In The Charcuterie
The Fatted Calf's Guide to Making Sausage, Salumi, Pates, Roasts, Confits, and Other Meaty Goods [A Cookbook]
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
A definitive resource for the modern meat lover, with 125 recipes and fully-illustrated step-by-step instructions for making brined, smoked, cured, skewered, braised, rolled, tied, and stuffed meats at home; plus a guide to sourcing, butchering, and cooking with the finest cuts.
This special iBooks Author version of In the Charcuterie invites you to:
– Choose recipes based on the animal and cut of meat you want to use.
– Neatly convert recipe measurements from Imperial to metric.
– Shop quickly and efficiently with aggregated shopping lists across multiple recipes, which you can e-mail to yourself or others.
– Cook from step-by-step instructions. When you’re ready to start cooking, you can seamlessly switch to landscape mode, which will display the recipe steps in an easy-to-read format that you can see from across the counter.
– Learn from interactive photos, which display information on topics ranging from types of knives to cuts of meat.
– Master butchery skills with descriptive photo slideshows, showing you every step of how to break down an animal.
The tradition of preserving meats is one of the oldest of all the food arts. Nevertheless, the craft charcuterie movement has captured the modern imagination, with scores of charcuteries opening across the country in recent years, and none is so well-loved and highly regarded as the San Francisco Bay Area’s Fatted Calf.
In this much-anticipated debut cookbook, Fatted Calf co-owners and founders Taylor Boetticher and Toponia Miller present an unprecedented array of meaty goods, with recipes for salumi, pâtés, roasts, sausages, confits, and everything in between. A must-have for the meat-loving home cook, DIY-types in search of a new pantry project, and professionals looking to broaden their repertoire, In the Charcuterie boasts more than 125 recipes and fully-illustrated instructions for making brined, smoked, cured, skewered, braised, rolled, tied, and stuffed meats at home, plus a primer on whole animal butchery.
Take your meat cooking to the next level: Start with a whole hog middle, stuff it with a piquant array of herbs and spices, then roll it, tie it, and roast it for a ridiculously succulent, gloriously porky take on porchetta called The Cuban. Or, brandy your own prunes at home to stuff a decadent, caul fat–lined Duck Terrine. If it’s sausage you crave, follow Boetticher and Miller’s step-by-step instructions for grinding, casing, linking, looping, and smoking your own homemade Hot Links or Kolbász.
With its impeccably tested recipes and lush, full-color photography, this instructive and inspiring tome is destined to become the go-to reference on charcuterie—and a treasure for anyone fascinated by the art of cooking with and preserving meat.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Boetticher and Miller are a match made in hog heaven. Having met at the Culinary Institute of America, the couple worked at several Bay Area restaurants before establishing the Fatted Calf charcuterie in San Francisco in 2003. There they provide a variety of cured-meat wonders and offer classes such as "Pig, Woman, Knife" and "All About Duck." They bring their work to the page here with photo-enhanced instructions on butchering, rendering fat, properly aging salami, and the like. Over the course of 125 recipes, they explore stand-alone vittles like pork sausage, corned beef, headcheese, and a soup stock made with ginger, chilies, and 12 pounds of duck and pork bones, as well as offering many a hot dinner entr e. A chapter titled "Skewered, Rolled, Tied, and Stuffed" features options like fig- and sausage-stuffed quails, and grilled rabbit skewers with chicories, olives, and almonds. Among the spicier selections are goat shoulder; birria, which is a Mexican stew (birria literally means "mess"); and a Oaxacan-style chorizo that calls for four types of chilies. It perhaps takes a butcher's mind-set to see meat loaf as a "classic American pat ," but there can be no arguing with the authors' m nage of sirloin and pork, served with a ketchup-based cocktail sauce.
Customer Reviews
A perfect 10 !
Probably one of the best cooking book I’ve read on a tablet ever ! Nice pictures, recipes, comments and interactive experience. That’s what a real cooking book is for this century !!!