
Reserve it at BN.com & pick it up in 60 minutes at your local store.
Enter a zip code
(Paperback)
Jane Doerfer, who runs a cooking school for solo cooks, has created 350 easy-to-make recipes for people who don't want to live in the kitchen and are tired of take-out food - people who want to eat more healthily and economically. Filled with practical advice on everything from selecting equipment to dealing with supermarket packages designed for a family, here are strategies for how to buy, store, and recycle food in quantities that won't get wasted, as well as ways of planning, preparing, and serving meals for yourself that can be a real pleasure.
At last, a practical and persuasive cookbook for anyone living alone--with more than 350 delicious recipes for all occasions--filled with money-saving tips and shortcuts. Here is food that will lure the reluctant single back into the kitchen. Featured in Southern Living magazine.
Eating alone need not be a dispiriting experience of takeout containers and stand-up ``sink cuisine,'' suggests Doerfer. She transforms the solo meal with strategies for food shopping, preparation and storage. Use a freezer as a cold-storage pantry for flavorful ingredients like bacon, herbs and ginger root, she advises; use smaller utensils for single servings. More than 350 recipes emphasize flavorful, often seasonal foods and include nods to ethnic cuisines (Sauteed Cucumbers with Lemongrass), vegetarian dishes (Red Beans and Rice) and old-fashioned favorites (Berry Pie for One). Most recipes are ready in less than 30 minutes: Watercress with Pork Soup takes considerably less time. Doerfer, who runs a Florida cooking school with the same name as the title, offers Southern specialties like Gumbo and Sweet Potato Corncakes; the co-author of The Legal Sea Foods Cookbook, she also details Baked Hake with Scallions and a simple Sole with Browned Butter. Noting that a meal chosen and prepared with care nourishes body and soul, Doerfer makes such meals possible for solo cooks. (May)
More Reviews and RecommendationsReader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
February 12, 2002: I bought this book while spending the summer in manhattan, and I must say it is excellent. I have made at least 15 of the recipies (there are so many!) and all of them were great. It is easy to multiply if you have people over, and easy to cook just for yourself. This book is absolutely amazing-- before I bought it the most I cooked was eggs or pasta, and now I'm making eggplant gratin and bread pudding. The recipies are easy to follow and she even has suggestions for leftovers.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
April 23, 2000: I was very happy to find a book like this (with recipes geared to one person) and it's good to see there are more coming out on the market. The book is full of many recipes, even desserts just for one. Especially useful is the beginning section of the book, which has hints and guidelines on efficiently and cost-effectively shopping and storing foods for one person. The only reason I gave the book 4 stars rather than 5 was because of the lack of pictures! Also, the pages were really 'papery' feeling and get easily stained and destroyed if you have the book open while you're cooking. I like cookbooks with glossy pages better. So that, and the fact that there's not a single picture of the foods you'll be creating, knocked it down one star. Other than that, EXCELLENT book.