Pillsbury Complete Cookbook Review

Pillsbury Complete Cookbook
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Having a good cookbook on hand is a must-have for every family, and sometimes it is difficult to sort through the enormous number of books on the market. I picked up this cookbook because I knew Pillsbury had many yummy dessert recipes, and I was pleasantly surprised with the amount of delicious recipes for every other category.
My family loves the Pan-Broiled Steak Smothered in Mushrooms, Lazy-Day Lasagna, Swiss Steak, Oven-Fried Fish, Asian Noodle Salad, and Baked Potato Soup (to name a few). Also worth mentioning were the recipes for Lemon Pudding Cake, Baked Rice Pudding, Peanut Butter Cups, Chocolate Carmel Layer Bars, and Espresso Brownies. I especially enjoyed the format of the book, which came in a sturdy binder with tabs for each food category. The book easily lays flat, and folds up neatly for storage. Make this cookbook a part of your collection and start making these yummy recipes today!
Enjoy!


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Tacos y más Review

Tacos y más
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These aren't your ordinary tacos!! I made the pork tenderloin tacos the other night and they were an instant favorite with my family. The pictures in the book are wonderful, and the recipes are easy to follow.

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deliciously informative. 32 tantalizing taco recipes featuring fully processed photographs including a mixture of step by step photos on selected recipes.

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Secrets of Success Cookbook: Signature Recipes and Insider Tips from San Francisco's Best Restaurants Review

Secrets of Success Cookbook: Signature Recipes and Insider Tips from San Francisco's Best Restaurants
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Too many collections of recipes from professional chefs prove disappointing in the home kitchen. In dramatic -- and delicious -- contrast, the five recipes I've tried so far from this book have all been major successes. The coq au vin recipe alone is worth the price of the book. Although I own hundreds of cookbooks, I return to a few favorites most of the time. This terrific new book has earned a place on my "favorites" shelf.

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Biba's Northern Italian Cooking Review

Biba's Northern Italian Cooking
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An earlier edition of this continues to be my favorite Italian cookbook after 15 years. I just purchased a new copy to give to my daughter for her first cookbook.
Every recipe from this book that I've tried over the years has been delicious. There are other great Italian cookbooks out there, and I own some of them, too. I like this one in particular for Caggiano's recipe selection, and its sample illustrations of preparation technique and presentation. The visuals were reassuring when I was new to cooking and entertaining. Now, when I'm deciding on a dinner, this is one of the books I consult out of reflex.
Italian cuisine varies across the penninsula. Most Italian-Americans came from the south. If you are accustomed to southern italian cooking, many of the recipes in this book will be brand new to you, and add a savory variety to your menu.
From appetizers to pasta, polenta, risotto, main courses, vegetables, sauces and desserts, I've made many wonderful dinners with what I call "Biba's book".

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Italian-born Biba Caggiano takes readers under her wing with more than 200 recipes from Northern Italy-the center of great cooking. Simple-to-master recipes cover tortellini from scratch, authentic pasta sauces, savory meat dishes, luscious desserts and more. This new edition features everything from simple dishes for a family meal to more elaborate recipes for special occasions, including: * Homemade Minestrome * Tagliatelle Bolognese Style * Shellfish Risotto * Bruschetta with Fresh Tomatoes and Basil * Roasted Leg of Lamb with Garlic and Rosemary

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The Flavors of Bon Appetit, Volume 6 Review

The Flavors of Bon Appetit, Volume 6
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As a new quilter I have checked out piles of books from the library and then purchased some. I renewed this book twice! I t is really cheap, and has a good selection of scrap quilt samples especially the attic windows, which I could only find ain a few books! It offers several variations for each pattern. Only thing confusing was sewing instruction for bowtie quilt-it says to pivot and my experienced quilting friends said NO NO don't . but still for $7 bucks it's a quilt book bargain! another excellent book for beginners is quilts quilts quilts! a complete guide...

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Create beautiful, one-of-a-kind quilts with expert advice on managing fabric and types of scrap quilt designs, suggestions for adapting traditional patterns, and more. Also included: complete instructions and full-size patterns for Attic Windows, Bow Tie, Brickwork, Alphabetical by Flavor, Hole in the Barn Door, Escape, and Stars and Bars.

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La Meilleure de la Louisiane: The Best of Louisiana Review

La Meilleure de la Louisiane: The Best of Louisiana
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I've used this book for 20 years - it's the best for authentic Louisiana cooking. The recipies are true, easy to follow, and always good. In case your wondering I was born and raised in Louisiana, so I do know good cajun food.

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A bestseller since it was published in 1983, this cookbook and guidebook to Louisiana cuisine offers a collection of recipes gleaned from famous restaurants as well as local kitchens. It provides reviews of restaurants, bars, products, and more.--This text refers to the Plastic Comb edition.

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Almost from Scratch : 600 Recipes for the New Convenience Cuisine Review

Almost from Scratch : 600 Recipes for the New Convenience Cuisine
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I checked this book out from the library last week and logged on today to buy it. Sure, I know how to roast my own peppers and simmer my own stock, but I don't have the time or inclination to do that every night of the week. Mr. Schloss has a book full of delicious recipes that only take a few minutes to throw together. So far we've enjoyed ziti with tomato and olive relish, jerk pork ribs grilled with yams, cream of pumpkin soup with Asiago cheese (okay, I used Parmesan instead) and red tandoori chicken thighs. Last night at the table my daughter said, "You mean this chicken came out of the same book as those ribs? It must be a magic book." I like the wide selection of cuisine types, too.
Note: Some of Mr. Schloss's "essential convenience pantry" ingredients can be expensive, but I appreciate his argument that it's cheaper than buying a pantry full of speciality spices, etc that you can't use every day. I also appreciate the brand recommendations.

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The Harvey House Cookbook: Memories of Dining Along the Santa Fe Railway Review

The Harvey House Cookbook: Memories of Dining Along the Santa Fe Railway
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Among the underappreciated elements of the American West was the civilization brought by train in the form of the trainside restaurants. As the authors of The Harvey House Cookbook describe, initially any food available on the long cross-country trips was provided during the 20-minutes or so that it took to replenish the locomotive's water supply, and the railroads didn't think they were in the food business. The food was dreadful -- until Paul Harvey suggested to the Santa Fe Railroad that he provide the restaurants, good food, and personnel.
In a few short years, someone taking the train from Kansas to Los Angeles might be served -- on white linen, by uniformed wait staff -- roast turkey with cranberries, lobster salad, and New York ice cream. Most likely, they were served by waitresses called Harvey Girls (perhaps you vaguely remember the Judy Garland movie, The Harvey Girls?). Those young women, who had to meet the criteria of "young women, 18 to 30 years of age, of good character, attractive and intelligent" often married local men... the *best* of the local men, suggest the authors, since the girls had plenty to choose from. And thus they had a profound impact. So did the resort hotels that the Fred Harvey company built or ran, among them El Tovar at the Grand Canyon and La Fonda in Santa Fe.
The history in this book is excellent: well told, backed up with plenty of facts and sources, and accompanied with photos and even a Harvey House menu from 1888 (the meal cost 75 cents). It's a short, non-academic read. If you have any interest in railroad history or the opening of the American West, you'll enjoy the book.
The book advertises itself as a cookbook, however, and indeed there are about 200 recipes. But they are primarily of historical interest rather than "What I'll cook tonight." It's not that the recipes are bad; to the contrary, they're fine, though many have a 19th century imprecision that we're not used to. They're just unremarkable except in the context of the "Harvey System" whereby Fred Harvey (and later his son) were innovators in "quality franchise operations," including such things as roast goose with cognac and apples, chicken enchiladas, or pampano in papillote. Menus were determined based on what was in season and sent by train from California (for produce) or the midwest (for meat). It's impressive and astonishing to think of that being accomplished in the 1880s at conveyed-by-railroad speed. Still, I just made a cheese fondue for dinner a few days ago, and the recipe I used was very much like the one in this cookbook. If you *do* cook from it, you won't go wrong; the point I want to make is that the recipes are, in all likelihood, "illustrations" more than they're "dinner tonight."
I know plenty of male rail fans (in the model railroad club to which we belong) who would buy this cookbook as a present for their wives ("See honey, I got you a cookbook!") and then read the book themselves for the history. Go ahead. I won't tell.

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In the 1870s, people traveling west of the Mississippi were still venturing into the wild. Loud, smoke-belching trains might have cut across the rough terrain, but harsh weather, rigid seats, and short breaks for bad food in the middle of nowhere showed the West was by no means won. Entrepreneur Fred Harvey had an eye for such problems and a nerve for the impossible. In 1876, he began establishing high-quality dining rooms along the Santa Fe Railroad, and his Harvey Houses helped change the entire picture of the American West. Recapture the spirit of the first western railway excursions with The Harvey House Cookbook. Its 200-plus vintage recipes, numerous period photos, and fascinating stories will take readers back to one of America's legendary experiences in the Old West.

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In the World Kitchen: Global Cuisine from California Culinary Academy Review

In the World Kitchen: Global Cuisine from California Culinary Academy
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Beautifully illustrated with full color photographs throughout, In The World Kitchen: Global Cuisine From California Culinary Academy is a luscious, culinarily impressive cookbook showcasing scrumptious recipes drawn from Africa, the Americas, Europe, and Asia. From Nicoise Salad; Thai Curry Shrimp; and Pita Bread; to Vegetarian Cassoulet; Chinese Roasted Chicken Salad; and Raspberry Ricotta Cheesecake, these culturally diverse, eye-catching and palate-pleasing selections are sure to resonate with seasoned chiefs and ambitious kitchen cooks seeking to try new things and diversify their menus.

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Cooking at the Academy is a rarity in the world of TV cooking shows — a no-frills program that favors solid, technique-based instruction. This third volume based on the series offers the same professional yet easy-to-understand instructions and classic restaurant-quality recipes that made bestsellers of the first two books. The Academy's Global Kitchen collects dishes from around the world. These thoroughly tested recipes show how common ingredients take on different tastes according to the country and culture they come from. Covering every part of a meal from appetizer to dessert, the book includes such irresistible dishes as Maryland Crab Cakes, Spicy Thai Corn Chowder with Lobster and Basil, Chinese Roasted Chicken Salad, Porcini Mushroom Risotto, Beef Goulash a la Ficelle, Cajun Three-Pepper Bread, and Creme Brulee and Flan. 120 recipes from around the world are included.

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Chef John Folse's Plantation Celebrations Review

Chef John Folse's Plantation Celebrations
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John Folse knows more about Cajun and Creole cooking than do "carpet bagger" chefs like Emeril who come down to New Orleans from the North and try to pass themselves off as experts on Louisiana cuisine. This book shows Chef Folse as an expert on not only the food, but the people and the culture of Louisiana. If you want to learn how to cook "real" Louisiana food, do yourself a favor and get a couple of Chef Folse's cookbooks.

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Discover the origin of many of America's premier dishes in this 335-page cookbook. It was at the great plantations gracing the banks of the Mississippi River that most Cajun and Creole cuisine developed. With influences from the Native Americans, French, Spanish, English, Africans, Germans and Italians, the cuisine of South Louisiana is recognized worldwide. In this book filled with more than 300 recipes and 150 full-color photographs, Chef Folse documented the masterpieces of plantation kitchens. The 300-year-old story of Louisiana's cuisine and cultures is also told in this book. Savor the history and recipes of those great mansions of Louisiana.

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Esquire's Handbook for Hosts: A Time-Honored Guide to the Perfect Party Review

Esquire's Handbook for Hosts: A Time-Honored Guide to the Perfect Party
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This handbook is not only the most informative of all, but it is also a great guide to throwing parties. Its biggest section about making drinks is a fabulous 'word to the wise'. I encourage you to buy this book!

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The Juan-Carlos Cruz Calorie Countdown Cookbook: A 5-Week Eating Strategy for Sustainable Weight Loss Review

The Juan-Carlos Cruz Calorie Countdown Cookbook: A 5-Week Eating Strategy for Sustainable Weight Loss
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Ever find yourself frustrated by the sheer quantity of ingredients in a weight watchers recipe for a meal you wouldn't even eat under normal circumstances, never mind the prep time? Tired of eating faux lasagna and cutting out the bread and cheese at every meal? This is the book for you.
Juan-Carlos Cruz provides recipes for foods regular people eat that are tasty, low-fat and don't use outlandish ingredients or preparation methods. Meatloaf tastes and feels like eating meatloaf, low fat mashed potatoes still have a satisying creamy texture and lots of taste. Nutritional information is provided with every recipe, so it's worth the money even if you don't follow his 5 week plan.

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Get Saucy: Make Dinner A New Way Every Day With Simple Sauces, Marinades, Dressings, Glazes, Pestos, Pasta Sauces, Salsas, And More (Non) Review

Get Saucy: Make Dinner A New Way Every Day With Simple Sauces, Marinades, Dressings, Glazes, Pestos, Pasta Sauces, Salsas, And More (Non)
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I've been a subscriber to Food and Wine magazine for years and have really come
to depend on Parisi's recipes. So when I read about her book Get Saucy
recently, I was very excited for its release.
I found the collection of recipes to be thorough and the recipes themselves
concise and totally approachable. I've nearly made my way through the pesto
chapter and particularly loved the Wild Mushroom and Herb pesto, Scallion
Macadamia Nut pesto, Green Chile Scallion pesto and Romesco. The fact that
these are not included in the pasta sauce chapter was initially a little odd,
but upon closer reading, the reason becomes clear. Pestos have multiple uses
that most of us wouldn't ordinarily think of. To put that to the test, I tried
the Green Chile pesto worked into meatballs and inside quesadillas and it was
super!My only quibble is that I wanted more than the recipe made. Next time
I'll double it.
I also liked how the author begins a chapter with a standard type of recipe and
then makes numerous variations. If my pantry lacked a certain ingredient, I
always felt like there was something else I could make or find some
approximation since she offers lots of alternatives to harder to find
ingredients.
Based on my level of cooking, I'm sort of glad Parisi didn't include the dozens
of classic French sauces she could have. Though interesting historically, I'd
never make most of them anyway. She makes a good point that the ones she did
include probably have the most universal appeal or at least are the most
indicative of the technique.
I quite enjoy reading the informative, quirky and anecdotal headnotes. They
make good reading and spark my interest. One issue I have with the organization
of the book however, is that the side bars, recipes contained in boxes and
other tips aren't included in the index. You have to read through a chapter to
find that information. It would be helpful to have those recipes at least
included in the index. I tried the Stir-Fried Beef with Scallions and Mushroom,
a recipe that shows you how to use a stir-fry sauce and it was delicious. There
is a page at the back that lists all those recipes, but it should be easier to
find them. The index otherwise is so overwhelmingly complete. The Sauce Index
by Suggested Use breaks down the food groups and pairs food with them.
Brilliant.
It seems fitting (though maybe a bit contrived) to end the book with dessert
sauces. But I'm never too full at the end of a meal to have something sweet and
I guess the same could be said of reading and using this book.

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Professional Cooking, College (With CD-ROM) Review

Professional Cooking, College (With CD-ROM)
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While I am not a culinary student, I do love to cook and learn the science behind the food. This book is the most comprehensive, best photographed book I have seen. This is written for the student, or professional preparation in terms of quantities the recipes make. You can easily scale most of them to suit your personal needs. The book is divided into various sections there is a textbook feel as each area of food is explained thoroughly, then come the recipes. This book is nice as it offers many suggestions and ideas with each recipe. While this may not be the best choice for every cook at home, I think this is a good choice for people that want a little more out a cookbook.

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Features the same clear, concise, and accurate explanations of techniques and recipes that have distinguished earlier editions.* 1,000 recipes, including 250 from Le Cordon Bleu.* 250 new color photographs--1,000 photographs in all--of plated dishes and step-by-step techniques.* New chapters on sausages and cured foods; pates, terrines, and other cold foods.* New professional-level CD-ROM, including resizing of recipes, US/metric conversions, costing, purchasing lists, nutritional analysis, and more.

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Marion Brown's Southern Cook Book Review

Marion Brown's Southern Cook Book
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I glanced through a copy of this 2001 newest edition, and felt the book lacked the "heart" of my old 1951 paperback edition of The Southern Cook Book by Marion Brown. I went home, flipped through the yellowed pages of my friendly old paperback, and fell in love with it again!
The 1951 version is one of THE classic books of Southern Cooking, and at 57 years old, is still alive with Marion's voice and the spirit of her quest to gather up many old recipes before they were lost.
There is a place for the new edition, with recipes using items not cooked from scratch, and it records how "fast"er foods are used by some cooks today for a newer taste. I can buy a Rachael Ray book, or google recipes by cooks not even born in 1950, 1960, or 1970 and learn some of these trendier New Southern recipes with ingredients such as ginger, foie gras, shaved truffles, all nicely stacked up. Thanks, but I'll pass on most of these dishes, just the same.
If you are serious about Southern Cooking, get the 1951 copyrighted version of The Southern Cook Book, Edna Lewis's 3 books, and try some of the newer Southern cooking styles as well, with Ronni Lundy, Camille Glenn, Frank Stitt's Southern Table, John Martin's books, many fine New Orleans cookbooks, and experience all that is "Southern Cooking", from cooks and writers from Louisiana, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas, and up through Virginia, Tennessee and Kentucky.
Better yet, taste today's cooking as a yardstick of comparison at the vanishing "Mom and Pop" tiny restaurants (for "meat and three"'s) and sample regional variations (Vinegar, tomato, mustard bases etc) at numerous BBQ throughout the South.
Try Charleston's Justines and the shrimp and grits at Middleton Plantation, sample the more upscale restaurants as well, such as Charleston Grille and McCready's in Charleston. Try BBQ at Sgt. White's Diner , and surprisingly tasty food at Gilligan's, both in Beaufort, SC. You MUST go to Mrs. Wilkes Boarding House in Savannah to try 35 different try Southern dishes at one setting, and pass on by the less authentic steam table foods at Lady and Sons, despite lovely Paula's humor and accent!
DO visit the Beautiful monuments and stunning trees of Bonaventure cemetery just outside Savannah, and toast all those who cooked, laughed and loved before us.

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A classic that has been in existence for fifty years, and recently updated, with over 1,000 recipes from famous Southern households, hotels, plantations, and restaurants, including everything from hors d'oeuvres, salads, breads and biscuits, to famous Southern desserts, and special food gifts.

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5 Spices, 50 Dishes: Simple Indian Recipes Using Five Common Spices Review

5 Spices, 50 Dishes: Simple Indian Recipes Using Five Common Spices
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This is a great book. It's premise is simple, but not simplistic - take 5 spices combined in various ways and produce a variety of Indian dishes for any occasion. Everything I've made from it has succeeded, and I will certainly make again. The coverplate (chickpeas with dill) is total comfort food, and uses dill as a vegetable in a new and surprising way. I've also made and enjoyed the Cabbage Salad (a fresh take on slaw), Indian Fried fish (tasty and savory), Sweet Potato with Ginger and Lemon, Corn with Mustard Seeds, and the fantastic Mussels in a Green Curry. And anyone who thinks they don't like okra NEEDS to try the Okra Raita - my favorite of all favorites in the book.
Recipes are well-presented, clear and easy to follow. I cook a lot of Indian food, but in no way felt that these recipes were dumbed-down at all. Kahate wisely confines her recipes to simple, practical ones with accessible ingredients. Does Indian food offer complex biriyanis with 15 spices and many ingredients? Sure. But that's not what is offered here. This is fresh home cooking, bursting with flavor, yet able to be cooked quickly. The flavors of the ingredients is prominent. And Kahate is a good guide to ingredients and techniques.
Highly recommended. Mine is already stained from much use!

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The premise is simple: with five common spices and a few basic ingredients, home cooks can create fifty mouthwatering Indian dishes, as diverse as they are delicious. Cooking teacher Ruta Kahate has chosen easy-to-find spicescoriander, cumin, mustard, cayenne pepper, and turmericto create authentic, accessible Indian dishes everyone will love. Roasted Lamb with Burnt Onions uses just two spices and three steps resulting in a meltingly tender roast. Steamed Cauliflower with a Spicy TomatoSauce and Curried Mushrooms and Peas share the same three spices, but each tastes completely different. Suggested menus offer inspiration for entire Indian dinners. For quick and easy Indian meals, keep it simple with 5 Spices, 50 Dishes.

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Cuisines of the Axis of Evil and Other Irritating States: A Dinner Party Approach to International Relations Review

Cuisines of the Axis of Evil and Other Irritating States: A Dinner Party Approach to International Relations
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Like some unholy hybrid of Rachel Ray and Fareed Zakaria, Ms. Fair uses her extensive knowledge of the world's hotspots and her love and talent for cooking to undertake the heretofore little-attempted mission of helping the reader actually learn something of use outside the kitchen whilst preparing to strap on the feedbag. The result subjects international relations, American foreign policy, and a sizable majority of the non-human animal kingdom to a healthy skewering.
Based on my own personal experiences with the author's cooking and rapier wit (she once helpfully explained to me the difference between "Northern Alliance" Afghan food and "Taliban" Afghan food), I believe you can safely assume that, in the end, you will be entertained, a little smarter for the effort, and in any event well fed.

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