Food Network Kitchens Favorites Recipes

September 4, 2010 by admin · 5 Comments
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Product Description
• More than 250 favorite recipes from the food staff that work behind the scenes in the Food Network Kitchens. • Kitchen tips and techniques that will ensure recipe success. • Exquisite photography provides inspiration and confidence that every dish will be a success…. More >>

Food Network Kitchens Favorites Recipes

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5 Responses to “Food Network Kitchens Favorites Recipes”
  1. Marte says:

    I found this book at the library and picked it up, thinking it’d be full of frou-frou recipes that would be entertaining to watch a chef create on TV but not practical for a real kitchen. Boy, was I wrong. This book is full of true recipe gems. I went straight from the library to Amazon to get my own copy. Definitely recommended for anyone who likes to cook.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. the night i bought this cookbook i rushed home && made the steak recipe w/ garlic aioli on page 190 && matched it w/ the home fries on page 7. it was devoured by the family && they all went back for another serving! the breakdown of the cookbook is simple && the recipes r extremely easy to follow, as well as to mix && match. they’ll make u look like a master chef no matter how experienced u might be. i’m more than pleased w/ my purchase && would recommend this cookbook to just about anyone, whether it’s for urself or purchased as a gift.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  3. First off, this is a very nice cookbook. One might well expect such a solid collection of recipes from the Food Network. Second, some recipes get more complex than I am interested in, but most look eminently doable. And, third, a handful that I have tried since I received this book are quite tasty when they get on the table!

    Many of the dishes are accompanied by color photos, which give a good sense of the dish’s appearance (I’m not as big on photos as some others are). The book is organized in a pretty standard manner–breakfast and brunch, appetizers and salads, soup and stews, sandwiches and pizza, main dish salads, pasta and noodles, beans and grain, meats (beef, pork, and lamb), poultry, fish and shellfish, veggies and side dishes, baked goods, and “sweets.”

    A few examples to illustrate. A cook breakfast dish: Baked eggs with farmhouse cheddar and potatoes. Ingredients are pretty simple–eggs, red skin potatoes, parsley, garlic, kosher salt, pepper, some butter, and farmhouse cheddar. Tasty stuff!

    Lamb burgers with Feta cheese. I haven’t made this one yet, but, boy, does it look good (The photo going with the recipe is mouth watering). Begin with 2 pounds of ground lamb for the burger. Then, many ingredients are assembled, such as yogurt, savory, garlic, lemon zest, and so on–with pita bread pockets instead of a standard bun. Then, the tzatziki sauce, with yogurt, cucumber, kosher salt, garlic, olive oil, lemon juice, and mint. This is going to take some work, but the end result promises to be delicious.

    Fairly easy to make–and tasty: Penne with pesto. Make your own pesto (with basil, garlic, pine nuts, olive oil, salt and pepper). Then, cook up the penne and add the pesto sauce. A quick dish to make.

    And so on, from Grilled soy and ginger chicken to pork rib roast with cranberry-apricot stuffing to cheese risotto to lamb chops with rosemary-orange gremolata to. . . .

    Anyhow, a very nice cookbook from the Food Network.

    Rating: 5 / 5

  4. M. Perry says:

    This is a great book full of interesting dishes! Pretty much anything that you could ask for is represented in here. The recipes are delicious and easy to understand. There are little tutorials for recipes and ingredients that may be unusual, IE how to strip and cut lemongrass….

    Not all of the recipes have pictures( I wish that they did)but I’d say that half do.

    If you are looking for a good “beginner” book, you should try Food Networks “How to boil water”! It is AWESOME!
    Rating: 5 / 5

  5. Jared Castle says:

    When it comes to cookbooks, I set pretentiousness limits. Cookbooks cross my tipping point when they overindulge in trends (e.g. panko and Panini presses) or put personality before the food. Unfortunately, the Food Network is heavily populated with bubbly non-chefs (Rachel Ray and Sandra Lee come to mind first, each brandishing glow-in-the-dark teeth) and egoists like Bobby Flay, who can’t leave a simple, delicious recipe alone. I avoid their cookbooks and recommend you do, too.

    What I like about this particular Food Network cookbook is that the recipes come from the behind-the-scenes professionals: the assistants, the sous-chefs and line cooks. Directions are easy to understand and more than half of the recipes include full-color photographs. However, the book needed more step-by-step photographs like those provided for oysters on the half shell (page 41), pork tenderloin with chipotle-maple mop (page 211) and grissini (page 340).

    There are more than 230 recipes – a wide range including everything from pancakes to cioppino – in this entry-level cookbook. Each chapter is less than 50 pages long and most are about 20 pages in length; the focus on everyday cooking is evident in the chapter titles:

    Breakfast & brunch

    Appetizers, snakes & small plates

    Soups & stews

    Sandwiches, pizza & quesadillas

    Main-dish salads

    Pasta & noodles

    Beans & grains

    Beef, pork & lamb

    Poultry

    Fish & shellfish

    Veggies & sides

    Breads & other baked things

    Sweets

    In summary, Food Network Kitchens Favorites Recipes provides good, simple recipes that reflect the “culmination of everything we’ve learned and experienced in 15 years.” This cookbook is a real treat courtesy of the behind-the-scenes professionals. Rating: 4 stars.
    Rating: 4 / 5

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