Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Everything Tastes Better with Bacon: 70 Fabulous Recipes for Every Meal of the Day is a book about cooking with bacon written by author, food commentator and The Oregonian columnist Sara Perry. The book was published in the United States on May 1, 2002, by Chronicle Books , and in a French language edition in 2004 by Les Éditions de l'Homme in ...
Editor’s choice: The best 5 recipes to try from Quick & Cozy. Along with my beautiful at-home testers, my husband and my 14-month-old, we tested a handful of recipes from “Half-Baked Harvest ...
A smartphone app for iPhone, iPad, and Windows supports that second book by making all its recipes available portably. [1] When the 20th anniversary edition of How To Cook Everything was published in 2019, [2] Bittman was interviewed by Yewande Komolafe in New York to celebrate the publication of this edition of the cookbook. [3]
The Essential New York Times Cookbook is a cookbook published by W. W. Norton & Company and authored by former The New York Times food editor Amanda Hesser. [1] The book was originally published in October 2010 and contains over 1,400 recipes from the past 150 years in The New York Times (as of 2010), all of which were tested by Hesser and her assistant, Merrill Stubbs, prior to the book's ...
Ruth Reichl (/ ˈ r aɪ ʃ əl / RY-shəl; born 1948) is an American chef, food writer and editor.In addition to two decades as a food critic, mainly spent at the Los Angeles Times and The New York Times, Reichl has also written cookbooks, memoirs and a novel, and has been co-producer of PBS's Gourmet's Diary of a Foodie, culinary editor for the Modern Library, host of PBS's Gourmet's ...
The book is written by British writer and academic Mike Berners-Lee, who acknowledges throughout the book his use of estimates and imperfect calculations. [1] [2] It was first published in 2010; a second edition was published in the UK in 2020, and an "Updated North American edition", retitled The Carbon Footprint of Everything, in 2022.
Guarnaschelli was the only child of cookbook editor, the late Maria Guarnaschelli [5] and John Guarnaschelli. [6] She was born in St. Louis, Missouri, but the family moved to New York City when she was just a few days old. Guarnaschelli's culinary experience started while watching her mother test numerous recipes at home while editing cookbooks.
In 1981, at the age of 54, she self-published her first cookbook, printing 15,000 copies of 150 Delicious Squares. The book was sold in specially designed racks at gas stations, grocery stores and at local fairs. [ 3 ]