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Critiques

12 sur 12
Excellent recipes, most of which are easy to make and require few/easy ingredients. I checked this out from the library, and enjoyed it so much I bought a copy.
 
Signalé
librariabillie | 1 autre critique | Oct 31, 2016 |
The American Heart Association is known for producing high quality cookbooks aimed at improving nutrition for today's rapid fire lifestyle. This newest cookbook provides 175 recipes prepared in one of 12 methods of cooking including microwaving, grilling, braising, and poaching.

In true AMA style every recipe is detailed with preparation and cooking tips, nutritional content and clear precise directions. One disadvantage of this glossy covered paperback cookbook is the lack of photographs. A few color photos are tucked in the center.

The index is arranged by major ingredient but not by recipe and for older eyes the print is very lightly colored and harder to read.

The AMA has created recipes with fancy names and most have one or more unusual ingredient that unfortunately is not available in areas with smaller rural grocery options. If a family is looking for a simple familiar recipe perhaps cooked in a different style they will be disappointed. If a family likes variety and a change of pace with different spices and preparation styles they will like it.

The strongest feature that this reviewer found was the detailed information about each of the 12 methods of cooking that could be used with family favorite recipes. It would be very valuable to a new cook or as a gift to someone looking to learn healthier methods of meal preparation.

Thanks to Blogging for Books for the review copy of this new book in exchange for an honest review.
 
Signalé
Itzey | 1 autre critique | Jan 23, 2016 |
There are 175 recipes in Grill It, Braise it, Broil It, and 9 Other Easy Techniques For Making Healthy Meals. Unlike a lot of cook books that organized by meals or types of meats, this one from the American Heart Association is organized by cooking techniques. That isn’t the only thing this cookbook does that is different from the norm.

After some introductory pages regarding shopping trips, what to eat and what to avoid, as well as a number of lifestyle suggestions, it is on to cooking techniques. The first one is “Slow Cooking” and begins on page 6 with a listing of 14 recipes. Along with various soups, stews, and gumbos, there are also recipes for “Rosemary Steak Smothered In Onions” (page 19) and “New Mexican Meat Loaf” (page 22-23). Each recipe has a detailed ingredient list, detailed instructions, one or more bulleted cooking tips, and detailed serving info regarding calories, various types of fat, sodium, cholesterol, and more. Some information regarding preparation time is included in the more complicated recipes, but there is no overall estimate on each one how long it should take start to finish.

This same recipe format continues through the rest of the chapter sections. There are additional sections covering Microwaving (starting on page 29), “Blending” (page 50), “Grilling” (page 69) among others including “Broiling” (page 199), “Roasting” (page 220) and “Baking” (page 247). A classic “Herb Roasted Chicken” recipe can be found on page 232 and it includes how to make gray from the pan. The simple act of making gravy from pan drippings continues to confound me.

After the recipes it is on to the interesting information such as stocking a heart healthy pantry (pages 272- 275). This includes pantry items as well as perishable items in terms of produce and more. So, it is not just pantry items as one would think of as it includes refrigerator and freezer items among other things.

Advice on kitchen safety and working with food, basic kitchen equipment, as well as serving size by calories level is included before leading up to the eight page index that concludes the book. The eight page index is organized by ingredient as opposed to recipe.

An anomaly with the cookbook is the 8 pages of random colorful pictures of dishes inserted between pages 58-59 in the book. Each picture of a dish has the name of it as well as the page number location for the dish. This is the kind of random cluster of photographs one normally sees at the very beginning of a cookbook. Instead, it is inserted here in the middle of the section on “Blending.”

Also worth noting is the fact that much of the information in small type has been placed inside of grey background boxes. This can be hard to see on older eyes.

Grill It, Braise It, Broil it, And 9 Other Easy Techniques For Making Healthy Meals is not a flashy and colorful paperback cookbook. It is a plain barebones cookbook packed with detailed information. Whether it works for you and yours is something you will have to determine. If you need a cookbook that will tell you exactly what is in the food you are preparing, this one is for you.

Grill It, Braise It, Broil it, And 9 Other Easy Techniques For Making Healthy Meals
American Heart Association
Clarkson Potter/Publishers (Crown Publishing Group)
http://www.clarksonpotter.com
June 2015
ISBN# 978-0-307-88809-9
Paperback (e-book version also available)
304 Pages
$19.99

Material supplied by the good folks of the Plano Public Library System.

Kevin R. Tipple ©2015
 
Signalé
kevinrtipple | 1 autre critique | Aug 23, 2015 |
I saw one review on GoodReads saying they wish they had the paperback version to make it easier to bring into the kitchen. I wish I had bought the hardcover edition, so it would be easier to read and wouldn't now be falling apart. In terms of contents, this is excellent, and not just for heart patients (which I'm not) but for anyone who wants to eat healthy without resorting to tasteless eating. Lot's of international options. Take the Poultry section. There are 44 recipes, almost all featuring chicken though there's "Curried Turkey with Water Chestnuts," "Turkey Mousse," and "Roast Stuffed Cornish Game Hen" and Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, Indian, Israeli, Creole, Italian, Spanish dishes--even pot pies and crepes. So more varied than you might think.
 
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LisaMaria_C | 1 autre critique | Sep 11, 2013 |
It's all well and good that this is from the American Heart Association but i didn't find that many useful recipes (all though i should probably stop buying cookbooks because i seem to use them just for ideas anyone~even if i start out with a recipe it slowly morphs into something more my own and almost unrecognizable...)½
 
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rampaginglibrarian | 1 autre critique | Dec 4, 2008 |
It's all well and good that this is from the American Heart Association but i didn't find that many useful recipes (all though i should probably stop buying cookbooks because i seem to use them just for ideas anyone~even if i start out with a recipe it slowly morphs into something more my own and almost unrecognizable...)½
 
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rampaginglibrarian | Dec 4, 2008 |
 
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ghectic | Jun 2, 2008 |
I'm not one who enjoys cooking for its own sake. It's just something one needs to do. When medical advice put us on a low-sodium diet, our Culinary School Graduate daughter gave us this and it's excellent. Useful even if you're not interested in cutting sodium, because what it does is train you in the art of seasoning. And does it without being over-difficult. Makes a nice basic cookbook and, hey, add salt if you really want to!
 
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nickelshrink | Mar 10, 2007 |
 
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austinwood | Sep 19, 2009 |
Since the American Heart Association published its first cookbook in 1973, dozens of health and diet trends have come and gone. Throughout this time, the Association, the foremost authority on heart health, has set the standard for nutritious eating. With millions of copies already in print, the Association’s flagship cookbook, The New American Heart Association Cookbook, is back—and better than ever. In today’s climate of confusing and often...
Cet avis a été signalé par plusieurs utilisateurs comme abusant des conditions d'utilisation et n'est plus affiché (show).
 
Signalé
Tutter | 1 autre critique | Feb 17, 2015 |
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