Home
the New Homemade Kitchen: 250 Recipes and Ideas for Reinventing Art of Preserving, Canning, Fermenting, Dehydrating, More (Recipes Kitchen Pantry Staples, Gift Home Cooks Chefs)
Barnes and Noble
the New Homemade Kitchen: 250 Recipes and Ideas for Reinventing Art of Preserving, Canning, Fermenting, Dehydrating, More (Recipes Kitchen Pantry Staples, Gift Home Cooks Chefs)
Current price: $35.00
Barnes and Noble
the New Homemade Kitchen: 250 Recipes and Ideas for Reinventing Art of Preserving, Canning, Fermenting, Dehydrating, More (Recipes Kitchen Pantry Staples, Gift Home Cooks Chefs)
Current price: $35.00
Size: Hardcover
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
Revive the lost arts of fermenting, canning, preserving, and creating your own ingredients.
The Institute of Domestic Technology Cookbook
is a collection of 250 recipes, ideas, and methods for stocking a kitchen, do-it-yourself foodcrafting projects, and cooking with homemade ingredients.
The chapters include instructions on how to make your own food products and pantry staples, as well as recipes highlighting those very ingredients
—for example, make your own feta and bake it into a Greek phyllo pie, or learn how to dehydrate leftover produce and use it in homemade instant soup mixes.
• Each chapter includes instructions to make your own pantry staples, like ground mustard, sourdough starter, and miso paste.
• Complete with recipes that utilize the very ingredients you made
• Filled with informative and helpful features like flavor variation charts, extended tutorials, faculty advice, and instructional line drawings
Also included are features like foodcrafting charts, historical tidbits, 100+ photos and illustrations, how-tos, and sidebars featuring experts and deans from the Institute, including LA-based cheese-makers, coffee roasters, butchers, and more.
From the Institute of Domestic Technology, a revered foodcrafting school in Los Angeles, each chapter is based on the school's curriculum and covers all manners of techniques—such as curing, bread-baking, cheese-making, coffee-roasting, butchering, and more.
• Complete with beautiful food photography, this well-researched and comprehensive cookbook will inspire chefs of all levels.
• Great gift for foodcrafters, food geeks, food pioneers, farmers' market shoppers, as well as people who feel nostalgic for a slower way of life
• Add it to the collection of books like
Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat: Mastering the Elements of Good Cooking
by Samin Nosrat;
The Food Lab: Better Home Cooking Through Science
by J. Kenji López-Alt; and
The Homemade Pantry: 101 Foods You Can Stop Buying and Start Making
by Alana Chernila
The Institute of Domestic Technology Cookbook
is a collection of 250 recipes, ideas, and methods for stocking a kitchen, do-it-yourself foodcrafting projects, and cooking with homemade ingredients.
The chapters include instructions on how to make your own food products and pantry staples, as well as recipes highlighting those very ingredients
—for example, make your own feta and bake it into a Greek phyllo pie, or learn how to dehydrate leftover produce and use it in homemade instant soup mixes.
• Each chapter includes instructions to make your own pantry staples, like ground mustard, sourdough starter, and miso paste.
• Complete with recipes that utilize the very ingredients you made
• Filled with informative and helpful features like flavor variation charts, extended tutorials, faculty advice, and instructional line drawings
Also included are features like foodcrafting charts, historical tidbits, 100+ photos and illustrations, how-tos, and sidebars featuring experts and deans from the Institute, including LA-based cheese-makers, coffee roasters, butchers, and more.
From the Institute of Domestic Technology, a revered foodcrafting school in Los Angeles, each chapter is based on the school's curriculum and covers all manners of techniques—such as curing, bread-baking, cheese-making, coffee-roasting, butchering, and more.
• Complete with beautiful food photography, this well-researched and comprehensive cookbook will inspire chefs of all levels.
• Great gift for foodcrafters, food geeks, food pioneers, farmers' market shoppers, as well as people who feel nostalgic for a slower way of life
• Add it to the collection of books like
Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat: Mastering the Elements of Good Cooking
by Samin Nosrat;
The Food Lab: Better Home Cooking Through Science
by J. Kenji López-Alt; and
The Homemade Pantry: 101 Foods You Can Stop Buying and Start Making
by Alana Chernila