Fotografía de autor
6 Obras 290 Miembros 4 Reseñas

Obras de Hugh Acheson

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1971-11-05
Género
male
Nacionalidad
Canada
Lugar de nacimiento
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Lugares de residencia
Athens, Georgia, USA
Ocupaciones
chef
restaurateur

Miembros

Reseñas

This is a great cookbook with creative ways to use the slow cooker. My complaint is that when it comes to my slow cooker, I want to be able to throw the ingredients in in the morning and have dinner ready at night. This is not that book. It's more your weekend slow cooker cookbook for when you have a lazy morning and can get the ingredients prepped and then let it cook through the day.
 
Denunciada
megbmore | Dec 7, 2020 |
We belong to a CSA, and sometimes we get a LOT of veg- some of which it can be hard to use. This book- like the "Victory Garden Cookbook" (another go-to)- promises to give lots of ideas about what to do with that celariac. The main difference is that Broad Fork is more "cheffy"- though not inaccessibly so- and Victory Garden is more middle-America.

I love that preserving and fermenting are included! My first project will be to can some spiced blueberries, and I am contemplating kimchee as well. If these, and a a couple more recipes, go well, I'll probably get the hardcover version to supplement the ebook. (I bought the ebook at a discounted price from the listed one.)

It's a very exciting cookbook! I bookmarked the recipes I wanted to try... and there are SO MANY!

I do love the format: season first, then vegetable (or fruit), with various options.
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Denunciada
cissa | 2 reseñas más. | Aug 18, 2017 |
Fantastic recipes for fruits and vegetables! There was barely a page that didn't show something I want to try, and the photographs are plentiful and gorgeous. Definitely a book for anyone's collection.
 
Denunciada
Gingermama | 2 reseñas más. | Jan 24, 2016 |
Hugh Acheson is a James Beard award winning chef/author and a judge on Bravo's Top Chef. The Broad Fork is his third cookbook and the focus is on seasonal vegetables and fruits. I think Acheson described his book best on his introduction- "The recipes here are all about vegetables- what to do with them, ideas to get you excited to cook and eat them. It's not manual to a vegetarian lifestyle, but rather a compendium of seasonal recipes to help you bring vegetables to the center of your plate."

Prior to reading this book I could count with both hands the amount of vegetarian main dishes that I could make. I like vegetables but I guess my brain was wired to treat them as side dishes and companion to whatever protein I'm eating. Yet, some of my favorite all-time comfort food are vegetable based such as ratatouille and eggplant parmigiana. I'm a huge fan of my local farmer's market and vegetable stands. I have access to great varieties of seasonal fresh veggies and fruits in Philadelphia but I usually buy the same exact vegetables year-round because let's be honest some veggies just looks intimidating.

This book is divided into the four seasons starting with fall, winter, spring and the summer offerings. Since I rarely read cookbooks cover to cover I decided to browse the book, mark down recipes that I would like to make and dived into the summer recipes. There's usually between 2-4 recipes per vegetable/fruit and what I like about this book is that Acheson goes from something basic and simple to something fancy. Beans for example- the first recipe introduced is a fried green beans with yogurt sauce. Second recipe? Green beans with tarragon-lemon sabayon. Now, yes if you are chefy a sabayon may not be something that's totally 'fancy' but I can count the number of episodes where chefs go home on a cooking competition because their custard falls apart. Another example is sweet potatoes which I love. This time three recipes on one page: first- simple sweet potatoes, second- sweet potato gratin and finally glazed sweet potatoes with maple gastrique. What's great about this book is that he introduced me to a new way of thinking about vegetables and fruits. Who knew that blackberry goes well with red meat? And now I know what to do when I see a salsify or a kohlrabi. I also thoroughly appreciate all of Acheson's cooking tips and personal commentary in this book such as "Is there a really a backlash against kale?"

I enjoy reading cookbooks where the chef is clearly passionate about food and even though his book is vegetable-centric it never came off as patronizing. You can see how much his southern roots plays off in his recipes and it's fantastic. The Broad Fork is truly a great addition to any home cook's library but instead of going to my bookshelf, this book is staying in the kitchen where it belongs.
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Denunciada
jnat88 | 2 reseñas más. | Aug 16, 2015 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
6
Miembros
290
Popularidad
#80,656
Valoración
4.0
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
11

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