Vegetarian Books
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One of my favoritesReview Date: 2008-07-09
Great Cookbook!Review Date: 2006-07-02
Lots of Facts and Recipes, but not essential.Review Date: 2005-07-25
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 CookReview Date: 2000-11-21
The Simple Things!!!Review Date: 2000-08-08

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Hit or Miss?Review Date: 2004-09-18
Looking for something different to cook tonight?Review Date: 2002-04-02
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 cookbookReview Date: 2001-06-11
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.
TimelessReview Date: 2006-07-30
best book everReview Date: 2006-05-31

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A book to dream about.Review Date: 2007-02-12
Great little book!!Review Date: 2005-11-02
Good recipes and ideas-- makes a great gift, too!Review Date: 2006-05-25
Very Entertaining and Good Recipies too!Review Date: 2005-08-12
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.Review Date: 2005-10-13


Great bookReview Date: 2008-06-13
Buy this book!Review Date: 2007-10-27
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!Review Date: 2004-01-02
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!Review Date: 2005-09-14
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!Review Date: 2005-06-26

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Great soup book!Review Date: 2002-08-10
Reviewer that called this book "an abomination" is a total loser!Review Date: 2005-08-29
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 mealsReview Date: 2003-02-03
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 abominationReview Date: 2004-05-10
Delicious! Inexpensive! Quick! Satisfying! A great book.Review Date: 2002-07-09

If you're planning on going vegetarian or vegan, get this!Review Date: 2002-08-14
Nutrition information and moreReview Date: 2001-07-16
A Must-Read Even for Non-VegetariansReview Date: 2005-02-03
Great hardcore bookReview Date: 2003-04-01
Ditto!Review Date: 2002-08-20
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!

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Page 80Review Date: 2007-11-16
What a Book!Review Date: 2007-09-27
Country Beans By Rita BinghamReview Date: 2007-01-06
Tasty and Simple Recipes -Great for Gluten FreeReview Date: 2005-08-30
All about beans, beans and more beansReview Date: 2007-08-15

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Finally, Indian Cooking At HomeReview Date: 2008-03-02
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 easyReview Date: 2007-06-22
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 introReview Date: 2006-06-20
Easy, and flavorful, Indian CookingReview Date: 2006-02-25
Finally Indian Cooking for today's scheduleReview Date: 2005-09-09

The Follow Your Heart Vegetarian Soup Cook Book is availableReview Date: 2002-08-16
This wonderful book also includes many tips on how to make soup.
The BEST TASTING SOUP RECIPESReview Date: 2002-12-07
Unfortunately, this book lacks an indexReview Date: 2005-01-30
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!Review Date: 2003-10-31
If you want people to swoon over your cooking....Review Date: 2001-08-16

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A Dissenting ViewReview Date: 2002-03-29
Easy and deliciousReview Date: 2002-05-15
Try It, You'll like It!!!Review Date: 2002-05-25
I tried something new, and I'm so glad!Review Date: 2001-03-09
Protein Powered Vegetarian:From Meat to Vegetable ProteinReview Date: 2001-03-08
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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.