Cookbook: Everyday Thai Cooking

Everyday Thai Cooking

As an adventurous chef, I always like to try to cook various culture’s cuisine. Everyday Thai Cooking by Katie Chin is made for people like me. The book is filled with everything from noodle dishes to seafood and even drinks and desserts. This book is essential for anyone wanting to give cooking Thai food a shot.

The Good:

Everyday Thai Cooking has so much variety. I enjoyed how there was varying levels of mastery and experience. This book make sit easy to start with the basics and work your way to excellence.

The book included basic cooking techniques and their explanation as well as a wonderful forward by Katie Workman that talks about why Thai food has such a rich history and how fun it is to enjoy and indulge in.
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Cookbook: Vegan Slow Cooking For Two or Just For You

Vegan-Slow-Cooking-For-Two-Kathy-Hester

As a former vegetarian who at one time dated and lived with a vegan, I have learned to appreciate meatless meals. I also have a small family of just three of us, so I was excited to test out the book, Vegan Slow Cooking For Two or Just For You by Kathy Hester.

Vegan Slow Cooking For Two or Just for You is full of everything from entrees to side dishes and even sauces to accompany many meals.

The Good:

Vegan Slow Cooking For Two or Just for You has beautiful photos. For me, as a chef, I was taught we “eat with our eyes first”, so this is one of the most important aspects any cookbook can have. The photos really made my mouth water and my husband came in and peeked over my shoulder and didn’t even know it was a vegan cookbook.

I liked that the book also included tips for using a slow cooker as well as an explanation of some new ingredients that may not be familiar to many home cooks. There was also a section on tips for cooking for small families in general as well, which I found very useful. I think this book would be great as a wedding gift!
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Quick Start Homemade: Book Review

I was sent a copy of Southern Living’s Quick Start Homemade to facilitate this review. All opinions are my own.

SouthernLivingQuickStartHomemade

 

It is not very often that a recipe book comes along that contains so many easy and budget friendly recipes in it that I had a hard time choosing which to try out for the review. Quick Start Homemade by Southern Living was such a book.

Quick Start Homemade features recipes that are hearty and delicious. The book allows you to make all the recipes using commonly found ingredients and cooking techniques that are fitting for just about any level home cook. The book contains 101 recipes for commonly made home-style meals with an extra spin on them to break up the ordinary.

 

The Good:

The book included a ton of great photos. I was always told in college when I went to culinary school that the #1 rule of food presentation was “You eat with your eyes, first”. This book gets that. The pictures are bright, bold and you can practically smell the recipes through them.

I enjoyed how the book broke down meals into colored sections so you could easily find the section you were looking for. These were broken down into categories such as pasta, pizza, eggs and so on. There were not only dinners in it, but also great dishes for lunch and brunch.
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I’d Know You Anywhere, My Love (new kid’s book)

Children love to dream. Their imaginations can take them on wild adventures; transporting them to far-off places and allowing them to envision grand scenes.  But, ultimately, no matter where their dreams lead them, their parents are there every step of the way. In I’d Know You Anywhere, My Love, best-selling author Nancy Tillman underscores parents’ steadfast devotion, while celebrating the dreamers.

 bedtime books

Inspired by her own children who often pretended to be different animals, I’d Know You Anywhere, My Love is written from the point of view of a mother whose child becomes a bear cub, a rhino, a ringtail raccoon, among other animals.  Filled with affirmation, I’d Know You Anywhere, My Love teaches children to dream big and remain confident that, whatever they aspire to be, they will be recognized and loved.

Getting Kids To Sleep

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Let’s Rhyme With Time (Kids Educational)

Has your child ever asked you what time it was when there was a large clock hanging nearby? Author Carmine Dapice believes that children are losing the ability to tell time on round clocks rather than digital.  A retired schoolteacher, Dapice wrote “Let’s Rhyme With Time” designed to teach children in school, at home or independently.

Dapice has created a book and included workbook with pages that contain catchy rhymes and illustrations synonymous with the Letter People – things children are already using in kindergarten.  So Carmine, do you have time for a little chat?

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Samantha- What inspired you to write the book?

Carmine Dapice- The writing of this long poem came by way of inspiration to write down my thoughts in poetic form, which I had already been doing for several years. It was later that the realization came to me that many kids were unable to tell time on regular, round clocks and it proved to be a problem for many since their orientation was toward digital clocks. The lively animated numbers and poetic form – hopefully – would attract their interest to numbered clocks that are still found in many areas of life.

S- Why do you feel children are losing this skill?

CD- Simply, ask several children in the age bracket of 5 years and up – even in later years to give the time from an analog numbered clock and you might be shocked with some of the results. My granddaughter was asked to give the time and even though an analog clock was present in that room, she had to walk into the next room to give the time from a digital clock. Now if that isn’t a strong motivation that a learning tool for analog clocks is necessary, what else would be! At the time, she was ten years old. It was sort of shocking to me.
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Starters & Sides: Made Easy Book Review

starters

 

“Starters & Side: Made Easy”  was provided to me for my review. All opinions are my own and I am being 100% honest. I am disclosing this in accordance to FTC Guidelines. Please see “Disclose” tab for more information.

Starters & Sides: Made Easy Promises “Favorite triple-tested recipes” that are easy to make. All the recipes are Kosher and include plating and serving suggestions. There is even a spice guide for those of you that are “spice shy”.

The Good:

I enjoyed the full color photos for nearly every recipe in the book. They looked appetizing and delicious. I also enjoyed the spice guide. I know quite a bit about spices and I am definitely not spice shy when it comes to cooking, but I enjoyed the in-depth explanation of each spice from peppers to types of salt. I also enjoyed the serving suggestions in the book as well as suggestions on how to make each dish a main dish rather than a side.
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The Anxious Traveler Author Interview

9/11  for most of us bring about old emotions, fears, and every single memory of where we were and what we did on that day 12 years ago.  Along with that for those of us that commute or travel, comes anxiety about traveling, multiplied as we all wonder with unease whether terrorists will try to commemorate this day with another attack.

Rita Anya Nara, author of the book The Anxious Traveler feels that we might be worried about another 9/11 attack from the skies in vain.  Rita- what makes you so sure?

 

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Samantha- What made you want to write this book?
Rita-
On February 22, 2013, I reached my ultimate travel dream, one I had harbored since I was five years old:  I reached the seventh and final continent on earth, Antarctica.  I had this emotional moment on the ship deck when I realized how far I’d come from cutting pictures of travel destinations out of National Geographic all weekend, and telling my doctor in 2001 that I’d never be able to go anywhere, ever.  And yet here I was, 38 countries, hundreds of challenges, and thousands of breakthroughs later.  I had the compelling need to share with others everything I had learned about how to travel successfully despite suffering from chronic anxiety.  I didn’t want to write a memoir – I wanted to lay out the dozens of strategies and approaches I’d discovered and observed about how to be a successful traveler, anywhere, with (or without) anyone, despite having an anxiety disorder or problems managing stress.  I had a lot of time inside my stateroom when it was too cold to go out on deck, so I started writing the Anxious Traveler.


S- Do you truly feel that 9/11 is the safest day to travel?  Or just to fly?
R-
I believe it’s the safest day of the year to fly in the U.S.


S- Why do you feel that way?
R-
Because of the vigilance of security officials at airports, the degree of attention paid to aircraft safety and air traffic on that day, and the unwavering and absolute determination of thousands of enforcement personnel around the country to avoid a repeat attack.  Passengers are also far more vigilant; most everyone is watching someone else.  They’re not leaving bags unattended to check their boarding time; they have an eye out for something “off”; and they’re on guard.  They’ve learned from 9/11 that tragedies happen when we’re least expecting them.

There are fewer flyers than normal just because of the number of people avoiding the date.  Fewer passengers means fewer distractions in airports and on planes, and often, time for more thorough screening checks.  Random post-security checks are much more frequent than normal, and by the time you get on the plane, you’ll probably feel incredibly relieved… and safe.


S- What first made you look at it as a safe day?
R-
Talking to security officials and airline representatives about what they go through every September to make sure there’s not a repeat attack on 9/11.   I could see the stress, confidence, and determination in their faces all at the same time.  They were the models of working through fear.  If it weren’t for them, airports would be ghost-towns on 9/11.  We’d have an annual travel shutdown day instead of an anniversary that commemorates our resilience.


S- Have you gotten hate mail since publishing The Anxious Traveler?
R-
I have gotten some snarks from bloggers that “headcases” and “nervous wrecks” should stay home for their own good (and to avoid being a “distraction” to others), but that’s all.  The overwhelming feedback I’ve gotten is that the book is very inspiring, and very informative.  It’s not my memoir; there’s not much about me beyond the first chapter.  It’s a true guidebook to help other anxious travelers plan a trip from A to Z – and then take it, and enjoy it.

As a society, we value overcoming personal obstacles and barriers to reach our full potential; this is a fundamental American belief.  It’s certainly something we want to teach our children.  Anxiety is something you can confront and manage in order to do what you want to do, and travel is a life-enriching way to overcome your fears in the real world instead of relying on only medication or behavioral therapy.  So I believe the message resonates with a great number of people, and in a very positive way. 

S- I have been to airports on 9/11- and you are right, it’s nearly impossible to move or fly, and I will never do it again for that reason.  Do you recommend traveling on that date?
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Enjoy some Soup! The Soupmaker’s Kitchen cookbook Review

 

I grew up in a large family, and we all know it’s not easy to shop or even cook for large families. We find ourselves eager and creative to put dinner together with what we have on hand. I have used this method after watching my mother do it when I was a child. One of my fondest memories was the soups she made, stews or gumbo. They were thick hearty and I really thought for the longest time she went out of her way to buy all this exotic food to create it all. Did she?

No. No my mother did what is shown in The Soupmaker’s Kitchen cookbook- a must for any family but I highly recommend it if you find yourself unsure of what you do with those left over scraps and items you don’t ‘have much of.  So you have a little of this and that, don’t think you can use it up? Wrong, don’t toss them, don’t ignore them –  Use them, all of them to make some wonderful soup! photo (1)

Green takes you through easy steps to stock up the pantry with items ( even small)  to create an entire heart warming soup with ease. Techniques on preparing, when you can sub frozen verses fresh and even how to make some flavors bursts are given throughout the book. Time savings tips, best used pots and other basic tools that will get you through soup season.
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