India Books
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Used price: $76.90

Top class guide to SikkimReview Date: 2001-05-11
The best book on Sikkim till date!!!Review Date: 2001-03-19

Used price: $11.74

Excellent guide for everday livingReview Date: 2006-10-24
Treasure Chest for Spiritual SeekersReview Date: 2006-10-23

Used price: $12.91

Six is better than 5Review Date: 2008-04-20
It looks a trifle suspicious when a successful book, to wit, "5 Spices 50 Dishes" is getting a perfect score here on Amazon, that another one rolls by, smelling quite close. Do we need this book?
To be sure, Kahate has a nice book in "5 & 50". It has good purpose and scope, namely to introduce the fundamentals of Indian cuisine. Indian food is the most complex in its preparation and execution that I have ever encountered, on average. It is not the most difficult in technique, but there are, again on average, more steps than any other cuisine I know. "5 Spices..." solves this barrier by introducing a simple approach to fundamentals.
So why Six? Maybe not if you already have 5. But here are my reasons to choose this one:
- Chilies are the sixth spice. Saluja includes just enough for those of us that love Indian hot
- Hardbound for close to the same price. This book is well made for decades of use. It lays flat on your
counter!
- Better organized. I like a section to tell me how to make food by seasoning in hot oil, and then the next
for clarified butter, a.k.a. ghee. Then powdered spice, then curry paste. Finally, a chapter looking to
more complete meals.
- More than "50" recipes, but thoughtfully so.
I have some minor aesthetic reasons as well. I like their publisher, Jones Books, in Madison, WI. I like not needing a named food photographer. I like the use of "Six" rather than "5 and 50" because numbers suggest or suppose other purposes, such as serial numbers and the like. All this is my small beer.
Buy both if you can. But get cooking with them.
What's for dinner Tuesday night? Who did you say is coming over?Review Date: 2008-08-07
Six spices is slightly misleading. Mustard seed, cumin, asafetida, chili, coriander and turmeric are the official six. But dried ingredients like green mango powder and fresh ones like ginger and garlic are often lumped with the spices. No matter, many of the recipes are simple enough for a weeknight, yet the quality is good enough for company.
There are two bonuses to this book over other Indian cookbooks we have: first, it includes some South Indian classics not often found in the US (e.g., Lemon Rice which is very practical as it can be made ahead -- and is enjoyed by all). Second, this is an instructional book: it doesn't just give you recipes, it teaches you how to cook. And if you need to have a balanced meal for a weeknight, you can always improvise on one of the many fine vegetable dishes like carrot and pea curry and throw in tofu or paneer (plus bread or a simple rice like cumin rice) and give the family a delicious balanced meal with two pans.
We have several other Indian cookbooks we love. But this one gets the most use.

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Collectible price: $16.00

A window into quiet daily workings of another land Review Date: 2004-11-08
Kudos for Sleeping in CavesReview Date: 2003-10-09
I gave the book to a friend for her 50th birthday and she read it eagerly. She has been studying Islam and grappling with extreme monotheism. She reports that the book gave her a refreshing vacation and a welcome reminder of the abundance and diversity of deity.
Used price: $207.36

FASCINATING ORIGINAL WORKReview Date: 2007-08-01
A truly remarkable bookReview Date: 2005-01-24

Used price: $119.63

Absolutely Beautiful!!Review Date: 2003-09-27
Indeed SpectacularReview Date: 2002-09-17
"Spectacular India" is beautiful collection of 150 color photographs by some of India's finest photographers with accompanying text by prominent Indian experts. It makes an honest and successful attempt of portraying real India and does justice to the country and it's people. It gives a sense of what India was, what India is and where it is heading. Recipedelights.com gives it a "must-buy" rating for Tourists, armchair Indians and Indians away from home. The format and size of this delectable volume make it a perfect coffee-table book.

A Great Visual Journey of Buddhist culture of TibetReview Date: 2004-04-12
A "Must Have" for Techie Types on a Spiritual PathReview Date: 2004-03-01

My 8 year old son LOVED this book!Review Date: 2008-01-08
Great fun!Review Date: 2007-12-27

Used price: $34.86

Beautiful Ideas, Beautiful ImagesReview Date: 1999-09-17
Parvati, Goddess of LoveReview Date: 2000-12-21

Used price: $32.90

A Wonderful Blessing for the Holidays!Review Date: 2003-12-15
An Indian SaintReview Date: 2004-01-28
So writes His Holiness the Dalai Lama, exiled leader of Tibetan Buddhists. The Dalai Lama is well-known in the United States; Ramakrishna is not. This biography, a faithful translation from the Indian Bengali, will serve as history's correction to all who take a devout and detailed pilgrimage through its pages.
The Hindu priest Ramakrishna (1836-1886) was, by many of his contemporaries as well as those who knew him only distantly in time and place, regarded as a living incarnation of God. At the least, he graces the company of saints. His message was one of
liberation -- from superstition, fear, and religious intolerance -- and of unity -- a unity of all creation as an expression of the holy.
In his brief 50 years of life, he attracted and inspired a generation of young Indians, led by Swami Vivekananda who went on with the other 15 original disciples to form the Ramakrishna Order and to spread its teachings through India, Europe, and the United States.
The life of Ramakrishna was first recorded by Swami Saradananda (1865-1927), and is now translated into English by Swami Chetanananda, minister of the Vedanta Society of St. Louis.
Swami Saradananda cared for Ramakrishna during his final illness and later became a monk in the new religious order. He was admirably situated to know the principals, to converse with them, and to record their reminiscences. He spoke with many who had known Ramakrishna from his humble birth in the little village of Kamarpukur, through his service in the Temple at Dakshineswar on the Ganges River, until his death of cancer near Calcutta in 1886.
Seven years in preparation, this translation of Ramakrishna's life story takes its place as the authentic, factual, descriptive, interpretive, and comprehensive biography of a spiritual giant. The book includes a biography of Swami Saradananda, a detailed listing of chapter contents, a chronology of Ramakrishna's life, a glossary, and an index. Over 100 illustrations, many in full color, bring to life the characters and locations of the book.
While Sri Ramakrishna and His Divine Play will undoubtedly serve as the scholarly resource on Ramakrishna for generations to come, it is a highly readable and engrossing story, well within the understanding of the average reader. Its 1,000-plus pages should not discourage anyone who seeks spiritual nourishment of the highest order.
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