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Hardcover Fresh Every Day: More Great Recipes from Foster's Market: A Cookbook Book

ISBN: 1400052858

ISBN13: 9781400052851

Fresh Every Day: More Great Recipes from Foster's Market: A Cookbook

Fresh. Flavorful. Unpretentious. Food this good doesn't need much of an introduction, and the inspired, down-home fare served at Foster's Market speaks for itself . . . and keeps the locals coming... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

My favorite cookbook

I purchased this cookbook when it was released this past summer, and so far I've made over 25 of the recipes, and everything has been amazing! I started with the summer recipes, of course, and several-the grilled chicken, salmon, salsas, and gilled pork chops-became weekly favorites. I've now tried some of the fall and winter recipes, and again, many have become standards, such as the pot roast,the braised salmon, and many of the vegetable recipes. What I like most about this book is that is works well for weekday cooking as well as entertaining. I think I made the herb-marinated grilled turkey breast with the corn and sugar snap pea salad about 4 times for casual dinner parties this summer. The other thing that makes this book really worthwhile is that the author takes everyday dishes and adds a different twist. I tried the smashed green peas, for example, and they were delicious, yet so easy I was kicking myself for not thinking of it on my own! Same thing with the roasted mushrooms with green peas and tomatoes (I substituted green beans)--standard vegetables put together in a unique combination. For these reasons-along with the fact that everything (including the 2 desserts I've made)--has turned out perfectly on the first try-I highly recommend this book. You will find interesting, unique twists on old favorites, and, I guarantee you will turn to it for everyday cooking as well as casual entertaining.

up there with Joy of Cooking

Everything I have made from this book has been a hit. From fridge pickles to minestrone soup, this book makes everything so easy. Nothing in here is unapproachable. So, if you are a little nervous in the kitchen - don't worry - you'll be fine.

Sara Foster's "Fresh Every Day" is great every day!

Fresh Every Day looks great (cool design, including fresh, foody colors), has great recipes and includes great tips and techniques. My fave recipe thus far is Roasted Asparagus Soup. Includes ingredients that were unexpected but which MADE the recipe! I've really enjoyed even just flipping through the book b/c it includes "tricks of my trade," "about..." and "basics" - which are all little tips that I can use for these recipes or any others. The tips have helped me extend my kitchen, you might say! I also really love the fact that Sara Foster encourages experimentation - she encourages you to throw this or that into a recipe - to be brave and bold, making a recipe your own (and maybe even tastier!). This is not one of those cookbooks that stays around the corner on a shelf in the Keeping Room; it's one of my 2-3 faves that stays on a handy shelf in the kitchen next to the stove.

Great Blend of Old and New South Tastes

Fresh Every Day educates the adventurous novice cook and challenges those of us with years of experience in the kitchen. Both will appreciate Sara Foster's well-organized, straightforward style and plentiful tips. Each section incorporates mini-lessons that cover elementary info -- using a meat thermometer, making pie crust, cooking fish -- as well as more advanced topics -- roasting garlic, making risotto, frying sage. Looking for traditional Southern favorites? You'll find Creamy Cheesy Corn Grits, Angel Biscuits, and Molasses Sweet Potato Pie. Something more contemporary? Try the Spicy Pad Thai Salad, Pan-Seared Scallops with Citrus Tarragon Butter, or Individual Tiramisu. After Fresh arrived in the mail, I spent my spare hours browsing the pages, becoming acquainted with Foster's home cooking with a sophisticated twist. Plenty of large, yummy photos capture the taste and texture of the recipes: fried green tomatoes coated with crunchy cornmeal; slivers of parmesan and proscuitto glistening with homemade vinaigrette; a chunk of glazed pork sliced from a baby back rib; roasted pears resting in a golden sea of syrup. Fresh Every Day passed my shopping simplicity test. Once I chose several recipes and created my grocery list, I had no problem finding the simple, fresh ingredients at just one store, and thankfully the recipes required no new culinary equipment. Foster uses plenty of fresh herbs so I'd suggest planting pots filled with rosemary, basil, sage, and mint to avoid paying several dollars each for the small packages found in grocery stores. Blue Heaven Smoothie, packed with fruit, a hint of cinnamon plus a tablespoon of honey, is refreshing and tart. Pickled Shrimp are perfect appetizers for picnics and tailgating. My daughter begged for the leftovers. Roasted plum tomatoes, garlic cloves, and quartered onions give Roasted Tomato Sauce with Basil its distinctly rich flavor. I froze the sauce for a meal I'm planning in a few weeks. Slow-Roasted Pork Shoulder was my pick from the chapter, Meals That Cook Themselves. Before serving it, I couldn't resist munching several crispy outer cuts. Apple and Avocado Salad with Fresh Mint and Lime is a delightfully tart contrast to the pork. I substituted slices of my favorite Asiago cheese for the feta and it worked well with the tangy dressing. Eastern peaches are abundant and cheap right now so I rounded out the meal with Roasted Peach Halves with Crumb Topping. Remember to pick up the vanilla ice cream. I didn't. Fresh Every Day makes a lovely gift. My only quibble is the delicate dust jacket. Please give me a sturdy one so I can protect this nouveau Southern cooking treasure!

Nouveau Southern with Chipotle. Better than the First Book

`Fresh Every Day, More Great Recipes from Foster's Market' is Sara Foster's second book in about three years, with a new co-author, Carolynn Carreno, a co-author of the very good New York City bistro / bakery book, `Once Upon a Tart'. Whether it is from the change in collaborator or some other reason, Ms. Foster has succeeded in giving us a book which is not only better than her first, but it is better than books from her nearest competitors, Paula Deen and fellow Martha Stewart alum, Ina Garten. While Deen gives us very good renditions of classic Southern dishes, Ms. Foster and her allies have done a `fusion Southern' cuisine which has all the charm of the original models with maybe just a little less fat and a little more flavor. Compared to fellow caterer, Ms. Garten of Long Island, Ms. Foster gives us much more bang for our $35. I have always thought Ms. Garten's books are just a tad overpriced for their content. Sara Foster has delivered a lot more content, and more interesting content, for the same price. While it took a fair amount of careful reading before I gave Sara's first book my five stars, my visceral pleasure with this book kicked in almost immediately, which is a sure sign that this is a quality cookbook. Very good and very bad books usually show their colors in the first few pages. When you have to look for the good stuff, it is surely an average book. The book has just a slightly different focus than the first book, in that it covers a lot of things Ms. Foster cooks at home for her family and dishes she demonstrates when she is doing book tours and cooking classes. For starters, I always give high marks to books with good breakfast recipes. For every decent book on breakfast dishes, there are fifty or more on desserts, so, we are always in need of more and better breakfast dishes. None of the recipes are really unusual, but that isn't what you want from a rural milieu caterer. You can get the fancy breakfasts from The Plaza and the Hiltons. The scrambled egg recipe(s) are a fine sample of what Ms. Foster and company do so well in this book. She gives the basic technique that is effective, but simple. No James Beard water bath cooking for 40 minutes here. Then, she gives us six different variations plus the courage to throw in most different kinds of odds and ends leftovers from the fridge. I thought the following page with breakfast tortilla recipes goes a long way to showing how far Mexican cuisine has influenced our cooking in that Ms. Foster uses the terms chipotle, burrito, quesadilla, and enchilada with no explanation of what they mean and really assumes the reader will have no problems following an instruction to `fold it like a burrito'. Later in this chapter, chipotle finds its way into several different recipes. The chapter also covers such essential subjects as grits, smoothies, biscuits, muffins, and granola. The next chapter is `Simple Soups' which opens with a sidebar on soup making which has almost as many spi
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