Recipes from Home - Hardcover

Page, David; Shinn, Barbara

 
9781885183996: Recipes from Home

Inhaltsangabe

There's no place like Home, a tiny restaurant nestled in New York's Greenwich Village. Known for an inviting mix of midwestern hospitality, great home cooking, and a taste for fresh flavours, Home has been praised as "everything you could hope for" (Food & Wine) and "remarkably pleasing" (Gael Greene). Here, from the husband-and-wife team behind Home, are more than 200 recipes for new home cooking, which elevate iconic American favorites to new heights and rekindle the best taste memories from childhood. From sage cornbread to sour cream pancakes, lobster kebabs, spiced pork chops, and Home's infamous chocolate pudding, these are cozy recipes with a gourmet twist, reflecting what David Page calls "American neighborhood cuisine".

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Recipes from Home is an unabashed ode to American cooking--a phrase defined years ago by James Beard, the dean of American cookery, as anything you eat at home. This simple thought has guided the life and work of authors David Page and Barbara Shinnm whose long-awaited first book offers 255 home-inspired recipes and timeless memories straight out of their mothers' and grandmothers' kitchens, all deliciously reinvented for today.

Home cooking is perhaps a culinary paradox. Everyone has memories of Mom's cooking, but not everyone is eager to revisit the dry meatloaf and limp green beans of their youths. With the deft hand of David, the chef, husband, and co-owner with Barbara of Greenwich Village's beloved Home Restaurant, the food you remember from Mom has grown up. Tater Tots have evolved into cornmeal-crusted Garlic Potato Cakes. Iceberg lettuce pales when Warm Frisee Salad with Blue Cheese and Apples is brought to the table. Even crisp skillet-fried chicken gets a lift served with a garlicky olive gravy.

David and Barbara's own cooking has roots in their midwestern upbringings (he's from Wisconsin and she's from Ohio) and the wonderful extended families who shared their stories and their secrets. It stems too from the couple's travels along the backroads and into the cities, farms, and waters of America, where they dallied at fish fries and pork pulls, fireman's picnics and Fourth of July barbecues, and any festival that featured strawberries or oysters. However, nothing taught them more about cooking, they say, than the "simple bounty of the land."

Recipes such as Bay Scallop Chowder with Sweet Cream, Garlic Greens, The Simplest Tomato Salad, Baked Spring Flounder, Lemon-Orange Rice, and Smoked Duck Breasts capitalize on America's rich abundance of seasonal produce and local ingredients and celebrate the essence of real home cooking.

Dozens of treasured photographs of Thanksgiving dinners, backyard barbecues, summers at the shore--photos so recognizable that you'd think they came out of your own family's scrapbooks--accompany more American classics: scalloped potatoes, roast turkey, macaroni and cheese, chocolate pudding, and strawberry shortcake. Nor are good old-fashioned food arts forgotten. You'll find scores of slaws, relishes and pickles, jams and jellies, even homemade sausage, barbecue sauce, mustards, and their Famous Tomato Ketchup (the only kind served at Home Restaurant).

Since 1993, Home Restaurant has attracted an eclectic following of native New Yorkers and homesick out-of-towners who line up outside for meals that have the power to rekindle memories of good cooking, warmth, lively conversation. With Recipes from Home, David and Barbara, the new apostles of home cooking, invite you to come to the table and experience again the flavors and feelings of home.

Aus dem Klappentext

Recipes from Home is an unabashed ode to American cooking--a phrase defined years ago by James Beard, the dean of American cookery, as anything you eat at home. This simple thought has guided the life and work of authors David Page and Barbara Shinnm whose long-awaited first book offers 255 home-inspired recipes and timeless memories straight out of their mothers' and grandmothers' kitchens, all deliciously reinvented for today.

Home cooking is perhaps a culinary paradox. Everyone has memories of Mom's cooking, but not everyone is eager to revisit the dry meatloaf and limp green beans of their youths. With the deft hand of David, the chef, husband, and co-owner with Barbara of Greenwich Village's beloved Home Restaurant, the food you remember from Mom has grown up. Tater Tots have evolved into cornmeal-crusted Garlic Potato Cakes. Iceberg lettuce pales when Warm Frisee Salad with Blue Cheese and Apples is brought to the table. Even crisp skillet-fried chicken gets a lift served with a garlicky olive gravy.

David and Barbara's own cooking has roots in their midwestern upbringings (he's from Wisconsin and she's from Ohio) and the wonderful extended families who shared their stories and their secrets. It stems too from the couple's travels along the backroads and into the cities, farms, and waters of America, where they dallied at fish fries and pork pulls, fireman's picnics and Fourth of July barbecues, and any festival that featured strawberries or oysters. However, nothing taught them more about cooking, they say, than the "simple bounty of the land."

Recipes such as Bay Scallop Chowder with Sweet Cream, Garlic Greens, The Simplest Tomato Salad, Baked Spring Flounder, Lemon-Orange Rice, and Smoked Duck Breasts capitalize on America's rich abundance of seasonal produce and local ingredients and celebrate the essence of real home cooking.

Dozens of treasured photographs of Thanksgiving dinners, backyard barbecues, summers at the shore--photos so recognizable that you'd think they came out of your own family's scrapbooks--accompany more American classics: scalloped potatoes, roast turkey, macaroni and cheese, chocolate pudding, and strawberry shortcake. Nor are good old-fashioned food arts forgotten. You'll find scores of slaws, relishes and pickles, jams and jellies, even homemade sausage, barbecue sauce, mustards, and their Famous Tomato Ketchup (the only kind served at Home Restaurant).

Since 1993, Home Restaurant has attracted an eclectic following of native New Yorkers and homesick out-of-towners who line up outside for meals that have the power to rekindle memories of good cooking, warmth, lively conversation. With Recipes from Home, David and Barbara, the new apostles of home cooking, invite you to come to the table and experience again the flavors and feelings of home.

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Clam and Sweet Corn Chowder

Every year at the chowder contest in Greenport, Long Island, we are saddened to note that there are fewer New England-style white chowders entered in the contest. We are both white chowder fans, and we make ours with littlenecks, one of the smallest of the hard-shell clams, which are usually under two inches across. Be sure they are alive when you buy them; their shells should be closed tightly. Use them the same day you purchase them.

5 slices bacon, diced (1/4-inch dice)

1 small yellow onion, cut into 1/4-inch dice

1 medium leek, cut into 1/4-inch dice

3 ribs celery, cut into 1/4-inch dice

2 garlic cloves, minced

1 fresh bay leaf

3 fresh thyme sprigs

4 cups Vegetable-Corn Stock (page 63)

3 ears sweet corn, kernels cut off the cobs (see Note)

3 cups peeled and diced white potatoes (1/2-inch dice)

36 littleneck clams, shucked and chopped, or 2 (8-ounce) jars chopped clams, drained

1 cup heavy cream

Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley

2 teaspoons paprika

Cook the bacon in a large soup pot over medium heat until crisp. Pour off all but 2 tablespoons of the fat and add the onions, leeks, celery, garlic, and bay leaf to the pot. Continue to cook over medium heat until the vegetables are softened, 4 to 5 minutes. Add the thyme, stock, corn, and potatoes and simmer until the potatoes are tender, 7 to 10 minutes.

Add the clams and cream and simmer until the clams are warmed through, 2 to 3 minutes. Season with salt and pepper. Ladle the hot soup into bowls and garnish with the parsley and paprika.

SERVES 6.

Note: If you don't have the stock on hand, reserve the corn cobs for making it.

Simply Roasted Chicken

We roast our chickens at a high temperature to give them crackling-crisp skin and deep flavor. We have found that placing the bird on a roasting rack allows the heat to surround it and brown it evenly.

1 chicken, about 3 1/2 pounds

1/2 lemon, cut in half

Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

1 fresh thyme sprig

1 fresh rosemary sprig

10 large fresh basil leaves

Preheat the oven to 450 degrees F.

Rub the inside of the bird with the cut lemon. Season inside and out with salt and pepper. Drop the herbs into the cavity of the bird and tie the bony ends of the legs together, covering the opening of the cavity. Twist the wing tips behind the thick part of the wings.

Place the bird on a roasting rack on a baking sheet. Roast until the skin is golden and crackling crisp, 35 to 40 minutes. Reduce the oven temperature to 350 degrees F and roast the bird for 25 to 30 minutes longer. Test the doneness of the bird by piercing the thickest part of the thigh with a thin-bladed knife. The juices should run clear. Transfer the bird to a cutting board and let rest for 10 to 15 minutes before carving.

SERVES 2 to 3.

Chocolate-Cherry Chunk Cookies

The cookie version of chocolate-covered cherries.

5 ounces semisweet chocolate, coarsely chopped

3 cups all-purpose flour

1 1/2 cups unsweetened cocoa powder

2 teaspoons cream of tartar

1/2 teaspoon baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

12 tablespoons (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened

1 1/4 cups granulated sugar

3/4 cup (packed) light brown sugar

3 large eggs

1/2 cup dried cherries

1/2 cup white chocolate chips

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

Melt the chocolate in a double boiler over hot, not simmering, water. Set aside.

Sift together the flour, cocoa powder, cream of tartar, baking powder, and salt into a medium bowl.

In a large bowl, using an electric mixer, beat together the butter and both sugars on medium-high speed until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes. Gradually beat in the melted chocolate. Beat in the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. On low speed, beat in the flour. Stir in the cherries and chips. The dough will be stiff.

Form the dough into golf-ball-size portions, flatten them between your palms, and place 1 inch apart on ungreased cookie sheets. Bake until the centers of the cookies are set, about 15 minutes. Cool on the cookie sheets on wire racks.

MAKES 36 COOKIES

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