Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Paperback Rachael Ray Express Lane Meals: What to Keep on Hand, What to Buy Fresh for the Easiest-Ever 30-Minute Meals: A Cookbook Book

ISBN: 1400082552

ISBN13: 9781400082551

Rachael Ray Express Lane Meals: What to Keep on Hand, What to Buy Fresh for the Easiest-Ever 30-Minute Meals: A Cookbook

How can you get a wholesome, delicious dinner on the table without spending time on long lines at the supermarket? Rachael knows how Her secret weapon is keeping plenty of versatile, flavorful... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Like New

$5.29
Save $14.70!
List Price $19.99
Almost Gone, Only 4 Left!

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

great recipes, user-friendly layout

This book is fabulous for our busy life! R.R. not only presents fabulous meals/recipes (all of them 30 min. or less preparation, she provides a shopping list for each menu. The only thing I wish she would include (but doesn't) is the calorie/nutritional information for the recipes. Her portion sizes are large, and she uses a lot of olive oil, so it would be nice to be able to re-portion in accordance with my personal calorie needs. However, the food is so delicious my whole family loves everything I've tried so far!!

My new favorite cookbook

I am always surprised to hear people say they don't like Ray's books. I have most of them, and everything I have ever made has been wonderful. I am an "accomplished cook" like one of the other reviewers, but instead of finding the cookbook full of cute stuff, I find that it is the perfect antidote to my insanely hectic days as a teacher. (We don't get home at 3--just an aside!!) I bought the few items I didn't already have from the suggested "keep on hand" list, and even on the nights that I haven't planned ahead, I can make a quick, healthy, tasty meal using one of her recipes. And as for the "methods" Ray always talks about, they've saved my exhausted self on many a day--got some beans, pasta, broth/stock, a few spices, garlic and onions? Some veggies? You've got dinner! (In way less than 30 minutes.) While many of the recipes do take me a little longer than 30 minutes, most of them are right around that time. My problem is that I prep everything first, unlike Ray does. If you follow her recipes verbatim, you'll find that your times are close. (My knife skills aren't quite as quick, either.) My favorite recipe from the book so far would have to be the Eggplant/veggie stew. It was really rich and flavorful--my husband said he knew there wasn't, but it seemed like there was meat in it. I also loved the one pot spicy chicken and couscous recipe. As for some of the health concerns: I agree that occasionally Ray errs on the side of too much fat (oil, cheese, butter, oversized meat portions) but I adjust the recipes to what I know makes more sense: less of those, add more vegetables. And if you take them exactly as they are, they're still healthier than eating out, by a long shot. Ray is my go-to helper in the kitchen, and this is my favorite book so far. Easy, tasty, and quick.

The Holy Grail Cookbook I've Been Searching For

Anybody who juggles work/school with cooking for a family will understand what an absolute pain cookbook cooking can be. Many call for too many ingredients while not using all the ingredients (and not offering alternatives recipes that they you can follow to use up the leftover ingredients). When the quick-and-easy cooking shows and cookbooks started popping up, I resisted the urge to purchase them because, as I told my husband, "it's not how fast you can make it that counts, it's how many ingredients you have to use and buy that make it easy." Rachael Ray's addresses this issue, and this cookbook basically works off that theory. She includes a list of things to stock your pantry with (she suggests accumulating as you go instead of going out and getting everything on the list) and her recipes rely heavily on ingredients from the pantry list. Therefore, in theory, all you have to do is buy a few select items fresh from the grocery store. She makes identifying these items easy by noting all the things you need to purchase fresh in the upper right corner of each recipe; and, underneath it, she lists the pantry items so you can check to make sure you still have them on hand. This makes shopping so much easier and, for my family, is well worth the price of the book. The recipes themselves are separated into 3 sections: recipes requiring minimal fresh ingredients (or even none, since some can be made solely from pantry items) for days when you're very tired or short on time, more elaborate recipes, and one section that bridges the two for those who have a little more time but still don't want anything too complicated. From what I've seen and tried, the recipes are all simple and require very few gadgets and little technical skill. Rachael Ray's forte is making quick aned easy meals that taste like they took more time and effort to make without breaking the wallet. My husband likes that the recipes are user friendly (so he can take over dinner-duty every now and then) and I love that I can it's easy to coordinate meals and draft shopping lists with this book. This is a fantastic book for people who juggle work with home and don't want to compromise the quality of their food or their time and money. It's also a fantastic starter book for anybody who wants to start cooking more and wants to 1) know how to stock up a pantry and 2) know how to maximize that pantry.

Rachael does fast cooking with a sound new twist.

`Express Lane Meals' by Rachael Ray, the '30 Minute Meal' diva does `pantry cooking' right where almost everyone else gets some important part of this concept wrong. I always feel the need to justify my liking Rachael Ray's books and TV Show, since my personal taste in cooking runs to masters of the serious and elaborate recipes of Julia Child, Paula Wolfert, and Marcella Hazan. First, Rachael has a twist to her '30 Minute Meal' shows which I have seen no one else do. That is, like a printed recipe, Rachael starts by ticking off the ingredients she will need for her. Then, she gives more than the average information on how she preps and how to do it for the 30-minute meal objective. Second, Rachael uses very few gadgets and tricks in her prep work. I usually see no more than a very good Santoku knife, a microplane, some wooden spoons, a spatula and a vegetable peeler. She occasionally uses the food processor she rarely uses the microwave. To be sure, she uses a lot of pots and pans, but one would probably be able to do everything Rachael does with two large skillets, two large saute pans, an 8 or 12 quart stock pot, and a two burner grilling surface. Third, Rachael manages to carry out her 30-minute strategy with relatively few prepared products. And, one can always easily make your own versions of those prepared items such as stocks, salsas, and sauces if you wish. Fourth, Rachael rarely gets into the `weekend prep ahead' mode popular with some quick cooking advocates. I suspect that if you really have not much more than 30 minutes to cook on a Monday, your weekends are probably also pretty well booked up, so you don't really have much time to do 3 to 4 hours of prep work, labeling, and freezing. Fifth, I really believe that most of Rachael's recipes can be done within 30 minutes, IF you have good kitchen skills and a well organized kitchen and you can move around the kitchen quickly AND you know the recipe by heart. That's a lot of ifs, but if you are serious about good cooking quickly, these are things you must have. I have seen many cookbooks claim to present whole chapters of pantry only recipes, where every recipe includes at least one ingredient I, who cooks every day, would not imagine keeping in my pantry. Rachael solves that problem by billing her message in this book as how to shop and cook based on the two or three items you can buy quickly on the way home to supplement what you will have in your pantry. Rachael also avoids the stance that you must run out and buy all the things in her pantry list. She is much closer to the sage advice from Madhur Jaffrey who said that you build your pantry by buying what you need for each recipe. What Rachael's list gives you is the assurance that a particular pantry item such as capers or shallots is a genuinely useful thing to have around for recipes in her books. I have mixed feelings about Rachael's advice on the spice cabinet. I once read a distinctly minority opinion claiming that the

Too busy to cook or shop? Not any more!

"Rachael Ray is a very busy lady" - so says the back of Ray's new book, "Express Lane Meals". With a show on the Food Network, a slew of cookbooks and a recent magazine venture, you would think that she has no time left to write another book. But obviously, this wonder woman has found the time to do it again! This book is focused on those of us who come home from work, exhausted, but still want a good, quality meal on the table without a lot of fuss. In Express Lane Meals, Ray emphasizes that this can be done - with a well stocked pantry and freezer - plus a few simple ingredients that you can pick up at the store on your way home. The secret is this - about every two weeks (or less depending on your usage), you do a "big shop", where you buy all the staple pantry/freezer/fridge ingredients that you keep on hand(ex: eggs, Parmesan cheese, pasta, frozen corn, lemons, canned beans, etc.) and then, you combine these ingredients with a few fresh items - and presto - you have quick, delicious dinners faster than you can say checkout! The food is typical Ray fare: lots of pastas, some Tex-mex and Asain, plus plenty of Italian. The recipes are really nice and tasty with everything from Balsalmic Chicken with White Beans and Wilted Spinach to Thai-Style Grilled Beef in Broth with a Lot o' Noodles. Each recipe features the "Express Lane Shopping List" (what you need to pick up at the store) as well as a list of ingredients that you should have on hand from those 'big shop' days. This is a really handy feature and it helps you to be organized so that you are not caught without your necessities. The book is divided into three sections: Meals for the Exhausted, Meals for the Not Too Tired, Bring it On! This allows you to choose from super easy to more complicated meals. I also like the "Master List" for the big shop days - this gives a good idea of what a well stocked pantry should be. It certainly gave me a few ideas that I didn't think of! I would recommend this book for working moms, harried executives, busy families, college students or those of us who simply want a nice home cooked meal without a lot of fuss. You really can't go wrong with any of her books. Well done!
Copyright © 2024 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured