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ویرایش:
نویسندگان: Darryl Estrine and Kelly Kochendorfer
سری:
ISBN (شابک) : 9781600854736
ناشر: Taunton Press
سال نشر: 2010
تعداد صفحات: 318
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
حجم فایل: 45 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Harvest to Heat Cooking with America's Best Chefs, Farmers, and Artisans به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب برداشت برای گرم کردن آشپزی با بهترین سرآشپزها ، کشاورزان و صنعتگران آمریکایی نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
Now more than ever, Americans are giving careful thought to
where their food comes from. And farmers, formerly anonymous
suppliers of bounty, are proving an inspiration to chefs
everywhere. This book celebrates the collaboration between
farmer and chef – and the journey from land to table. Readers
are invited along to visit the men and women who grow, herd,
ranch, and create artisanal foods that supply the finest
restaurant chefs in the country.
Harvest to Heat explores this dynamic relationship and paints
beautiful portraits of these often unheralded people, even
while it offers up a bounty of never before published, easy to
cook recipes – 100 in all. It will encourage readers to think
fresh first and buy food locally, as well as motivate them to
cook with the confidence of a four-star chef.
Named one of The Top 100 Cookbooks of the Last 25 Years by
Cooking Light magazine
Named one of The Best Cookbooks of 2010 by epicurious.com
Named one of the Six Great Finds for Your Kitchen by Parade
Magazine
Named one of the Five Top Fall Cookbooks by Garden & Gun
magazine
«One of the most compelling cookbooks of the year... In
addition to recipes, Estrine and Kochendorfer include profiles
of the featured farmers and artisans so you can get to know
them and their stories the way their partner-chefs do. Harvest
to Heat is also stunning. The food photography is casual and
rustic—a bit like a farm dinner. But, Im hooked on the
snapshots from Estrine and Kochendorfers cross-country farm and
restaurant tour, which spotlight the people, places, animals,
and ingredients that helped create the book. And, if youre
inspired to visit these farms and restaurants (a not unlikely
possibility), Harvest to Heat includes addresses, phone
numbers, and web sites for all of them.” –
epicurious.com
«One of the falls most beautiful cookbooks.»
– Julia Reed, Newsweek
«Harvest to Heat represents a new generation of cookbook, one
that celebrates the crucial relationship between chefs,
farmers, and artisans, documenting this connection with rich,
candid photography and stories from the field and kitchen
alike.»
– Alice Waters, Chez Panisse
«At all of my restaurants, we strive to shorten the time and
distance any ingredient spends from the soil, water, or air to
the plate. This notion is exactly what Harvest to Heat
celebrates–eating local, artisanal products made from farmers
who have been doing what they do–perfectly–their whole
lives.»
–Mario Batali, Chef/Author
«Harvest to Heat attests to the often-forgotten fact that no
matter our styles of cooking, be it rustic Italian or modern
French, we are nothing without the producers, artisans, and
craftspeople that provide our ingredients through their labors
of love.»
– David Chang, Momofuku
«Harvest to Heat is a sumptuous and sensually beautiful book
from soil to stove, it features the very best our great land
has to offer. With earthy and delicious recipes, Harvest to
Heat is an instant classic for any kitchen library and a book
you will grow to love more and more as the years wear on and
the meals pile up.»
– Padma Lakshmi, Emmy-nominated host of Top Chef, author,
actress, and designer
«Every serious chef understands that great ingredients from
dedicated farmers and artisans are the key to great dining.
This book celebrates that fact, capping it off with 100 recipes
from some of America?s leading chefs.»
– Tim Zagat
«Harvest to Heat brings together the artisans of the fields and
the kitchen to share the results of their skills and talents,
furthering the «farm to table» experience we enjoy when we eat
a meal by highlighting the important connection between farmer,
chef, and artisan. The stories in Harvest to Heat are a
delicious example of how memories are made through food.»
– Cat Cora, celebrity chef, author, and philanthropist
«Anyone who reads Harvest to Heat will be as compelled to cook
from it as I am. I will cook from this book knowing that those
who contributed are making a delicious, sustainable, and
thoughtful community-based food future a tangible reality. I
will not talk. I will cook. And then I will shout with joy: we
have arrived!»
– Michel Nischan, Chef/Owner of Dressing Room and President and
CEO of the Wholesome Wave Foundation
«Harvest to Heat highlights the collaboration between farmers,
chefs, and artisans, making this cookbook unique. It is a
fabulous mix of soulful stories, gorgeous photos, and inspiring
recipes that bring together all aspects of creating a truly
fine meal. Harvest to Heat honors the many aspects of enjoying
great food while not ignoring the planet, the animals, or the
people that bring us these gifts.»
– Nell Newman, President of Newmans Own Organics
FEATURED CHEFS AND ARTISANS
Northeast
– Eric Warnstedt, Hen of the Wood, Waterbury, Vermont, and
Mateo & Andy Kehler, Jasper Hill, Greensboro, Vermont
– Matthew Gennuso, Chez Pascal, Providence, Rhode Island, and
Karl Santos, Shy Brothers Farm, Westport, Massachusett
– Derek Wagner, Nicks on Broadway, Providence, Rhode Island,
and Paul Baffoni, Baffonis Poultry Farm, Johnston, Rhode
Island
– Rob Evans, Hugos, Portland, Maine, and Rod Browne Mitchell,
Browne Trading Company, Portland, Maine
– Barbara Lynch, No. 9 Park, Boston, and Chris Kurth, Siena
Farms, Sudbury, Massachusetts
– Jody Adams, Rialto, Boston, and Matt Linehan, Sparrow Arc,
Kennebunk, Maine
– Tony Maws, Craigie Street Bistro, Cambridge, Massachusetts,
and Kofi Ingersoll & Erin Koh, Bay End Farm, Buzzards Bay,
Massachusetts
– Brian Lewis, The Farmhouse at Bedford Post, Bedford, New
York, and John Ubaldo, John Boys Farm, Cambridge, New
York
– Clark Fraiser & Marik Gaier, Arrows, Ogunquit, Maine, and Ted
Johnson, Ogunquit, Maine
– Bill Taibe, Napa & Company, Stamford, Connecticut, and Annie
Farrell, Millstone Farms, Wilton, Connecticut
New York City
– Eric Ripert, Le Bernardin, and Eberhard Müller & Paulette
Satur, Satur Farms, Cutchogue, New York
– Daniel Boulud, Daniel, and Tim Stark, Eckerton Hill Farm,
Hamburg, Pennsylvania
– Michael Anthony, Gramercy Tavern, and Zaid Kurdieh, Norwich
Meadows, Norwich, New York
– Jean-Georges, Jean George, and Nancy MacNamara, Honey Locust
Farm, Newburgh, New York
– Michael Psilakis, Anthos, and Peter Skotidakis, Skotidakis
Goat Farm, St. Eugene, Ontario, Canada
– April Bloomfield, The Spotted Pig, and Rob Thompson,
Thanksgiving Farm, Harris, New York
– David Shea, applewood, and Ridge Shin, Hardwick Beef,
Hardwick, Massacahusetts
– Thomas Keller, Per Se, and Keith Martin, Elysian Fields,
Waynesburg, Pennsylvania
– Charlie Palmer, Aureole, and Tom Jurgielwicz, Jurgielewicz
Ducks, East Moriches, New York
– Tom Colicchio, Craft, and Travis & Ryan Croxton, Rappahannock
River Oysters, Topping, Virginia
– Johnny Iuizzini, Jean Georges, and Rick Bishop, Mountain
Sweet Berry Farm, Roscoe, New York
– Waldy Malouf, Beacon, and Jon Wallach, Eden Brook Fish
Company, Monticello, New York
– Dan Barber & Alex Grunert, Blue Hill, and Ralph Erenzo,
Tuthilltown Spirits, Gardiner, New York
– Gina DePalma, Babbo, and Jody & Luisa Somers, Dancing Ewe
Farm, Granville, New York
– Daniel Humm, Eleven Madison Park, and Steve & Sylvia Pryzant,
Four Story Hill Farm, Honesdale, Pennsylvania
– Peter Hoffman, Savoy, and Michael Yezzi & Jennifer Small,
Flying Pigs Farm, Shushan, New York
Mid-Atlantic
– Lee Chizmar, Bolete, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and Skip
Bennett, Island Creek Oysters, Duxbury, Massachusetts
– Jose Andres, Mini Bar, Washington, D.C., and Bev Eggleston,
EcoFriendly, Moneta, Virginia
– Michel Richard, Central MR, Washington, D.C., and Mark
Furstenberg, Washington, D.C
– Marc Vetri, Vetri, Philadelphia, and Tom Culton, Culton
Organics, Silver Spring, Pennsylvania
Southeast
– Michael Paley, Proof on Main, Louisville, Kentucky, and Steve
Wilson & Laura Lee Brown, Kentucky Bison Company, Goshen,
Kentucky
– Linton Hopkins, Restaurant Eugene, Atlanta, and Allan Benton,
Bentons Smoky Mountain Country Ham, Madisonville,
Tennessee
– Sean Brock, McCradys, Charleston, South Carolina, and Glenn
Roberts, Anson Mills, Columbia, South Carolina
– Monica Segovia Welsh & Andrea Reusing, Lantern, Chapel Hill,
North Carolina, and George ONeal, Lil Farm, Hillsborough, North
Carolina
South
– Donald Link, Herbsaint, New Orleans, and Billy Link, Link
Crawfish, New Orleans
– John Besh, August, New Orleans, and Stuart Gardner, Gardner
Ranch, Cankton, Louisianna
– Michelle Bernstein, Michys, Miami, and Gabriele Marewski,
Paradise Farms, Homestead, Florida
– Frank Stitt, Highlands Grill, Birmingham, Alabama, and Jason
& Shelley Powell, Petals from the Past, Jemison, Alabama
Upper Midwest
– Tory Miller, LEtoile, Madison, Wisconsin, and Matt Smith,
Blue Valley Garden, Blue Mounds, Wisconsin
– Paul Kahan, Blackbird, Chicago, and David Cleverdon,
Kinnikinnik Farm, Caledonia, Illinois
– Laurent Gras, L20, Chicago, and Peter Klein, Seedling Farm,
South Haven, Michigan
– Rick Bayless, Topolobampo, Chicago, and Marty & Kris Travis,
Spence Farm, Fairbury, Illinois
– Charlie Trotter, Trotters, Chicago, and Lee Jones, The Chefs
Garden, Huron, Ohio
– Paul Virant, Vie, Western Springs, Illinois, and Will Allen,
Growing Power, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
– Gale Gand, Tru, Chicago, and Judy Schad, Capriole Farm,
Greenville, Illinois
West
– Greg Higgins, Higgins, Portland, Oregon, and Carol & Anthony
Boutard, Ayer Creek Farm, Gaston, Oregon
– Naomi Pomeroy, Beast, Portland, Oregon, and Dave Hoyle,
Creative Growers, Noti, Oregon
– Vitaly Paley, Paleys Place, Portland, Oregon, and Barb
Foulke, Freddy Guys Hazelnuts, Monmouth, Oregon
– Gabriel Rucker, Le Pigeon, Portland, Oregon, and Manuel Recio
& Leslie Lukas-Recio, Viridian Farms, Dayton, Oregon
– Maria Hines, Tilth, Seattle, and Joe Whinney, Theo Chocolate,
Seattle
– Elisabeth Prueitt, Tartine Bakery, San Francisco, and Sue
Conley & Peggy Smith, Cowgirl Creamery, Point Reyes Station,
California
– Nancy Silverton, Osteria Mozza, Los Angeles, and Mimmo Bruno,
DiStefanos Cheese, Baldwin Park, California
– Charles Phan, The Slanted Door, San Francisco, and Andy
Griffin, Mariquita Farms, Watsonville, California
– Doug Keane, Cyrus, Healdsburg, California, and Peter Newman,
Lolas Garden, Healdsburg, California
– Vinny Dotola & Jon Shook, Animal, Los Angeles, and James
Birch, Flora Bella Farm, Three Rivers, California
– Jason Franey, Canlis, Seattle, and Tracy Smaciarz, Heritage
Meats, Rochester, Washington
Southwest
– Tyson Cole, Uchi, Austin, Texas, and David Anderson,
Bluebonnet Hydroponics, Schertz, Texas
– Lachlan Mackinnon-Patterson, Frasca Food & Wine, Boulder,
Colorado, and Bob & Mike Munson, Munson Farms, Boulder,
Colorado
– Dean Fearing, Fearings, Dallas, and Todd Smith, Texas Quail
Farms, Lockhart, Texas