David Hammond wrote:Eating my way through an entire menu is much more appealing than cooking my way through an entire book (pace Julie).
Some helpful links:
Julie and Julia ProjectFrench Laundry at HomeAlinea at Home (same woman as FLaH)
Ad Hoc at Home (kind of redundant, since the book is titled "at home")
Momofuku for 2Big Fat Undertaking (Big Fat Duck)
What cookbook would you want to cook through? I have a major problem attempting that, since my beloved spouse won't eat fin-fish. At all.
(Except when she doesn't notice like a bacalao fritter or a piece of sushi she thought had krab)I'm entranced by Momofuku -- the flavors I've encountered so far are amazing, but it's just a bit more pork fat than I should keep in my diet. It's the one I'm most likely to accomplish. Alinea would be next to impossible without a lot more time on my hands. French Laundry isn't impossible, just annoying in its fussiness. There's some really good stuff in there (and some curious omissions, like they tell how to truss a chicken to roast... but not the roast chicken recipe, which is
thankfully posted all over the web). Babbo? Nah. I've done a lot from Nicole Routhier's "Cooking Under Wraps" -- that's probably the most-covered cookbook in my collection.
But aha! I remember there's one I've completed: "The Elements of Cooking" by Michael Ruhlmann.
It's only got one recipe (veal stock).
What is patriotism, but the love of good things we ate in our childhood?
-- Lin Yutang