Warning: This is a no-holds-barred book of decadence. Do you keep unsalted butter in your freezer? Not afraid of a little saturated fat? Then indulge -- if you dare The recipes in Jeremy Jackson's Desserts That Have Killed Better Men Than Me pack a one-two butter-and-sugar punch. Have a lick of Snice Cream (that's Fresh Snow Ice Cream) or slurp down a Banana Smoothie. Chomp on Chocolate-Dipped Ranger Cookies or dive into a Chocolate Sinkhole. Just be prepared to defend your bounty. These desserts are so delicious that a food fight might start over the last piece of cake Don't be fooled by the simple ingredients and easy-to-follow directions. Jeremy's desserts are not to be taken lightly. They're not for the faint of heart -- or stomach. Danger lurks beneath that delectable layer of Chocolate Ganache. So suit up in a pair of elastic waist pants, arm yourself with a fork and a giant glass of milk, and prepare for battle. If you can survive Three-Lemon Cheesecake and My School Lunch Cream Puffs, you can probably handle the Peach Pie with Almond Crumb Topping. Polish that off and you just might be ready for the Hanging-Crust Rhubarb Cobbler. In the world of desserts, there is no room for mediocrity. Desserts That Have Killed Better Men Than Me has no filler or predictable, so-so recipes (and absolutely no almond bark ), just good, honest, and deadly delicious ones -- with plenty of heavy cream.
I love this little book! Who can resist the title? It's such fun to read and the results are fantastically good--it's like cooking with a friend who is a lot of fun and doesn't let you down in any way! The recipes are simple and delicious and, incidentally, withstand substitutions well: peaches instead of raspberries for the Raspberry Clafouti, English breakfast tea instead of Earl Grey for the Earl Grey Applesauce, lemon juice & zest for orange in the Slow-Roasted Pinapple Sauce. Cook one recipe everyday and invite your friends over--par-ty, par-ty, par-ty...!
Your wife will love you for these treats...
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
I saw an article in our local Iowa newspaper which featured this book and a couple of the recipes. The title piqued my curiosity, so I bought it. To date, I have made four of the desserts contained therein. None are particularly difficult or time consuming. The instructions are written in novel-like prose and are easy to follow. The flavors in the finished products range from brain-melting (Chocolate Sinkholes) to delightfully sublime (Earl Grey Applesauce). Amaze your family and friends, or create the perfect conclusion to a romantic meal with your spouse at home while the kids are away at Grandma's for the weekend.
So -- *Is* fruit a dessert. . . ?
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Chocolate-Dipped Ranger Cookies? Three-Lemon Cheesecake? Yikes! Rather than, as he says, produce a book with 1,000 recipes, of which only a couple of hundred are slightly better than average, Jackson, author of _The Cornbread Book,_ decided to limit himself to 60-odd lethel desserts, all of which are fantastic. Some of these are original (like Black Walnut and Dried Blueberry Tart, which is new to me, anyway, and which is now on my to-do list), some are variations on old standbys (like banana smoothies, or clafouti with raspberries instead of cherries), but all of them are at least interesting. The style is light and chatty but always informational, and there are some serious droolers in this little volume -- but I wish there were pictures.
Great Little Book of Largely Original, Easy Desserts
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
This little book by Jeremy Jackson is not quite perfect, but it's close.Jackson is a rare male culinary writer specializing on desserts who, unlike David Libovitz or Wayne Harley Brachman, is not a professional pastry chef. Not only does he simply write about dessert recipes, but he claims to write, in this book at least, exclusively about original recipes.The story of how this book came about makes perfect sense to anyone whose mind has wandered. When Jeremy was testing and tasting an interminable queue of cornbread recipes for his first cookbook, he was daydreaming of potential book titles. This one lit him up like the famous lightbulb over the head. The task was then to come up with recipes that deserved the title.By the author's count, the book contains sixty recipes. His objective is to avoid the situation he encounters with other cookbooks where a quarter of the recipes are good, a quarter of the recipes are so so, and half the recipes are filler. The challenge with these books is to find the recipes in the quarter of good recipes. While I suspect Jackson's estimate of average recipe quality may be just a bit more dismal than what we encounter among respectable authors, I think he has a point. The question about this book, then, is `Has Jeremy Jackson succeeded in publishing sixty original, better than average desserts?' As I suggest in my opening sentence, I believe the answer is `almost'.On the easier question of originality, the very simple answer is that not all recipes are original, by the author's on admission. The very first recipe in the last chapter of nine `Basic Recipes' is attributed to the very good book by David Libovitz, `Room for Dessert'. I suspect that there is also not a lot of originality in the remaining eight basic recipes or their variations. People have been making pate sucree, pate brisee, and ganache for centuries. I doubt the author has anything startling to tell us about these. Several dessert recipes also have the look of being only small variations on well-known classics. The first traditional title which catches my eye is the Apple Galette.In spite of the appearance of a few standards, I do believe that the majority of the recipes in the book deserve the label of `original'. I say this with the understanding that I have not read every dessert book ever written, so some of these recipes may be variations on recipes as old as Monsieur Careme himself. I will only say that the recipes which strike me as original seem, at the very least, to not be the product of the imaginary computer program the author concocts to visualize how many recipes in large cookbooks may be created.The very first recipe in the first chapter on fruits immediately catches my attention as a very clever adaptation of the savory cooking en papillote to the construction of a delightfully surprising dish. The very next recipe gives us an Earl Grey applesauce recipe which I suspect never crossed the minds of the Pennsylvania Dutch who spent so mu
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