Cook’s Illustrated is a widely renowned America’s Test Kitchen brand that is the work of over 60 passionate chefs based in Boston, Massachusetts, who put ingredients, cookware, equipment, and recipes through objective, rigorous testing to identify the very best. America’s Test Kitchen brands are well-known for top-rated television shows with more than 4 million weekly public television viewers, bestselling cookbooks, magazines, websites, and a cooking school. Discover, learn, and expand your cooking repertoire with Julia Collin Davison, Bridget Lancaster, Jack Bishop, Dan Souza, Lisa McManus, Tucker Shaw, Bryan Roof, and our fabulous team of test cooks!
Cook's Science: How to Unlock Flavor in 50 of our Favorite Ingredients
Hardcover
- ISBN-13: 9781940352459
- Publisher: America's Test Kitchen
- Publication date: 10/04/2016
- Pages: 504
- Sales rank: 209,234
- Product dimensions: 9.10(w) x 10.20(h) x 1.50(d)
.
In Cook's Science, the all-new companion to the New York Times-bestselling The Science of Good Cooking, America's Test Kitchen deep dives into the surprising science behind 50 of our favorite ingredientsand uses that science to make them taste their best.
From the editors of Cook's Illustrated, and the best-selling The Science of Good Cooking, comes an all-new companion book highlighting 50 of our favorite ingredients and the (sometimes surprising) science behind them: Cook's Science. Each chapter explains the science behind one of the 50 ingredients in a short, informative essaytopics ranging from pork shoulder to apples to quinoa to dark chocolatebefore moving onto an original (and sometimes quirky) experiment, performed in our test kitchen and designed to show how the science works. The book includes 50 dynamic, full-page color illustrations, giving in-depth looks at individual ingredients, "family trees" of ingredients, and cooking techniques like sous vide, dehydrating, and fermentation. The 400+ foolproof recipes included take the science into the kitchen, and range from crispy fried chicken wings to meaty-tasting vegetarian chili, coconut layer cake to strawberry rhubarb pie.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
-
- The Science of Good Cooking:…
- by America's Test Kitchen
-
- Cook's Illustrated…
- by America's Test Kitchen
-
- 100 Recipes: The Absolute Best…
- by America's Test Kitchen
-
- Cooking at Home With Bridget…
- by Laurel Antonio AitkenJTFAmerica's Test Kitchen
-
- The Science of Cooking: Every…
- by Domenico Bartolucci
-
- Small Victories: Recipes,…
- by Julia TurshenGentl + HyersIna Garten
-
- Martha Stewart's Cooking…
- by Martha Stewart
-
- Mark Bittman's Kitchen…
- by Mark Bittman
-
- The Blue Apron Cookbook: 165…
- by Frances R. Havergal
-
- Betty Crocker Lost Recipes:…
- by Betty Crocker Editors
-
- Williams-Sonoma Cookbook: The…
- by Williams-Sonoma
-
- Mario Batali--Big American…
- by Mario BataliJim Webster M.D.
-
- Food52 Genius Recipes: 100…
- by Kristen MigloreAmanda HesserMerrill Stubbs
-
- My Kitchen Year: 136 Recipes…
- by Ruth Reichl
-
- The Fannie Farmer Cookbook
- by Marion CunninghamFannie Farmer Cookbook CorporationArchibald Candy Corporation
-
- My Family Table: A Passionate…
- by John Besh
-
- Better Homes and Gardens 100…
- by Better Homes and Gardens
-
- The Vegetable Butcher: How to…
- by Ribeiro Bruning Maria Cec lia
Recently Viewed
The editors of America’s Test Kitchen take readers into the lab to show just how those tests are performed in addition to offering tips on getting the most out of 50 common ingredients and their associated dishes. Even if readers skip past the team’s rigorous testing process, they’re sure to learn plenty as the editors dig into each of the featured ingredients, offering insights into how slaughter affects flavor and juiciness in meats, how smoke is infused into foods, and how to pick out the best onions and orange juice. Readers searching for recipes will be more than satisfied. In addition to expected fare such as roasted tomato sauce, cheese soufflé, strawberry-rhubarb pie, and the Ultimate Beef Chili (which, it should be noted, includes beans), there is also a surprisingly straightforward honey fried chicken that offers home cooks ways to expand their repertoires. The book is rounded out by picks for recommended pantry staples (from anchovies to yogurt), digressions on ingredients such as lobster and kale, and the peculiarities of melting cheese, giving readers a solid resource as well as a foundation to build from. (Oct.)