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Vegetarian Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Vegetarian
Red, White, and Greens: The Italian Way with Vegetables
Published in Paperback by William Morrow Cookbooks (1999-05-01)
Author: Faith Willinger
List price: $15.00
Used price: $7.95

Average review score:

One of my favorites
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-09
There are plenty of things here I'd never try--making French Fries with Extra-Virgin Olive oil, for instance.

And to some extent, this books works as a reader better than a kitchen companion.

But when one of the people at a regular potluck dinner declared eggplant to be her favorite vegetable, I brought makings for the extraordinary, and extraordinarily simple grilled eggplant the next time. I didn't take any home, either. I did spend a fair amount of time at the stove with the grill pan. Next time, I think I'll bring the BIG griddle.

I may start some Tuscan style chard this fall so I can do some of those recipes.

Great Cookbook!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-02
This one is a real winner - one of my personal favorites. You won't be disappointed - the writer knows her stuff!

Lots of Facts and Recipes, but not essential.
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-25
`Red, White & Greens' is on `The Italian Way with Vegetables' by one of the leading distaff Anglo-Saxon interpreters of Italian cuisine, Faith Willinger, who joins Joyce Goldstein, Lynne Rosetto Kasper, Nancy Harmon Jenkins, and Claudia Roden in the very demanding footsteps of Elizabeth David in providing us with an understanding of Italian cuisine.

Unlike many of the superb books by the likes of Marcella Hazan and Lydia Bastianich, these authors, like David, want to go behind the recipes and give us some feel for the analysis, history, geography, botany, and culture of Italian cuisine. Ms. Willinger in this book is focusing on vegetables in a way that is somewhat different from her closest competitor, Jack Bishop, with his book, `The Complete ItalianVegetarian Cookbook'. And, before I go any further, if all you want is Italian recipes with vegetables, then Bishop's book will definitely give you more of what you want than Ms. Willinger's older and shorter volume.

When I started in on Ms. Willinger's book, I quickly became wary of her statement that the Italians like vegetables because they taste good. Almost every authority I have read on the matter, including some which go back to Renaissance cooking, are pretty clear on the fact that Italians like vegetables because they were poor and so many good vegetables could be gathered from the wild.

As I was docking the author for her faulty history, I largely gave her back most of her points when I saw how she treated her subject once we got into the individual vegetables. Unlike Mr. Bishop who organizes his recipes by type of dish, Ms. Willinger treats each of her nineteen headline vegetables in a separate chapter. Note that while there are only nineteen chapters, many more species are discussed. The chapter on artichokes, for example, also deals with cardoons and there is but one chapter on all of mushrooms.

The selection of recipes is not meant to be complete or even a selection of the most popular dishes. The chapter on artichokes, for example, does not include the famous `carciofi alla giudea' of Rome. In fact, most of the recipes are identified with the name of the individual from whom Ms. Willinger cribbed the procedure.

This book is a bit of a lightweight compared to many, but it has a lot of historical and botanical information you may not find elsewhere. It is an excellent addition to any library on Italian cuisine, but if you have Elizabeth Schneider's `Vegetables from Amaranth to Zucchini' and Jack Bishop's book, you will probably not miss this volume.

A Great Resource For The Italian Cook
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-21
While living in Italy, I learned to appreciate the Italian way of cooking vegetables which combined fresh ingredients with simple preparations, creating amazing results, and Faith Willinger's book on Italian vegetables is packed full of these types of recipes. As the host of my own Italian cuisine website Italian Food Forever, I love to prepare vegetables in the Italian manner, and this book has become a great resource for me. Each chapter highlights a vegetable, with a little history of each thrown in with great recipes. If you like vegetables, you'll enjoy this book.

The Simple Things!!!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-08
Anyone that knows the Cooking talent of this woman KNOWS that her recipes are wonderfully simple and easy to prep. This to me makes cooking so much more fun than a 25 step recipe with less than satisfactory results. "Sometimes.. the simple things are the best things" So is true with Faith and her way of working with food. Great food with ease !!! Always a wonderful treat for the eyes...nose..and mouth when I cook one of her recipes! She is a true Diva or her art. Luv Ya FAITH!!!

Vegetarian
Still Life With Menu Cookbook
Published in Paperback by Ten Speed Press (1994-10)
Author: Mollie Katzen
List price: $19.95
New price: $9.92
Used price: $2.73
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

Hit or Miss?
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-18
My mother-in-law gave me this cookbook and I was anxious to try out some of the recipes to show my appreciation for the gift. However, many of the recipes seem overly exotic to me - and I am used to a wide variety of international cuisines. It seems to me that perhaps the author has sacrificed authenticity on the altar of innovation. I most recently attempted the banana cheese empanadas, despite my initial misgivings at the absence of fat in the dough. This is the first time I've seen a recipe for empanadas in which the dough consists of only flour and water. Needless to say, it was tough and flavourless. I have not had much more luck with the other recipes I tried, either. What I find especially irritating is the author's decision not to include photographs of finished dishes or diagrams of cooking techniques, but to showcase her own original, and completely irrelevant, artwork.

Looking for something different to cook tonight?
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-02
This is one of my favorite cookbooks. I'm a bit of a cookbook addict and tend to buy lots of them, then when I realize I never actually COOK anything out of a book, I get rid of it. This one, on the other hand, is off the shelf nearly every week, it's ripped, it's dirty, it has lots of food stains on it because I use it so often.
Some of the recipes are true breathtakers. The Thai appetizer is amazing. And the seeded tomato soup. Lots and lots of yummy things here. She has a whole section on "quick and easy." And I can always find something that I have the ingredients on hand for.
Mollie writes great introductions to the recipes, so you always know what you're getting into with each one.

An excellent gourmet vegetarian cookbook
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-11
Just shy of 400 pages this is a gem of a cook book.What I appreciate about the book is it is laid out as meals. Of course you can make one item or all or mix and match and combine with family favorites you already have.

On page 17 the author has a "How To Use This Book" section where she reminds the reader that sometimes it is when we do not follow a recipe so closely that we learn to love cooking.

Now I will probably sound a tad snobbish so forgive me , but I think this is a cookbook that will appeal to people who are well traveled, very curious about food, willing to try new things and probably educated and upscale. I say this because the person who likes what is called "All American" meat and potato and high fat and unhealthy food will probably be lost here.

We live in California where we have a year round bounty of the best fruits and vegetables so this is an easy to use book as far as ingredients go. And we loved the Roasted Red Peppers with Garlic and Lime on page 56, the Strawberry Meringue Pie on page 85 the Chinese Vegetable Soup on page 89 the Greek Stuffed Eggplant with Bechamel Sauce on page 151 the Southwest Salad with Black Beans and Corn on page 178 the Yellow Split Pea Dal on page 191 oh and the Spinach Roll Ups with Lime Chutney. We love Indian food!!

My husband would live in Tuscany if he had his way I would choose the south east area of rural France, so he loved the Linguine with Quick Tuscan Tomato Sauce on page 239 and the Pasta with Marinated Vegetables like roasted peppers, artichoke hearts tomato mushroom and olives. Not canned olives but the luscious oil cured type you find in Italy and Greece.

On page 331 she has Week-Long Menu Planning Guide where she lays out everything you will need to aquaria as well as some encouraging words about how to combine and end up with great leftovers. And like all her wonderful books she did all the paintings. The recipes are easy to follow as well.

Timeless
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-30
I bought this book over 20 years ago, when my best friend became a vegetarian and I wanted to cook meals that we could share. I have 3 of Mollie's books; starting with the Enchanted Brocoli Forest (which to me, is the best) I bought this one after I had run through almost all of Brocoli Forest, and loved the recipes there. Still life is a bit more refined, as she lays out menus; paints a picture, or landscape with food. I have, over the years bought many other vegetarian cookbooks, but this book, along with the other two mentioned above, are classics, and present meals easy to prepare and ones which almost all meat-eaters find equally appealing. I high recommend this book for anyone just starting out on the vegetarian way of life, as well as for established vegetarians, or those who want to eat in a more healthy way. This is a very practical cookbook.

best book ever
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-31
make everything-- especially the ginger snaps and chocolate chip mint cookies. worth every penny. nice art too!

Vegetarian
Teany Book: Stories, Food, Romance, Cartoons and, of Course, Tea
Published in Paperback by Studio (2005-03-24)
Authors: Moby and Kelly Tisdale
List price: $16.95
New price: $1.12
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $39.99

Average review score:

A book to dream about.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-12
I'm not a fan of Moby's music, but I am a fan of tea and vegetarian food. Even if this book sometimes looks like a huge advertisement leaflet for teany, it also has really useful information and recipes that may or may not involve tea, but that are really good. When I read the one for Pan Bagna, I actually dreamt I was eating Pan Bagna that night! That's how yummy everything is! And I've already bought online a large amount of teas that come in the book. Can't wait to get them and do drink recipes with them, like lavender lemonade. Oh the luxury! If you are lucky enough to live in New York City, go pay teany a visit.

Great little book!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-02
I loved this book, my only complaint...it should have been longer. It was funny, interesting and informative. I've been a vegetarian for 5 years so alot of the recipes were familar but the desserts were mostly new to me. Like a review posted earlier said, it's hard to classify this book. A little history, recipes, humor and Moby background...equals an entertaining book.

Good recipes and ideas-- makes a great gift, too!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-25
If you are stuck for something to give someone in your life who might be vegetarian/vegan, tea-totaler or just enjoys collecting unique cookbooks, look no further. Written by DJ Moby and the manager of his restarant, "Teany", this book shares insights about living an eco-friendly life with some tasty receipes. I made several of the them; they were not complicated or expensive and turned out great.

Very Entertaining and Good Recipies too!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-12
I'm a bit biased because I've always been a Moby fan. I believe, though, that anyone who buys this book will enjoy it. Moby has a great sense of humor and it really comes through in this book. From hangover cures to general ramblings about everyday life, there's something for everyone.

As a tea enthusiast, I thought that I knew as much as you could know about the stuff. Wrong! I learned a great deal about different kinds of tea and how you should prepare them. There's also some info on how to use tea/tea bags as remedies for different ailments.

The recipies are great. The Cashew Nut Butter sandwich is tasty and Moby's mom has a good burrito recipie in the book as well. I'm not a vegetarian and I liked the way that it wasn't "shoved" down your throat (as some of my friends have done). There were also hints on how to change some of the recipies to suit your meat loving friends.

An interesting look at tea, but it's not my cuppa either.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-13
This was a book that I really wanted to like, but I found the entire premise and content a little too 'precious' for my tastes. As a devoted tea drinker, I was hoping to find some new ideas for what to serve up to go with my afternoon break -- instead, while some of the stories and touches of humor are funny, the ingredients were just a bit too odd for me to contemplate. Too, the book gets overly cute in spots, and while I do admire the author's stand on vegantarism, his self-effacing manner really begins to grate after about the fifth time that he mentions that he's trying not to be self-promoting. Hm-hmmm -- and what about that big sticker on the cover informing me of the latest cd release? It's nice for a once through, but I won't be adding it to my pernament collection.

Vegetarian
The Vegetarian Grill: 200 Recipes for Inspired Flame-Kissed Meals
Published in Hardcover by Harvard Common Press (1998-05)
Author: Andrea Chesman
List price: $29.95
Used price: $4.85

Average review score:

Great book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-13
Love this book. It is not only full of a variety of great recipes but it has useful tips and suggestions as well. My husband thought he was going to have to do away with the grill when I switched to a vegetarian lifestyle. This book has shown him that there is more to grilling than just using it for meat.

Buy this book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-27
If you enjoy grilling and vegetables, you must have this cookbook. I used it at least 3 times a week all summer long, and I liked it so much I've been buying copies for other people every time I get a chance.

I have never tried a recipe that let me down. Everything has been delicious and fairly easy to make. The author does a good job of explaining what to look for as you're grilling, so it's rare for me to have something over or under cooked. Every recipe is interesting enough to be tasty, but not so outlandish that it would be out of place at an average American backyard barbecue.

There are a few recipes where the author suggests using chicken or vegetable broth, as other reviewers have mentioned. Maybe they'd be happier if the title was "The Vegetable Grill" instead? I'm not too worked up about it. This is a solid cookbook, and it definitely fills a niche that was open for far too long.

The author recommends buying either a flat grill pan or a grill wok. I bought both and have only used the wok once or twice. I would recommend to other readers to buy the grill pan along with the cookbook and skip the wok entirely.

Vegetarians: say "hello" to the Barbie!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-02
Two things made this a great book for me.
1. I've been a vegetarian for 16 years.
2. I've been living in Sydney, Australia for 6 of those and we were given a huge gas Barbeque as a wedding present.

Since I moved to Sydney I drag a bag of veggie burgers to every BBQ. There's only so many types of veggie burger you can try before eating at the next BBQ is a real chore.

Since I got it, this book has opened up a whole new world of BBQ enjoyment to me. I've had it a week; we've had three BBQ's and I have tried a half dozen recipes. All of them worked out really well. We are talking red pepper Quesedilas, herb-grilled potatoes, veggie skewers in Tandoori sauce, char-grilled vegetables with cous cous. Yummmm. The (normally carnivorous) guests were all well impressed too.

Recipes are from around the world as you might have gathered and are not overly complex or time-consuming. They are well described, but this is not a glossy book. There are no photos bar the cover. Illustrations are hand-drawn but clear. The layout is easy to read and pleasing to the eye. This is a food-lovers book, not a coffee-table decoration.

The only slight limitation is many of the recipes require a special vegetable grill pan. I've never seen one of these things and reckon they aren't commonly available down here. So a few of the recipes will result in much loss of your vegetables to the coals below. But you learn the work-arounds fast. For me half the fun of cooking is adapting recipes to what you have, so if a few of the ingredients are not available, it's just fun making a new recipe.

I thought I had too many vegetarian cook books in my library. This one proved me wrong! If only I could find a way to get this in the hands of a few more people in Sydney, I wouldn't have to do all the cooking. How about an Australian edition?

Veggie BBQ!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-14
My husband and I have been vegetarians for about twenty years and are raising our kids vegetarian too. For years I've always brought veggie burgers and tofu pups to other people's barbeque parties every summer. I thought we needn't bother owning a grill of our own because all we could make on it would be garden burgers anyway (how exciting is that? not very!) Anyway, this book has shown me how wrong I was. We recently acquired a very nice gas grill and I have been cooking up a storm on it! I've been using this cookbook and everything has been delicious. Not one bad recipe so far. I had a BBQ party of my own finally for my sons first Birthday recently and it was a totally hit. I made veggie pizzas (with the recipe from this book, although I used my own pizza dough recipe.)I grilled up all the veggies and than had everyone fix their own pizzas which I grilled for them. It was a lot of fun. Everyone gobbled them them up, raving about how delicious they were. Plus it was nice for people to see that a BBQ doesn't have to revolve around meat.

As for the comment below about the chicken stock, there is one recipe that says you can use either veggie or chicken stock. (I haven't noticed any others.) I agree it shouldn't be in the book. Vegetarian means no meat at all. I didn't see any mention about adding meat to the recipes, though I haven't read every page of this book, so maybe I just haven't seen it. I haven't seen any recipes that actually call for meat or anything. (No mention in the index either.)

So far I've made about 6 recipes from this book and they have been totally great. Plus, despite the fact that I'd say I know my way around a kitchen, I'd never grilled before and there was a useful chapter just talking about tools. (A vegetable grill rack is a *must* have for veggie grilling. I use mine constantly and would have been very frustrated had I not known about it.) To me, a newbie vegetarian griller this book has been indispensable. My husband keeps commenting on how fun it is to sit out on our deck and eat yummy food from the grill.

Yet another book that doesn't get it!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-26
Let me start by saying that I enjoy reading cookbooks as much as I enjoy using them, and from the first read, I am not very impressed. I really wanted a vegetarian grilling book, what I got was a book that calls for chicken stock in at least one recipe, tells me what kind of meat I could throw in to the mix and tells me that I won't even miss the meat. While there may be pros and cons to the cheese question, how can anyone justify chicken broth in a vegetarian cook book?

Vegetarian
Vegetarian Soups for All Seasons
Published in Paperback by Little, Brown and Company (1996-10-01)
Author: Nava Atlas
List price: $14.95
New price: $4.84
Used price: $0.12

Average review score:

Great soup book!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-10
I'm a huge soup fan - not sure why but I just love it. So, this book hit the spot for me. I love cooking with vegetables that are in season and this book makes it so easy - this time of year (summer) when I can go to the farmer's markets to get really fresh foods it's just that much better. I just flip to that section of the book and can easily make my shopping list not having to wonder well do I have to go to the supermarket to get that other ingredientt hat needs to be flown here from half way across the world? The recipes are sooo tasty and there's lots of variety. There are curried soups, cream based soups, hearty bean soups, and they cut across nationalities/ethnicities. You won't be disappointed with this one.

Reviewer that called this book "an abomination" is a total loser!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-29
I haven't yet made anything from the book, but as an experienced cook myself, I can read a recipe and know pretty much whether I will like it or not. I might make a mistake once in a while, but it's very unlikely that anyone who calls themself "a skilled and experienced" cook would choose as many as six recipes and not be able to tell they would be "vile" once made. I'm all for honest reviewing, and if you don't like a book, so be it, but this review was unnecessarily harsh and, in my judgment, probably the act of someone who has very little nice to say about anyone or anything.
Once I try some of the recipes, I'll try to report back on them. For now, I've just read through them, and there's hardly one that doesn't sound interesting to me. On that basis alone, I feel justified on giving the book 5 stars, since I can't say that about most non-dessert cookbooks!

Inspired one-dish meals
Helpful Votes: 33 out of 33 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-03
For me, the one thing that matters about a cookbook is: is it *inspired* or not? The ones that are not may have one to a few usable recipes, almost by accident, but the majority are either based on stale ideas, or they are too heavy, due to their use of meat, fat, sugar, or other such ingredients.

This book far surpassed my expectations. The recipes are original, hearty, satisfying - and low-fat. One of these soups with some bread and cheese makes for a simple and delicious weekday meal.

Most of the soups we've tried from this book have come out very well. We got off to a good start with Garlicky Cream of Celery Soup (p. 39). Examples of other successes: Cream of White Vegetables (p. 15; this worked fine with Chinese white radish/daikon; turnip is unavailable in Taiwan) - very smooth, soothing and flavorful; Gingered Pumpkin-Apple Soup (p. 25) - I'm not sure I'll put the apple in next time, but we all enjoyed the complex flavors of this one; Cream of Broccoli Soup with Whole Wheat Pasta (p. 96) also wasn't bad, even with plain macaroni shells. The Moroccan-Style Vegetable Stew (p. 26), with pumpkin, chickpeas and couscous, was very unusual and quite tasty. I was less impressed with the Tomato-Rice Soup with Snow Peas (p. 93) - this ended up something like Campbell's tomato rice, but then but I did make some substitutions, like white rice for brown. And I probably should have let the Curried Cauliflower-Cheese Soup (p. 84) thicken more before serving. You can skip the Sauerkraut Soup (p. 36) - this was edible, but didn't much appeal to any of us; too heavy on the sweet and sour, and not very satisfying. Still, I'm very gung ho about continuing to try out the other recipes. Well over half the recipes look doable to me in our environment, and that's a remarkably high ratio. I have found no other soup cookbook that can compare with this one. The recipes that work - and that has been most of them so far - are excellent, and just our style.

The book not only gives individual recipes but in fact teaches a *method* for making good vegetarian soups, i.e. pureeing cooked vegetables for a thick and hearty but not too rich base. Organizing the recipes by the seasons makes it easier to find a soup suited to the weather.

P. 27 has a recipe for 'Squash and Corn Chower', but that's the only typo I've spotted. The pencil drawings and quotes are quite charming. I haven't yet tried the bread and other 'accompaniments' recipes in the back, but they look intriguing.

In short: if you like soup but not meat, and are looking for ideas for simple but very good meals on the light side, this book is an outstanding choice.

An abomination
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 30 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-10
Sorry to disagree with the other reviewers, but this is the worst cookbook I have ever bought. I am a skilled and experienced vegetarian cook, and recipes in this book are perversely, malignantly vile. There will always be recipes we don't like in any cookbook, but I tried half a dozen soups in this book and they were just wretched. After the last one I just threw the book in the recycling bin. Back to Moosewood!

Delicious! Inexpensive! Quick! Satisfying! A great book.
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-09
I own about 35 vegetarian cookbooks, and decided to stop buying any more. However, finding a variety of good soups that I could center a meal around has never been easier once I gave in and purchased this book. I've so far prepared about fifteen recipes, and enjoyed each and every one, and plan to make them all again. This may be the one cookbook that I eventually prepare all of the recipes therein. A MUST HAVE cookbook...you won't regret the purchase. Your mouth, stomach, heart, and pocketbook will all thank you regularly for your wise decision!

Vegetarian
Vegetarian Way, The: Total Health for You and Your Family
Published in Hardcover by Harmony (1996-05-14)
Author: Virginia Messina
List price: $35.00
Used price: $2.48

Average review score:

If you're planning on going vegetarian or vegan, get this!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-14
I had a hard time finding a book for diabetics going vegetarian or vegan. I found this one, thinking it was going to be mostly recipes and all, and was happy to see it covers a very wide range of topics. Three chapters convinced me this was the book to get: the diabetic vegetarian, losing weight the vegetarian way, and the vegetarian athlete, all applicable to my new lifestyle change. It also convinced me that I want to go vegan, which I never thought would happen. Milk is baby food after all for us mammal types! So give this book a try, has delicious recipes included, and vegan alternatives on menu plans for diabetics.

Nutrition information and more
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-16
This was one of the first books I read when I decided to follow a vegan diet, and a year and a half later, I am glad that I found it so soon. Though it also contains stuff about other issues and problems that many vegetarians encounter, the main value of this book lies in the nutritional information it contains. The book goes through what vitamins and minerals are needed, why they are needed, where to find them in vegetarian foods, and what studies have shown about vegetarians and their relations to these nutrients. There are larger chapters discussing protein and calcium, which are the primary concerns that people who don't know much about vegetarianism seem to have. Messina is a registered dietician and cites her references carefully. She tries not to make any unfounded claims, though she cites correlational studies whose conclusions are more unclear than she makes them seem. For the most part, the information is very much consistent with current knowledge of nutritional science, and if you are a new vegetarian who is unsure of where to start, this book will prove to be extremely useful in understanding why other people become vegetarians, how such a diet affects certain illnesses, how to address the special needs of infants, children, teenagers, pregnant women, athletes, and how to start planning and preparing vegetarian meals. Of course, it's a big change to alter your dietary habits, so you want to read many other books as well. And cookbooks will no doubt be helpful. But you can't go wrong starting with The Vegetarian Way.

A Must-Read Even for Non-Vegetarians
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-03
You don't have to be a vegetarian to take advantage of this book. I am a non-vegetarian with a 1 1/2-year-old daughter who does not like meat. I was very worried that she would not get enough protein and iron so I purchased this book to educate myself more about non-animal sources of the nutrients. What an eye-opener! Even the nutrition courses I took in college did not provide me with such wealth of information. This book will tell you all you need to know to feed yourself and your family healthily and nutritiously. Interestingly, it will also change the way you look at the food on your plate. I'll be delighted if my daughter will one day happily eat red meat (organic of course). But I no longer worry that she doesn't.

Great hardcore book
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-01
This is a book for those who want to know more about the nutrition of being a vegetarian or those who need some reinforcement. I have not read such a well written book on this topic. I think that everyone whether vegan, vegetarian or omnivore should read this book.

Ditto!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-20
I would like to echo the positive remarks that other readers have made. The nutrition information alone is a must-read for anyone considering becoming vegetarian or anyone who is concerned about the diets of their loved ones.

I was very pleased by the overall honest tone of the book. The authors were never "preachy" and were willing to admit that some claims in the book were not yet fully substantiated. The result is a book that is very balanced and convincing. Bravo!

Vegetarian
Country Beans - 2nd Edition
Published in Paperback by Natural Meals Publishing (1999-04-01)
Author: Rita Bingham
List price: $14.95
New price: $14.95
Used price: $34.45

Average review score:

Page 80
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-16
There is a great Gluten free recipe in this book to make Cream of Chicken condensed soup. Great for any recipe that calls for this.... for example that great Green Bean casserole your mom used to make. Of course, use GF tater tots on top.

What a Book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-27
My wife has a lot of food based allergies--wheat and cow dairy to name a few. This bean book is amazing for us! We recommend it to anyone with food allergies (especially if you have a wheat intolerance).

Country Beans By Rita Bingham
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-06
Is a great way to turn whole beans/peas into "fast food" with the help of a grain grinder. Refried beans in just 5 minutes! Wonderful ideas.

Tasty and Simple Recipes -Great for Gluten Free
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-30
This cookbook provides recipes for simple and tasty meals using dried beans that can be found in any grocery store. I have other bean cookbooks that call for exotic beans that are difficult to find. My only problem with this book is that half of the recipes call for bean flours that are not so easy to locate. Health and specialty food stores may have one or two types of bean flours such as soy but not all of them called for in this book. The only place I could find pinto bean flour (used in many of the recipes) was in online stores with high shipping charges. The author directs the reader to Bob's Red Mill in Oregon but their web site did not offer any bean flours which may not be available anymore. Because I really wanted to try many of the recipes and I was intrigued with using bean flours in cooking, I took the author's advice and bought a K-Tec Kitchen Mill to grind my beans at home. I am happy with it and I think the instant refried beans made with pinto bean flour is tasty and will be a money saver over time. The soups thickened with bean flours will also be a healthy and tasty way to eat. If you are not interested in searching for bean flours or grinding them at home you may want to look at other bean cookbooks before you purchase this one. Although, this cookbook would be helpful for those allergic to wheat because the recipes show how bean flours can replace products containing gluten.

All about beans, beans and more beans
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-15
This is another favorite book by Rita Bingham that is full of information as well as recipes. Like her other books, this is a compendium of healthful cooking. Mrs. Bingham recommends a grain mill that I have on my wishlist for now. But happily I discovered a COFFEE mill at Sam's Club for $30 that grinds what I need, with very little mess. If you are on a budget but want to get started you can read my review of the little Cuisinart Coffee Mill. If it breaks, there's no big loss!Cuisinart DBM-8 Supreme Grind Automatic Burr Mill

Vegetarian
Easy Indian Cooking
Published in Paperback by Robert Rose (2004-04-03)
Author: Suneeta Vaswani
List price: $19.95
New price: $10.00
Used price: $9.50

Average review score:

Finally, Indian Cooking At Home
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-02
Finally, fairly authentic Indian cooking that is manageable at home. I love Indian food, but normally don't make it at home b/c it is involved and time consuming. These recipes are do-able and lend themselves to adjusting. I first tried "Preeti's Brown Onion Chicken". I was looking for a little more in the way of vegetables and heat, so added some celery and a chili when sauteeing the onion. When it was nearly browned, I added some spinach, then pureed it.
When cooking the chicken, I added some chopped carrots, chard, and diced potatoes. I know my additions would make a purist faint, but it was fantastic, healthy, and family-friendly. Cheers!

Not so easy
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-22
My fiance and I are capable in the kitchen. We've tried two recipes out of this book. Here are our thoughts.

First, finding a recipe is not so easy in this book. There are not many pictures, so when we're sitting around with tummies grumbling, we have a hard time choosing. There are no high-level descriptions either.

The first time we picked a recipe, it was a curry chicken. We had to drive around to different stores to find all the spices we needed. We live in San Jose, CA, and we have access to Indian grocery stores. So, we're probably in better position to get these than most would be. Also, many of these spices are pricy.

After we tracked down all the ingredients, we faithfully followed the recipe. The result: bland and dry chicken. The chicken did not pick up much flavor at all! The curry was OK, but the chicken ruined the meal.

Our second attempt was another chicken dish. This one called for thighs, so we were hopeful that they would be juicier and absorb more flavor. They did. The dish was pretty good, but not as flavorful as we would expect from an Indian meal. Maybe we just need to double up on the amount of spice. We held back on some of the water since it seemed like it might be too watery. Despite that effort, it was still very watery.

A good intro
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-20
This is my first Indian cookbook. I like this cookbook a lot because, as others have stated, it's very well laid out and has clear instructions. There are also helpful pages on spices, other ingredients, techniques, etc. I like most of the recipes I have made out of it. However, I don't feel like they have ever quite tasted like the Indian food I get in American restaurants - it doesn't seem quite as good to me. Maybe this is because she has made them low-fat, or they are actually more authentic than restaurants, or she has simplified the ingredients (although I still find the recipes time-consuming, like 1-2 hours each). So I'm still on the lookout for an Indian cookbook that duplicates that (expensive) restaurant experience.

Easy, and flavorful, Indian Cooking
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-25
The book provides all the information needed for a novice to cook and enjoy authentic Indian cooking. Common substitutions for ethnic ingredients are very helpful. The photography is more than adequate, and evocative. I have enjoyed learning more about foods that I enjoy, and a culture different from mine. I recommend this cookbook to anyone who enjoys Indian food and cooking.

Finally Indian Cooking for today's schedule
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-09
I love to plan, prepare and eat Indian food but let's face it, cooking several dishes each requiring many different spices and lengthy preparation isn't often workable in our lives today. This book has made my joy of cooking Indian dishes renewed!

Vegetarian
Follow Your Heart's Vegetarian soup cookbook
Published in Unknown Binding by Woodbridge Press (1983)
Author: Janice Cook Migliaccio
List price:

Average review score:

The Follow Your Heart Vegetarian Soup Cook Book is available
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-16
BR>It is truly a classic cookbook with nothing but great tasting, wholsome soups.
This wonderful book also includes many tips on how to make soup.

The BEST TASTING SOUP RECIPES
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-07
If you love to make your own soup, you want this book, if you love excellent tasting soup, you want this book. Easy to follow recipes, excellent tasting soups, you cannot go wrong purchasing this book. These soups can be eaten all year round. This Soup Cook Book makes an excellent gift.

Unfortunately, this book lacks an index
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-30
I have owned this book for several years and I have repeatedly attempted to cook from it. Unfortunately, I have never gotten around to it! Although it may be true that the recipes offered are actually great tasting and easy to make and hence deserve a higher rating, the design of this book has a vital flaw that consistently leads me to frustration: There is no index of ingredients. For many cooks this may be a minor annoyance or even no bother at all - for me it renders this book virtually worthless since I generally have a hankering for something (lets say potatoes) and then like to look in the index to see which recipes contain potatoes.

Although the book does have an index that lists all the soups contained within its pages by their respective names, there is no other way to find out which recipes contain the desired ingredient other than to open a page and read the entire recipe.

If such an index is vital for you, you might end up with this book unused on your shelves. If not, based on other reviewers it appears that the recipes should be quite pleasing.

Yum Yum and love love it!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-31
I know the folks who made these soups and I've tasted almost all of them and they are so yummy and so filled with love and goodness! You will enjoy feeding your family and your self these delectable delights from the founders and followers of Follow Your Heart. Enjoy to your heart's content!! And when in Canoga Park, CA go there and try some from their kitchen, they are renowned for their soups!

If you want people to swoon over your cooking....
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-16
.....then make soup from this fine cookbook. Every recipe is amazing and delicious, there's not a miss in the bunch! Her use of herbs gives extrordinary flavors, giving new life to old-favorites, and creating new favorites for your repitoire. I've been using it for years and have never tired of it. Get this book immediately, do not wait another minute!

Vegetarian
The Protein-Powered Vegetarian: From Meat to Vegetable Protein : A Cookbook With Spirit
Published in Paperback by iUniverse (2000-12)
Author: Bo Sebastian
List price: $11.95
New price: $7.47
Used price: $5.95

Average review score:

A Dissenting View
Helpful Votes: 43 out of 50 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-29
From the other reviews, I gather this book is useful to some people, so I'll try to be balanced in my criticism. Perhaps this book is helpful for those who have extremely mainstream, fastfood tastes. no experience with vegetarian food, and no cooking background. For others, however, this book is useless. Much of it involved (1) descriptions of premade vegetarian meat substitutes that can be purchased in supermarkets and (2) elementary cooking ingredients and techniques. The recipes include instructions on how to "pizzazz" a commercial frozen pizza with Green Giant hamburger crumbles. I'd like to see vegetarianism spread in this country so perhaps this book can perform a public service. But it's not for the serious cook, and I am going to return it.

Easy and delicious
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-15
I love the recipes in this book. They are both easy and delicious, and are geared to living in the real world. The ingredients are readily available and good for you. Plus, the recipes don't require the kind of time commitment required by many vegetarian dishes. It is a great book for busy families who want a healthy vegetarian lifestyle.

Try It, You'll like It!!!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-25
I really like this cookbook. It opens up a whole new way of cooking and eating.The recipes are great and don't take hours to prepare. Tastes that are wonderful and healthy, too! What more can you ask for? Great for vegetarians and meat eaters who choose not to eat meat all the time.

I tried something new, and I'm so glad!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-09
I am one of those people who are always looking for new ideas in cooking and preparing foods. I especially like books that focus on fat-free cooking and low cal. ideas to get me on the healthy track. I have been working out in the gym since last November and I have been regimenting myself towards proteins and away from carbs. When I first looked at this book, I thought, this is just what I have been looking for! As I thumbed through and realized that, yes, most of these recipes were things I already liked, but, there are some great new ideas on how to change my old recipes into fresh new meals plans! I have even tried a few new things that I have been afraid to try in the past. That may sound like an odd thing to admit, but, I think many of us do fall into that trap of not being willing to try new things! I have always been a very picky and afraid to try new things. So, this cookbook has opened many new doors for me. I highly recommend this book! I would also like to add that I had a wonderful sense of heart and home and felt as if I personally sat around the table and shared these meals with Mr.Sebastian. I have told all of my friends about this book. So many have passed these new recipes on to their friends. I am sure this book will be a great hit!

Protein Powered Vegetarian:From Meat to Vegetable Protein
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-08
I have never used a cookbook to the extent that I have used this one. I find these recipes to be better than many I have used in the past that were not vegetarian. My family is not completely vegetarian, we still eat fish and seafood and the occasionally range poultry, but this cookbook has allowed me many options that I could never have found on my own and they are options my family actually now prefers. I have enjoyed the recipes and information so much that I have actually bought several copies for friends who were contemplating a more veggie diet.


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