Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

Friday, April 30, 2010

24 boxes :: 1 book is here!

It’s finally arrived (and it’s finally finished!). The cookbook took more time – and energy – than I had expected, but all of the delays and fine-tuning were well worth it. I’m excited to report that you can now purchase copies of 24 boxes :: 1 book!

It’s a spiral-bound, 70-page + cover book that includes a seasonal crop chart, a recipe corresponding to each week of the box season and a few extras thrown in for good measure. I hand-assemble each book with care. I hope that you find the book useful, well designed, fun to read and enjoyable to look at.

Visit the ordering site to see sample pages (“Look Inside!” button) and to purchase your copy. Please email jnoelle [dot] cooks [at] gmail [dot] com or comment if you have any questions. Thanks to everyone for supporting and reading 24 boxes. It’s been a lot of fun for the past three years and there’s more to come! ~ Jen

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Book Review | A Homemade Life

This is more of a public service announcement than a simple book review. I am so enamored with A Homemade Life that I feel it’s my mission to make sure that all of my foodie (especially my female foodie) friends READ THIS BOOK. It’s more than a memoir and not necessarily a cookbook (but there are lots of recipes). It’s funny, familiar, poignant, sometimes sad, bittersweet and very romantic.

Molly Wizenberg is author and creator of the award-winning blog Orangette. Her writing and storytelling style will make you feel like you’re one of her closest friends. You fall in love with her, her cooking and eventually (just like she did), you fall in love with her fiance then husband. Prepare to laugh, cry, laugh some more and then cook.

Sunday, April 06, 2008

Book Review | The Food You Crave

My work life and blog life are not the best of friends. They fight all the time and, being the bully that he is, work life almost always wins. Work life has been especially active over the past month as we grow and make exciting changes to our business. I have managed to sneak in some tv time (I’ve got to unwind somehow!) and my most recent find is a show on the Food Network called Healthy Appetite with Ellie Krieger. Rantings and complaints about Food Network programming aside (there are enough other blogs that handle that), I really enjoy this show and think that it’s a great addition to their line-up. The accompanying book, The Food You Crave: Luscious Recipes for a Healthy Life, has quickly become one of my favorites.

Ellie Krieger is a nutritionist who has combined her nutritional know-how with her cooking skills to create a fabulous collection of recipes that are good for you and actually taste good, too. She follows a “usually–sometimes–rarely” philosophy when it comes to choosing food. Nothing is off limits, as long as it’s in the rarely category, and she tries to incorporate usually foods – fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lean meat – into every meal. She takes classic recipes that can typically be fat- and calorie-laden and updates them to be lighter, leaner and healthier. She has a l0t of interesting and inventive tricks up her sleeve for making successful healthy recipes. For instance, her Macaroni and Four Cheeses uses pureed squash as a surprise ingredient – it bumps up the nutritional value, adds a wonderful sweet and creamy flavor, and imparts that signature yellow-orange color that identifies a classic mac ’n’ cheese.

I recently tried her revamped version of Sloppy Joes. Her recipe adds kidney beans for an extra boost of fiber, diced red pepper for flavor and Vitamin C and uses ground sirloin to replace higher-fat ground beef. The flavor was spot-on Sloppy Joe and really hit the spot.

Every recipe in The Food You Crave supplies nutrition information, including “excellent and good sources” of vitamins and minerals. If there was one down-side to the recipes, it would be their lack of seasoning. If you’re on a sodium-restricted diet, this is the book for you. If you’re like me and like your food well-seasoned, you can simply add salt to taste and the recipes will be perfect.

Click here to download and print a pdf of this recipe:

Sloppy Joes

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Book Review | Cheese & Wine

When I’m out shopping for Christmas presents, I have a bad habit of always ending up with something for myself, too. Yesterday I stopped in one of my favorite stores, Porte Rouge, to pick out some gifts and on display next to all of the gorgeous French dishes and tableware was a beautiful book about cheese and wine pairing. Of course it came home with me (along with presents for other people) and I read the first half in one sitting last night before bed.

Cheese & Wine is an excellent book that profiles 70 different cheeses outlining the origins, makers, and characteristics as well as complementary wines. Sprinkled throughout are suggestions for creative and interesting cheese platters that are perfect for holiday entertaining. The style is informative, approachable and friendly.

This book would make a wonderful gift for a cheese enthusiast or someone who is just starting to explore wine and cheese pairing. And, if you’re thinking “wow, that would make a great present for me!” go ahead and buy it for yourself – I won’t tell anyone.

Cheese & Wine by Janet Fletcher is available at Amazon.com for $19.56 (retail price $24.95).