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The New York Times Jewish Cookbook: More than 825 Traditional & Contemporary Recipes from Around the World

The New York Times Jewish Cookbook: More than 825 Traditional & Contemporary Recipes from Around the World

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Creators: Linda Amster, Mimi Sheraton
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Category: Book

List Price: $35.00
Buy New: $20.50
You Save: $14.50 (41%)



New (28) Used (11) Collectible (1) from $19.94

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 144265

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1st
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 640
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.8
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.4 x 1.3

ISBN: 0312290934
Dewey Decimal Number: 641.5676
EAN: 9780312290931
ASIN: 0312290934

Publication Date: September 30, 2002
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • Joan Nathan's Jewish Holiday Cookbook
  • Heirloom Cookbook: Recipes Handed Down by Jewish Mothers and Modern Recipes from Daughters an d Friends (Adult Interest)
  • The Healthy Jewish Cookbook: 100 Delicious Recipes from Around the World
  • The New York Times Passover Cookbook : More Than 200 Holiday Recipes from Top Chefs and Writers
  • Jewish Cooking in America: Expanded Edition (Knopf Cooks American)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
From the food pages of The New York Times comes this authoritative, wide-ranging Jewish cookbook. With almost 800 well-tested recipes by Times food writers, this collection includes influences from Northern Africa, Western and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and the United States. It is a collection to cook from as well as to celebrate the history, culture, culinary creativity, and enduring tradition of Jews around the world.

Mimi Sheraton, food critic and cookbook author, has written a full introduction to the book as well as to each chapter, providing context and expertise to entertain and inspire. Editor Linda Amster has organized chapters to cover every course: appetizers, breads, soups, fish, meat, chicken, vegetables and salads, grains and dairy delights, cakes, cookies, and other desserts. Delicious recipes include both traditional favorites and more recent variations that update the classics with a contemporary twist. All recipes are kosher and include dishes from dozens of well-known writers and chefs such as, Ms. Sheraton, Alain Ducasse, Joan Nathan, Daniel Boulud, and Wolfgang Puck.

This useful, appealing, and imaginative volume will delight those who celebrate Jewish culinary culture, and is sure to set a new standard on the Jewish cookbook shelf.



Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars very good!   October 21, 2007
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I use this book as an instrument of work and it is very helpfull. Is one of the book I own I can trust.


5 out of 5 stars L. Schler   January 9, 2007
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

Fabulous, I've tried a number of recipes all have been a hit. I highly recommend this cookbook.


4 out of 5 stars Not Worth The Price!   May 2, 2006
 11 out of 19 found this review helpful

I just got the book today it has tons of recipes I am just disappointed that there are no pictures in the book. The recipes are great reminding me back to the day of childhood.But I found many other Jewish cook books with these same recipes in them at cheaper price with pictures! Look around for other Jewish cookbooks on amazon. You will find a few. Unfortunately I did that after I bought this expensive book when I found out this has not 1 picture in it. This Cookbook is expensive and for the price it should at least have pictures. I rate it 3 stars but I accidentally hit the 4 star rating.


4 out of 5 stars A Great Big Collection of Published Recipes. Nothing Else   January 5, 2004
 34 out of 39 found this review helpful

The best and worst thing one can say about this book is that it is just a very large collection of ancient and modern recipes whose ingredients and preparation conform to at least conservative Jewish dietary laws. It is very similar to a collection of all English Language published sonnets ranging from Shakespeare to the little old lady in Nebraska who publishes in her local newspaper. Everything has been published and everything follows certain rules, but all connections between the collected items ends there.

This is not an unworthy book. It sort of reminds me of the old Palgraveys Golden Treasury of English Poetry, which collected works according to little rhyme or reason, except that the authors were English and wrote in English.

This book has three things going for it.

First is its size. With 825 recipes, someone looking for a recipe to accomplish a particular objective within the kosher rules, they have a good chance of finding one.

Second is the fact that all recipes have been published, but not all have been published in the pages of the New York Times. Some come from recently published books such as Marcus Samuelsonys yAquavity. This means that each one has been editorially reviewed by one or more of professional editorial eyes.

Third is the obvious love and care with which the editor(s) have assembled the material. The introductory essays by Mimi Sheraton and Joan Nathan are informative and endearing.

Unfortunately, all sense of cohesiveness stops on the first page of Appetizer recipes. There is no trace of any scholarship which would help sort out the recipes by whether the originating tradition was, for example Ashkanazy or Sephardic.

The Chapters dividing the recipes are:

Appetizers
Soups
Fish
Poultry
Meat
Vegetables
Grains, Legumes, and Pasta
Salads
Light Fare for Brunch and Lunch
Trimmings, Savory and Sweet
Breads, Rolls, Bagels, and Matzohs
Desserts

There is no sense in which Jewish traditional food forms a cuisine in the same sense that Morocco or Turkey or Iran have a distinctive cuisine. Jewish food is an overlay on the existing cuisine of the region.

This is a very worthy book if you have few cookbooks and are in need of a more diverse selection of kosher recipes. It is interesting that there is no statement in the book saying that the validity of the kosher nature of the recipes has not been certified by any rabbinical authority. And note that a kosher recipe can easily be made non-kosher by using non-kosher ingredients. A reasonable price for a lot of recipes. If you want a more measured look at Jewish Cooking, check out Claudia Roden's book on the subject and her book on Middle Eastern food.


4 out of 5 stars vicarious weight gain   September 7, 2003
 21 out of 27 found this review helpful

I put on 8 lbs. just reading one chapter. Like most endeavors of the NYT, it is both authoritative and encyclopedic in scope. While it sticks maily to traditional Kosher and Jewish dishes, it shows some respect for Israeli cooking, usually given short shrift in "American Kosher" cookbooks.

It's failure, however, is one of overload, both in many of the recipies themselves, and in the number of inclusions. It gives insufficient weight to weight itself!! With so many of its readers and users in the constant battle of the waistline (and tushline), it provides little encouragement to minimalists and moderationists (new word, coined this morning).

Best read during the 2 hour break in services on Yom Kippur

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