The Pleasures of Cooking for One

Hardcover
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Author: Judith Jones

ISBN-10: 0307270726

ISBN-13: 9780307270726

Category: Cooking Memoirs - 2010 Holiday Recommendations

From the legendary editor of some of the world’s greatest cooks—including Julia Child and James Beard—a passionate and practical book about the joys of cooking for one.\ Here, in convincing fashion, Judith Jones demonstrates that cooking for yourself presents unparalleled possibilities for both pleasure and experimentation: you can utilize whatever ingredients appeal, using farmers’ markets and specialty shops to enrich your palate and improve your health; you can feel free to fail, since a...

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From the legendary editor of some of the world’s greatest cooks—including Julia Child and James Beard—a passionate and practical book about the joys of cooking for one.Here, in convincing fashion, Judith Jones demonstrates that cooking for yourself presents unparalleled possibilities for both pleasure and experimentation: you can utilize whatever ingredients appeal, using farmers’ markets and specialty shops to enrich your palate and improve your health; you can feel free to fail, since a meal for one doesn’t have to be perfect; and you can use leftovers to innovate—in the course of a week, the remains of beef bourguignon might be reimagined as a ragù, pork tenderloin may become a stir-fry, a cup or two of wild rice produces both a refreshing pilaf and a rich pancake, and red snapper can be reinvented as a summery salad. It’s a fulfilling and immensely economical process, one perfectly suited for our times—although, as Jones points out, cooking for one also means we can occasionally indulge ourselves in a favorite treat.Throughout, Jones is both our instructor and our mentor, suggesting basic recipes—such as tomato sauce, preserved lemons, pesto, and homemade stock—that all cooks should have on hand; teaching us how to improvise using an ingenious strategy of building meals through the week; and supplying us with a lifetime’s worth of tips and shortcuts. From Child’s advice for buying fresh meat to Beard’s challenge to beginning crêpe-makers and Lidia Bastianich’s tips for cooking perfectly sauced pasta, Jones’s book presents a wealth of acquired knowledge from our finest cooks.The Pleasures of Cooking for One is a vibrant, wise celebration of food and enjoying our own company from one of our most treasured cooking experts. The Barnes & Noble Review If you were to buy just one cookbook this year, my recommendation -- unless you routinely cook for a crowd -- would be Judith Jones's tremendously appealing, sensible yet inspiring The Pleasures of Cooking for One. Amid all the coffee-table-sized cookbooks by big-name restaurant and television chefs, Jones's modest little volume is perfectly, tastefully scaled to its subject. But don't let its diminutive size deceive you, and don't dismiss it if you cook for a household of two or even four: this book is packed with suggestions for body- and soul-satisfying sustenance and no-nonsense tips that Jones picked up during her long career at Knopf, where she has edited the crème de la crème of the culinary stratosphere, including Julia Child and James Beard. Widowed 13 years ago, Jones confesses that it took a while to discover the satisfactions of cooking for one. She points out that with only yourself to please, you can indulge your whims and experiment more freely. One of the challenges is to scale back quantities so you're not eating the same thing for days on end. Jones offers recipes for quick mini-batches of soups, a treasury of thrifty ideas for variations and leftovers, and advice on cajoling your butcher to sell you a single pork tenderloin (they usually come in packets of two) to prepare several different ways during the course of a week: Lemony Scaloppine, mini Roast Tenderloin, Pork Stir-fry with Vegetables. The allure of her book -- and not just for single cooks -- is her wise and economical approach to menu planning and time management. Prepare enough rich Boeuf Bourguignon on a leisurely weekend so you'll have leftovers to make what she calls Second and Third Rounds on worknights: a quick Beef and Kidney Pie and a meaty pasta sauce. Similarly, Moroccan-Style Lamb Shanks with Potatoes and Peas can become Couscous with Lamb, Onions, and Raisins, while leftover fish is easily transformed into fish cakes or fish salad. Most of her recipes, including a nestful of egg preparations and one-dish meals, can be whipped together in 30 minutes or less. This is comfort food but not nursery fare, civilized grown-up dining complete with candlelight, wine, and a cheese course -- as opposed to scarfing takeout pizza while standing at the sink. Alas, the big problem with cooking for one Jones doesn't solve is that there's no one else to do the dishes. --Heller McAlpin

\ Christine Muhlke[Jones's] wise pep talk of a cookbook…is also a manifesto: she encourages readers to experience food with all the senses and to pester supermarkets to sell individual cuts of meat rather than giant value-pack sizes that are downright discriminatory…Those who've taken to takeout rather than gorging on recipes designed to feed four to six will find this restorative book an encouraging friend in the kitchen.\ —The New York Times\ \ \ \ \ Publishers WeeklyLongtime Knopf editor and executive Jones follows up her recent food memoir with this civilized, unfussy guide to cooking—and cooking well—for solitary diners, for “those... who want to roll up [their] sleeves and enjoy, from day to day, one of the great satisfactions of life.” Forming and revising cooking strategy is a cornerstone of her digressive, folksy approach, so she provides lists of equipment deemed essential, suggestions for dealing with packaging that coerces individuals into buying—and then wasting—more than necessary, and tips for storing spoilage-prone foods. Her other key to enjoying cooking—while reducing the costs of eating—is flexibility. She shares her personal credo about culinary language and exactness, and with many protein-based dishes includes ideas for variations and “second” and “third rounds,” as she refers to leftovers. She doesn't skip desserts, entertaining or self-indulgence, and best of all, her whole book benefits from the diverse and cumulative gleanings of work with many of the great cooks and cookbook writers (including Julia Child, of course) of the latter half of the 20th century. (Oct.)\ \ \ The Barnes & Noble ReviewIf you were to buy just one cookbook this year, my recommendation -- unless you routinely cook for a crowd -- would be Judith Jones's tremendously appealing, sensible yet inspiring The Pleasures of Cooking for One. Amid all the coffee-table-sized cookbooks by big-name restaurant and television chefs, Jones's modest little volume is perfectly, tastefully scaled to its subject. But don't let its diminutive size deceive you, and don't dismiss it if you cook for a household of two or even four: this book is packed with suggestions for body- and soul-satisfying sustenance and no-nonsense tips that Jones picked up during her long career at Knopf, where she has edited the crème de la crème of the culinary stratosphere, including Julia Child and James Beard. \ Widowed 13 years ago, Jones confesses that it took a while to discover the satisfactions of cooking for one. She points out that with only yourself to please, you can indulge your whims and experiment more freely. One of the challenges is to scale back quantities so you're not eating the same thing for days on end. Jones offers recipes for quick mini-batches of soups, a treasury of thrifty ideas for variations and leftovers, and advice on cajoling your butcher to sell you a single pork tenderloin (they usually come in packets of two) to prepare several different ways during the course of a week: Lemony Scaloppine, mini Roast Tenderloin, Pork Stir-fry with Vegetables.\ The allure of her book -- and not just for single cooks -- is her wise and economical approach to menu planning and time management. Prepare enough rich Boeuf Bourguignon on a leisurely weekend so you'll have leftovers to make what she calls Second and Third Rounds on worknights: a quick Beef and Kidney Pie and a meaty pasta sauce. Similarly, Moroccan-Style Lamb Shanks with Potatoes and Peas can become Couscous with Lamb, Onions, and Raisins, while leftover fish is easily transformed into fish cakes or fish salad. Most of her recipes, including a nestful of egg preparations and one-dish meals, can be whipped together in 30 minutes or less.\ This is comfort food but not nursery fare, civilized grown-up dining complete with candlelight, wine, and a cheese course -- as opposed to scarfing takeout pizza while standing at the sink. Alas, the big problem with cooking for one Jones doesn't solve is that there's no one else to do the dishes. --Heller McAlpin\ \ \