the project I began calling my work space the sticky kitchen and was tempted to change the title to The Sticky Kitchen Cookbook. Stickiness did little to deter from my ever-increasing excitement for the subject, however. I started out liking honey a lot and ended up loving it. I also fell in love with the bees.

In addition to the bees, I am grateful for the generous support and assistance with honey and bee sleuthing I received from colleagues, friends, and family. They are too numerous to mention here, so I will name just a few: Helene and Spencer Marshall, longtime Napa Valley beekeepers, for your kind hospitality; Matt Bennett, for bringing a frame with wax honeycomb, dripping with raw honey, from his wife Ashleys beehive to a honey tasting I hosted for the San Francisco Professional Food Society; the National Honey Board, for its excellent, fact-filled website and support for this project; David Guas, honey aficionado and chef proprietor of Bayou Bakery in Arlington, Virginia, for introducing me to Appalachian sourwood at a tasting hosted by the honey board; Linda Sikorski and Juliana Uruburu of Market Hall Foods in Oakland, California, and The Pasta Shop in Berkeley, for more honey tasting and an insightful honey and cheese pairing experience; Brooke Jackson and Nancy Kux, for retesting a few recipes; Laura Brainin-Rodriguez, for nutritional wisdom, research, and friendship; Paula Hamilton and Pam Elder, dear friends and tireless researchers, for sending media alerts and honey factoids my way; Jenny and Hari Krishnan, neighbors and enthusiastic tasters; and Kathleen de Wilbur, Kathleen ONeil, Debbie Rugh, and friends in my book club for keeping me sane.

And then there is my sweet and concerned family, who watched over me as I worked my way through this cookbook: John, my best friend and husband; Stephanie, our amazing daughter; Shawn, our thoughtful son-in-law; Seraphina, our beautiful and smart granddaughter; and Joseph, our adorable grandson, who at the age of three insisted that my honey chocolate cake needed chocolate icing, inspiring yet another honey recipe.

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