The New Orleans Cookbook
F**G
Great vintage Cookbook
Wonderful vintage NOLA cookbook. Very good condition.
L**U
The best! If you only have one New Orleans Cookbook this is IT!
Excellent cookbook. The authors were the "Underground Gourmet" , annonymous food critics for the "Times Picayune" paper in New Orleans through the 60's and 70's. They were closely acquainted with every local restaurant and owner from the finest to the small and little known local haunts and worked on this book, experimenting at home for 12 years.It is EXCELLENT. The recipes are simple and very typically local. I haven't cooked anything from it that is a miss.I cook a lot and I always make changes (drop salt, substitute chicken or vegetable broth for water (plenty salty by the time it reduces!), and double and triple up on the spice to nearly everything I cook, and I normally work from multiple recipes), but even cooking straight from the recipes here you won't miss. They are all well tested, not unnecessarily complex, and trial by trail, I've found that the recipes here are more consistently a hit a higher percentage of times than most any cookbook I've ever tried.The sauce picaunte recipe (otherwise known as Shrimp Creole) is an old recipe from the 1800's and is great. There's a good rich etouffee recipe.There are a number of good gumbos...Mix them and add the ingredients you like! The braised pears on icecream dessert is easy to prep, quick to prepare after dinner and will WOW your guests (You can substitute Le Courvoissier.)
C**W
MUST HAVE cookbook for New Orleans Food.
This book is an absolute MUST HAVE if you want to learn how to cook New Orleans food correctly and authentically.
K**E
Old school recipes
Classic New Orleans recipes. Many that you don't easily find anymore, even in New Orleans. The book is plain, but worth having if you only care about the cooking and the food
T**5
The New Orleans Cookbook
I purchased the paperback version of this book and I don't like how difficult it is to use. The commentaries, while informational, are not very well-written. However, the recipes are well-written, concise, and easy to understand. As a cookbook there are a number of traditional and popular recipes. Included are variations for some of these recipes. Another thing I didn't like, was that the information is scattered throughout the book. While it was fairly easy to find, it was hardship to keep flipping between pages, because of the way the book is bound. While the aesthetics of the book present awkwardness, the recipes are excellently written. The recipes in the chicken chapter look killer and I can't wait to try the Chicken Fricassee and the Chicken Pontalba.The Dirty Rice recipe is delicious. I love how the recipes are organized. I am a passionate cook. Overall this cookbook is one that I would recommend. However, I think if I ever purchase this as a gift, I will invest in a hardbound edition. Perhaps it won't be so awkward to use.
N**7
Wonderful dive into Louisiana cooking
My mother had the original version of this she received as a wedding gift. 50 years later, it still is a great book! Filled with recipes and a brief story of the categories of dish, this is a must have for any fan of Cajun cooking.From Appetizers, to snacks, entrees, to desserts... this is a GREAT south Louisiana/Cajun cookbook!(Thanks Amazon for helping me replace a priceless book with a gently used version!)
T**.
real good book in very good condition and a very low price
has a lot of recipes that I am going to make. very good transaction overall
A**E
My favorite Louisiana cookbook
As a native of Louisiana no longer living in the Bayou State, I often have an "envie" (that's cajun dialect for "yearning") for the food I grew up with. I got my first copy of this book in 1975 and have cooked with it ever since. It is particularly strong on the classic New Orleans recipes--oysters rockefeller, trout veronique, Bananas Foster--but also covers some basic stuff like how to make a good Bechamel sauce, hollandaise.It is also quite good at Cajun cooking. Most people outside of Louisiana think you can make anything "Cajun" by dousing it with Tabasco--not so. It's a far subtler cuisine than that, generally no spicier than Szechuan and certainly less spicy than Thai. The recipes for Chicken & Sausage Gumbo, Chicken Macquechoux, and similar stuff have been used so often the pages are sticky with spatterings of oil and roux.I prefer this GREATLY to Paul Prudhomme's book. (I have both and rarely use Paul's.) If you are interested in a strictly Cajun cookbook and not in something which has New Orleans cuisine, I might recommend Justin Wilson's Homegrown Louisiana Cooking. Still, The New Orleans Cookbook is by far my most-used Louisiana cookbook, and one of the most used cookbooks in my kitchen
C**S
Wide variety of recipes
Christmas gift for my son. He loves it lots of recipes to choose from.
C**N
Cucina creola
Bel libro, non molte foto, ma le ricette sono molto gustose.
L**E
Five Stars
Look very good
M**.
Excellent product.
It has all the major southern recipes. I am very satisfied .
E**A
Five Stars
They look like difficult recipes but truly New Orleans ones
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