
Description
Where is taking your feelings out with heavy mallets and sharp knives not just allowed--but encouraged? The kitchen, of course! And in Steamed, acclaimed food writers Rachel Levin and Tara Duggan offer readers fifty funny, feisty, and full-flavored dishes to channel frustration and rage into something utterly delicious.
For those inevitable moments when you're boiling over, steaming mad, or just plain fried, turn to:
- Pounded Chicken Parmesan
- Ripped Bread Salad
- Feeling Sad French Onion Soup
- Tune-It-Out Tinga
- Wailing Wasabi Tuna Bowl
. . . and many more in this ultimate ode to finding your chef's knife-wielding, onion-crying, chicken-pounding culinary release.
Playful sidebars, including "Beat It All Out: When You Just Want to Whisk Like a Wild Woman," teach technique and channel all those feelings into your new favorite dinner. For anyone looking for stress eating's more constructive cousin, Steamed and catharsis cooking are here to lend a helping hand--or cleaver.
Product Details
Publisher | Running Press Adult |
Publish Date | May 04, 2021 |
Pages | 168 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780762499151 |
Dimensions | 8.2 X 6.3 X 0.8 inches | 1.1 pounds |
About the Author
Tara Duggan is the deputy food editor of the San Francisco Chronicle's James Beard Award-winning section, where she also won individual awards from the James Beard Foundation, the Association of Food Journalists, and the California News Publishers Association. She is the author of several cookbooks, including Root to Stalk Cooking, and coauthor of The Blue Bottle Craft of Coffee. Her recipes and articles have been published in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Food & Wine, and Sunset magazine, among other publications.
Reviews
So many of us (myself included) cook to escape the insanity of the world-I can't imagine a better way to channel our collective stress than Steamed!--Maile Carpenter, editor-in-chief, Food Network Magazine
This book is exactly what I need right now--not another ode to food as love and bla bla bla. Duggan and Levin get at the real reason we say cooking is therapy: so we can pound, slash, spear...and still make delicious, satisfying (extremely satisfying!) food.--Jenny Rosenstrach, New York Times best-selling author of Dinner: A Love Story
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