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| 1. The Barbecue! Bible by Steven Raichlen | |
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list price: $22.95 -- our price: $13.41 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0761149430 Publisher: Workman Publishing Company Sales Rank: 611 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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As far as covering the basics, he goes into concise and complete detail on all manner of technique -- everything from how to cook your basic hamburger, to how to properly segment a chicken, to how to arrange the coals in your grill. At the beginning of every major chapter, he describes how different foods should be cooked. If you look at each individual recipe that includes chicken breast, it will not include a description on how to cook chicken breast: it was covered earlier! Read the book! In short, this book comprises an eclectic range of tasty grill recipes, all explained in detail. There is also a great deal of food history included, as well as some very helpful glossaries. This is an essential book for any griller, whether you want to learn how to get your steaks just right, or want to branch out into less familiar territory.
Second, the recipes cover the most simple (The Great American Hamburger) to some truly exotic dishes from the many cultures of the Pacific rim, to the spice of Latin America, to the classic tastes of Europe. Third, it is easy to use. Categorized by course (starters, salads, entrees) and by protein type (or vegetable), the book is easily navigable. I received this book as gift nearly two years ago. It remains one of my most frequently used cookbooks and has provided many, many crowd pleasing meals.
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| 2. Backyard BBQ: The Art of Smokology by Richard W. McPeake | |
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list price: $15.95 -- our price: $15.95 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0971801428 Publisher: Richard W. McPeake Sales Rank: 570 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 3. Smoke & Spice: Cooking with Smoke, the Real Way to Barbecue by Cheryl AltersJamison, Bill Jamison | |
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list price: $16.95 -- our price: $14.00 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 1558322620 Publisher: Harvard Common Press Sales Rank: 1510 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review Reviews
As a linguistic purist, I am extremely happy to see that both the Jamison's and Paul Kirk clearly characterize barbecue as a low, steady heat method using hot smoke from wood while grilling is a high heat method where smoke is either incidental or even something to be avoided. The Jamison's even expand the lore of barbecue for me beyond Steve Raichlen's excellent introductory essay in `BBQ USA' when they explain that southeastern (as in North Carolina and Tennessee) pork barbecue and southwestern (as in Texas) beef barbecue arose from two entirely different sources, coalescing around styles developed in Kansas City and Chicago. As much as barbecue experts like to blow their own horn, they also seem much more willing to credit colleagues with contributions to the field. As the Jamisons are mainstream cookbook authors who happen to be experts on barbecue, they cite virtually the entire pantheon of American food writers, including James Beard, James Villas, Robb Walsh, John Thorne, Calvin Trillin, and Chris Schlesinger. Part One of the book lays down your barbecue basics, and I strongly recommend that this be read by anyone considering any of these recipes. True barbecue technique is difficult. It may be more difficult to achieve good results as it is to make some of the more arcane creations in the French culinary repertoire. What's worse, it needs equipment that are not standard equipment in an American kitchen, and, it is equipment that MUST be used outdoors. If you do not want to deal with these things, get a book by Bobby Flay and a good grill pan. The authors do briefly discuss stovetop smoking, but assign it a minor role in the world of great barbecue technique. Part Two contains the recipes. The first chapter covers dry rubs, pastes (wet rubs), marinades, and mops. This collection of condiment recipes is not as extensive as the one found in Paul Kirk's `Championship Barbecue' and it does not include recipes for staples like homemade catsup or homemade Worcestershire sauce, but since Kirk's book is about competition and the Jamison's book is not, you will not find too much overlap if you own both. The second chapter of recipes covers the pig. Almost every recipes includes it's own recipe for rub, mop, and other mix. For those of you who harbor any doubts about the commitment needed for barbecue, note that almost every recipe begins with the phrase `The night before you plan to barbecue...'. These recipes require a lot of work. They are the sorts of things the average working American family will be able to manage on maybe a few summer weekends a year. A dedicated barbecue hobbyist will probably manage once or twice a week. The pig chapter owes much to the Carolina style of barbecue and includes recipes for a `Carolina Sandwich Slaw', a `Memphis Mustard Slaw', and spice mixes from New Orleans to Los Angeles. The chapter finishes with recipes for what to do with successfully barbecued shoulder. If you have a good commercial source of barbecue, these recipes alone are worth the price of admission. The third chapter of recipes covers beef. One of the hallmarks of beef barbecue is that it specializes in especially tough cuts of beef such as the brisket, skirt steak, and flank steak as well as ribs. The chapter also covers a fair share of `aftermarket' recipes for hot dogs, hamburger, meat loaf, and hash. If I were ever tempted to do true barbecue, it would probably be to do lamb. The next chapter covers this plus goat, veal and game meat. Mexican goat barbecue or cabrito is a subject all its own, on which Robb Welsh, for one, has written extensively. The next chapter covers chicken and other fowl such as turkey, duck, quail, and pheasant. Chapters on fish and vegetables round out the smoking recipes. Oddly, recipes for sauces which many think are essential to barbecue are placed near the back of the book, including a recipe for a famous catsup precursor. The very last chapter includes a great selection of side dish recipes, including slaws, beans, potatoes, greens, biscuits, cornbread, and muffins. As good as the side dish recipes are, you would probably do as well or better for them with a classic non-barbecue source such as `James Beard's American Cookery' if you were not planning to go the full nine yards with the barbecue technique. Of the three heavyweight barbecue books I have reviewed, this is the best for true home barbecue, but it is not the very best it could be. For as detailed a technique as barbecue is, requiring very specialized equipment, the total absence of pictures is baffling. If you plan to embark on true hot smoke low and slow barbecue, please find a good survey of equipment such as you may find from Consumer Reports to supplement this book.
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| 4. Bobby Flay's Grill It! by Bobby Flay, Stephanie Banyas, Sally Jackson | |
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list price: $35.00 -- our price: $23.10 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0307351424 Publisher: Clarkson Potter Sales Rank: 1066 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 5. Big Green Egg Cookbook: Celebrating the World's Best Smoker & Grill by Big Green Egg | |
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list price: $50.00 -- our price: $31.50 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0740791451 Publisher: Andrews McMeel Publishing Sales Rank: 2207 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review The book's introduction explains the ancient history of ceramic cookers and the loyal devotion of self-proclaimed EGGheads to these dynamic, original American-designed cookers. Complete with more than 160 recipes and 100 color photographs, the Big Green Egg Cookbook is a must for the more than 1 million EGG owners in the United States and a great introduction for anyone wanting to crack the shell of EGGhead culture. Reviews
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| 6. 101 Things to Do with a Dutch Oven (101 Things to Do with A...) by Vernon Winterton | |
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list price: $9.99 -- our price: $9.99 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 1586857851 Publisher: Gibbs Smith Sales Rank: 1539 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review With 101 easy recipes to choose from-from breakfast to dessert, including breads and rolls-the Dutch oven might just become the most popular cooking method in your house. Recipes include the Mountain Man Breakfast, Sausage Spinach Wreath, Dutch Oven Stew with spicy Jalapeno Cheese Bread, Caramel Apple Cobbler, Stuffed Pork Roast, Cinnamon Rolls, Dutch Oven Pizza, Apricot Raspberry Glazed Cornish Hens, and White Chili. Reviews
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| 7. Barbecue! Bible : Sauces, Rubs, and Marinades, Bastes, Butters, and Glazes by Steven Raichlen | |
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list price: $12.95 -- our price: $10.36 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0761119795 Publisher: Workman Publishing Company Sales Rank: 1126 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review Well, now comes Grilling 201-the grilling guru's seminar in the flavor boosters, dry and wet, that give grilled food its character, personality, and soul. Echoing the master book in its energetic design and in-depth perspective, Barbecue Sauces, Rubs, and Marinades presents over 200 recipes for global flavoring techniques. There are rubs and spice mixes: Memphis Rub, Chesapeake Fish Powder, Santa Fe Spice Mix, Bombay Blast, Powdered Hellfire. Marinades and spice pastes: Moroccan Charmoula, Gaucho Beef Marinade, Thai Lemon Chili Marinade, Yucatan Black Recado. Plus sauces and salsas, mops, bastes, and butters, ketchups, mustards, chutneys, and relishes. The author gives a quick overview of barbecue essentials, explains what each flavoring technique does and how it works with different recipes and ingredients, and offers dozens of grilling and cooking tips-including how to build your own signature barbecue sauce. You'll graduate to a new level of grilling expertise. Reviews
The author has the gift of gab, which is a very good thing in this case. He has spent considerable time with the best of the barbecue pros, and it shows. Just reading through this one picks up a wealth of information, and you can't help but learn. One problem is the recipes. A dirty trick is to present a fantastic recipe that relies on an obscure or hard to get ingredient, and this book is full of them. Most of these recipes will not become a part of your cooking repetoire. Another problem is that the majority of the recipes cover a wide range of international recipes. Traditional, american barbecue gets a scant 50 pages of the nearly 300 pages of this book. Even here, he favors the upscale and chic. There is a tendency to favor the trendy, like flavor injectors and chutneys. He also goes through topics such as compound butters and flavored oils. Also, if you believe his side comments, all of his recipes go with all types of meats, seafoods and vegetables. In one of the more interesting sections, he has some rare recipes for mustards, ketchup, and hot sauces. I also have one beef with the graphics of this book: many pages have a sidebar that is colored brown. As a result, it is hard to read the text in them. This book seems to have been aimed at people who will probably never get within a country mile of a smoker. It covers a lot of ancillary subjects, and the topics covered range all over the place. This makes for very good reading, but little hard information. This book is closer to a personal diary than a cookbook. I can recommend this book because it is so interesting. However, if you are serious about barbecue, you will need a few other books beside this one in your collection. It certainly is not a "bible".
The author includes Liquid Smoke in many of his sauce recipes, something that would make most experienced pitmasters cringe. Why put artificial tasting smoke flavor in a sauce when the food is being smoked already? There are indeed some interesting recipes from other cultures, and there is a useful though somewhat out of date listing for shopping sources for some of the more exotic ingredients. The chart of the effects of various common ingredients is very good, and would be very useful to any newcomer I should think. It is also a nice reference to have even for experienced pitmasters when thinking over new recipes. In general however, I found that the recipes make use of too many ingredients, and yet when prepared tasted no better than traditional recipes I've been using for years and that are considerably less complicated. The reason is simple. Good barbecue gets it's flavor from being slow cooked at low temperatures with just the right amount of smoke, not because the cook used a dozen ingredients in the rub and another two dozen in the sauce. Everything from the cover layout to the number of ingredients called for and the sheer number of recipes makes me feel the author went for quantity rather than balance or quality.
Steven Raichlin takes barbecuing seriously, to the point where he actually goes to barbecue competitions to interview top teams and seeks different styles of barbecue in his world travels. He dispenses with all his knowledge in the following chapters: 1. Introduction: Building Better Barbecue -- The Flavor Factor 2. A Refresher Course: Everything You Need to Know About Barbecuing and Grilling 3. Seasonings and Rubs 4. Marinades, Wet Rubs, and Spice Pastes 5. Bastes, Mops, Glazes, Oils, Finishing Sauces, and Butters 6. American Barbecue Sauces 7. World Barbecue Sauces 8. Slather Sauces 9. Salsas, Relishes, Sambals, and Chutneys Don't worry if you live in a rural area where fresh spices and ingredients may be lacking. Raichlin also provides internet and mail order contacts for the essentials. This book will transform the House of Bland into a culinary temple. Be sure to have plenty of napkins with you so you don't drool over all the pages.
A previous reviewer listed that many of the recipes contain a "hard to find" ingredient. I don't think that is an entirely fair assesment. The book author provides links in the back of the book to numerous mail order houses where you can buy all the ingredients you need. It is well worth it. I found that for a relatively modest investment in 4-6 spices (~[$$]) I have been able to make everything I have been interested in. I really really really like this book.
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| 8. Weber's Big Book of Grilling by Jamie Purviance, Sandra S. McRae | |
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list price: $24.95 -- our price: $15.47 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0811831973 Publisher: Chronicle Books Sales Rank: 1048 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review Reviews
The Art of the Grill (the first book) contains some very involved recipes that are very tasty, but not any of the practical cooking tips. The Big Book of Grilling, however, highlights the following: Just overall, this book has been a godsend when it comes to my grill. I have an older Weber 3-burner model that allows me to easily switch from direct to indirect heating, but the book also compensates for the charcoal users out there. I highly recommend this book to anyone who needs a book full of great grilling ideas and suggestions, or who at least needs a great grilling reference book.
Big describes the difference. Quality recipes, photos and grilling basic advice are all here, but now more of it. Also, more informal recipes I'm discovering which probably will allow its usage more than just the occasional weekend bbq blast. So far, pigged out on Greek Garlic Chicken, Disappearing Tenderloins with Pico de Gallo, Grilling A Monster Fish, plus great side dishes of veggies and grilled fruits and desserts. Worthy to become a classic standard! Next to my Weber all the time!
I got so involved in the book, I had to buy another. The arrangement is great-if you don't start with condiments, a rub, a marinade, a sauce, you're wasting a good fire. The assortment and explanations are prodigious, and the commentary is fun. This is a droll friend who just happens to be a great grill chef taking the novice and the "chef d'backyard cuisine" alike along a path of hot coals to a satisfying feast. Lots of Asian and Mexican influence, and fish is treated with familiarity, not like an afterthought. While I don't understand the photo on page 165, the photography like the commentary, feeds the soul as well as the body-- the dog stealing a steak--adds to the family, friends, fun essence of cookouts---the memory-searing seasoning that lasts long after you've licked your fingers clean. Wonderful Father's Day, birthday, hostess or Holiday gift. Turkey or a prime rib on the grill not only tastes great, it frees up the kitchen and gets the guys involved. This book gets you involved.
The only complaint I have is that I was looking for a standard, straightforward bbq book, and for the most part this is just that, however, certain recipes seem to veer off into the "exotic" realm. I'll use Steven Raichlen's BBQ Bible for crazy exotic BBQ. But I guess I can't really complain. The Kansas City Ribs recipe is excellent, and Weber gives great advice on grilling and grilling techniques. Good thing I own a Weber grill. A great book to have in your library. ... Read more | |
| 9. How to Grill: The Complete Illustrated Book of Barbecue Techniques by Steven Raichlen | |
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list price: $20.95 -- our price: $14.25 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0761120149 Publisher: Workman Publishing Company Sales Rank: 2297 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review Now Steven Raichlen's written the bible behind The Barbecue! Bible. A full-color, photograph-by-photograph, step-by-step technique book, HOW TO GRILL gets to the core of the grilling experience by showing and telling exactly how it's done. With more than 1,000 photographs and lively writing, here are over 100 techniques, from how to set up a three-tiered fire to how to grill a prime rib, a porterhouse, a pork tenderloin, or a chicken breast. There are techniques for smoking ribs, cooking the perfect burger, rotisserieing a whole chicken, barbecuing a fish; for grilling pizza, shellfish, vegetables, tofu, fruit, and s'mores. Bringing the techniques to life are over 100 all-new recipes-Beef Ribs with Chinese Spices, Grilled Side of Salmon with Mustard Glaze, Prosciutto-Wrapped, Rosemary-Grilled Scallops-and hundreds of inside tips. Reviews
The layout and format are simply outstanding - done, again, in what seems to be a "basic grilling book" format. Tons of color pictures showing various techniques. You want to know how to grill chicken breasts? Bam! It's right there. Bone-in chicken? Whole chicken? Chicken sate? Chicken wings? All there. And for the more seasoned cook, there are new things as well. Recipes like rum-cured smoked salmon and turkey pastrami are a few non-everyday recipes that are quite excellent. And yes, I've tried many of the recipes and they've all come out quite well. In addition, there are plenty of notes and comments that will bring any cook to a higher level. One note, however. I also bought his 'The Barbecue! Bible' book, and it appears that most of the recipes are also in that book as well, albeit not as nicely illustrated and laid out. I still, though, use both quite frequently (the photos on cutting up a whole chicken are just one of the things that are better in this book).
1: Types of grills - Raichlen discusses the basics on gas grills, charcoal grills, hibachis, tuscan grills, smokers, you name it. 2: How to set everything up - I learned how to probperly light coals, clean and oil the grate, and test for proper temperature. 3: Recipes! - From steak to ribs to chicken, and even lobster and vegetables, Raichlen provides detailed instructions on how to cook just about anything on the grill. Plus, he even has quite a few recipes for rubs and sauces. 4: Everything else - Essential accessories, tips, and how to be a flamboyant griller can be found here. _____In addition, the book is easy to read and logically outlined; you won't need to flip through trying to find specific information - you can find it easily once you know the layout. _____I thought I was already an expert griller, but this book taught me A LOT of stuff, stuff that every griller should know. BUY IT!!
Be warned that this book is a little biased toward the charcoal grill, but most of the recipes can be done on a gas grill if that is your taste. In addition it is primarily a book about grilling. The author only touches on advanced cooking techniques such as barbecuing and smoking. He does however treat rotisserie grilling very thoroughly. The section on materials is short but does provide the basic information you will need to know before cooking outdoors. All told this book is an excellent guide to the fine art of grilling. It is an essential reference manual for both the beginner and advanced cook.
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| 10. Weber's Way to Grill: The Step-by-Step Guide to Expert Grilling (Sunset Books) by Jamie Purviance | |
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list price: $24.95 -- our price: $16.47 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0376020598 Publisher: Oxmoor House Sales Rank: 1587 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) This book includes all of the basics of grilling with charcoal or gas, complete with lots of pictures so you can see exactly how to set up the grill for the type of food you will be grilling and what the coals should look like. How to use the vents, how to use a rotisserie, and needed tools and equipment.
The very best part of this book is the recipes. It does include the classics like pulled pork, burgers, steaks and ribs but also has a lot of great recipes with ethnic flavors. Kofta in Pita Pockets with Cucumber and Tomato Salad, Lamb Meatball Pitas with Chopped Salad and Minted Yogurt, Pork medallions with Asian Black Bean Sauce, Thai Shrimp with Watermelon Salsa, Shrimp Po'Boys with Creole Remoulade, Vietnamese Shrimp Pops with Peanut Sauce, Baja Fish Wraps with Chipoltle-Lime Slaw, Tandoori Chicken Breasts with Mango-Mint Chutney, Chicken Involtini; chicken breast rolled with prosciutto and basil. Not feeling ethnic, how about Hickory Smoked Turkey with Bourbon Gravy? There is a Bacon-Wrapped Turkey Breast with Herb Stuffing that uses a great "braided" technique for the bacon that completely encases the turkey breast. Soda-Brined Pork Loin with Cherry-Chipoltle Glaze. Hard Cider Simmered Brats with Apples and Onions. I could go on and on and have not even touched on the fruits, vegetables and grilled bread. There are many great burger recipes for beef,lamb and turkey. Each recipe and technique is very well illustrated with pictures. They have recipes using planks, smoking papers and even a cast iron skillet on the grill. 40 beef recipes 22 pork recipes 27 poultry 35 for seafood 27 vegetable 10 fruit 21 rubs 20 marinades 14 sauces
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) I'm not much of a cookbook guy, but until a few days ago, Weber's Big Book of Grilling was to me what The Joy of Cooking has been to my mother and grandmother. If you have a Weber grill, you just *have* that book.
I also have Weber's Real Grilling and Weber's Art of the Grill: Recipes for Outdoor Living, but they've never been used like the Big Book of Grilling. Where am I going with this? Well, it may be sacrilege, but Way To Grill is quite possibly better than the Big Book. And I don't say that lightly. Way to grill gives you everything you could possibly need to take your grill beyond burgers and hot dogs. The recipes are relatively easy to make, and almost always call for common items. But more importantly, there's some emphasis on technique. In all likelihood, this is as close as you're going to get to learning how to grill, without standing next to someone who will teach you. The book itself is well made, and like the other Weber books, has excellent pictures and very comprehensive instructions. If you own a grill -- gas, or charcoal -- you really need this book.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) I read cookbooks and have several of the author's other books. Sure, I like to cook, but I enjoy reading the tips, food history, anecdotes and recipes to get ideas. The recipes are presented in a logical, easy-to-follow format with pictures of the final products. Along the way, there are callouts with tips like how to prepare skirt steak or how to take the edge off fresh onions for salsa. In general, the meat recipes each include a sauce, relish, or other accompaniment -- so, you're not just left with a slab of meat.
This book may be light on the anecdotes but it is chock-full of tips, tricks, and advice. The entire first chapter is for beginning grillers: charcoal or gas? What are essential tools, What is smoking? How/why do I use a rotisserie, and more. Then, right into the Red Meat chapter and some recipes. Like a lot of grilling books, the book is divided into chapters featuring various types of food (red meat, pork, poultry, seafood, veggies and fruit). Following the recipes is an entire chapter devoted to 'Resources'. I think this section is worth the price of the book for anyone new to grilling. For each of the major categories (chapters above), there is a subsection here covering must-have knowledge like how to choose the best cuts of meat, a grilling guide for common cuts -- just how long and what type of heat should I use to cook a 4 lb beef tenderloin? -- and my wife's favorite section: 'When is it done?'. Not a lot of books include a grill maintenance schedule -- this one tells you what you should do on a regular basis to keep your baby performing its best. For those who may be a little leery about cooking with an open flame, there are sections called 'Safety' and 'Selecting the Right Grill.' What about for the seasoned griller? In addition to many interesting recipes (I have not had the opportunity to test all of them, but I have marked over 20 more that I will be trying in the coming months), there are sections for Rubs, Marinades, Sauces (and corresponding Way More Rubs, Way More Marinades and Way More Sauces). This reference gives newbies a nice list of common preparations, complete with a key: this one is good with poultry... red meat, not so much. Everything in the book is color-coded: are you in the mood for Southwest-style chicken? Grab yourself the Southwest rub, marinade or tomatillo salsa with an orange square next to it and use as-is or build from there. Teriyaki for seafood? No problem: marinades... blue square... go. Interested in grilling veggies? Flip to the green section of the book. For me, the true measure of any cookbook (or any reference book, for that matter!) is the index. Someone spent a lot of time ensuring that things would be easy to find in this book -- there are separate indices for Recipes and Techniques and the "Duck Breast Tacos" are listed under both 'T' for Tacos and 'D' for Duck.
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| 11. John McLemore's "Dadgum That's Good!" by John McLemore | |
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list price: $24.95 -- our price: $16.47 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0578059541 Publisher: APG Sales & Distribution Sales Rank: 2468 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 12. Down Home with the Neelys: A Southern Family Cookbook by Patrick Neely, Gina Neely, Paula Disbrowe | |
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list price: $27.95 -- our price: $18.45 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0307269949 Publisher: Knopf Sales Rank: 2809 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 13. Beer-Can Chicken: And 74 Other Offbeat Recipes for the Grill by Steven Raichlen | |
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list price: $12.95 -- our price: $8.02 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0761120165 Publisher: Workman Publishing Company Sales Rank: 6873 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review An essential addition to every grill jockey's library, Beer-Can Chicken presents 75 must-try beer-can variations and other offbeat recipes for the grill.Recipes such as Saigon Chicken with Lacquered Skin and Spicy Peanut Sauce, Root Beer Game Hens, Beer-Can Turkey (uses the 32-ounce Foster's), Stoned Chicken (it's grilled under a brick), Dirty Steak, Fish on a Board (Salmon with Brown Sugar Glaze), Mussels Eclade-grilled under pine needles, Grilled Eggs, Wacky Rumaki, Rotisseried Garlic Rolls-even Grilled Yellow Pepper Soup will have your mouth-watering. Whether on a can, on a stick, under a brick, in a leaf, on a plank, or in the embers, each grilling technique is explained in easy-to-follow steps, with recipes that guarantee no matter how crazy the technique, the results are always outstanding. So pop a cold one and have fun. Reviews
The majority of the book is beer can chicken and its derivatives. And there are quite a few variations on the theme, almost enough to make you forget that this is mostly a book about poultry on a can full of some sort of liquid. Don't get me wrong, the resulting dishes are varied and spectacular, running the gamut from true American barbecue to Asian, to Indian, to Middle East, etc. - similar to his Barbecue Bible. However, you'd better like poultry if you buy this book. There are some meat, fish, and vegetable dishes (and dessert), but it's mostly poultry on a can. One plus that the author mentions, and most people will figure out, is that even though it is mostly poultry on a can recipes you don't need to stop there. There are so many rubs, sauces, and marinade recipes in there, you can really be creative and do whatever you like with them. Throw in some good tips here and there and you've got a great book. Call it 4-4.5 stars, simply because the author's previous barbecue books are true 5 star books that are hard to live up to.
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| 14. Bobby Flay's Mesa Grill Cookbook: Explosive Flavors from the Southwestern Kitchen by Bobby Flay | |
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list price: $35.00 -- our price: $23.10 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0307351416 Publisher: Clarkson Potter Sales Rank: 1980 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 15. Pizza on the Grill: 100 Feisty Fire-Roasted Recipes for Pizza & More by Elizabeth Karmel, Bob Blumer | |
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list price: $16.00 -- our price: $9.71 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 1600850065 Publisher: Taunton Press Sales Rank: 2709 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 16. Meat Smoking And Smokehouse Design by Stanley Marianski | |
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list price: $19.95 -- our price: $11.87 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0982426704 Publisher: Bookmagic LLC Sales Rank: 2962 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 17. Planet Barbecue!: 309 Recipes, 60 Countries by Steven Raichlen | |
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list price: $22.95 -- our price: $14.52 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0761148019 Publisher: Workman Publishing Company Sales Rank: 2856 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 18. Seven Fires: Grilling the Argentine Way by Francis Mallmann, Peter Kaminsky | |
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list price: $35.00 -- our price: $23.10 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 1579653545 Publisher: Artisan Sales Rank: 3407 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 19. America's Best BBQ: 100 Recipes from America's Best Smokehouses, Pits, Shacks, Rib Joints, Roadhouses, and Restaurants by Ardie A. Davis, Chef Paul Kirk | |
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list price: $19.99 -- our price: $6.69 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: B003NHR8HK Publisher: Andrews McMeel Publishing Sales Rank: 3124 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review Only Ardie and Paul, the go-to sources on barbecue, can earn the trust--and the secret recipes--from some of the nation's barbecue legends. Tasty sides include tips, tricks, techniques, fun memorabilia, full-color photos, and firsthand recollections of tales from the pits culled from over a century of combined barbecue experience. With more than 100 recipes for mouthwatering starters, moist and flavorful meats, classic side dishes, sauces and rubs, and decadent desserts, this book should come with its own wet-nap. * Whether it's spicy or sweet, Texas or Memphis, this is the best collection of American barbecue recipes. * Ardie's BBQ alter ego, Remus Powers, PhB, has earned profiles in many barbecue books, tons of magazines, and more than a few national newspapers. He's graced the Food Network and PBS, appearing in various documentaries on 'cue and great American cuisine. * Paul has appeared on The Today Show, Discovery Channel, CBS This Morning, Talk Soup, and Anthony Bourdain's A Cook's Tour: In Search of the Perfect Meal. He was also featured in AARP's Modern Maturity Magazine, Saveur, and The Calgary Herald, and he has written articles for Food ∧ Wine, Fine Cooking, and Chili Pepper magazine. Reviews
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) To call this book a cookbook would be like equating Ted Williams with all other baseball players. America's Best BBQ contains recipes collected by the authors in their travels and networking. The book itself is more like a piece of Americana, a glimpse of a subculture that most of us only know superficially.
Davis and Kirk not only share some incredible recipes, but also introduce us to fascinating people and interesting places the reader might want to visit in his or her travels. I really like the design and look of the book. It takes on its own ambience as one of the barbecue joints within might. There's plenty here to whet the reader's appetite and sate his curiosity. Open to any page and find classic neon, well-worn signs, incredibly vivid food photographs, simulated spots of BBQ sauce, brown paper, and more pig icons than you've ever seen in one place. Like barbecue cooking, this book is meant to be enjoyed slowly so that one can taste all of the flavors proferred by the authors. At the end of the book is a lengthy discourse detailing the pros and cons of gas vs. charcoal grilling with a tableful of tips for both schools of cooking. This section is so informative that I read it twice. America's Best BBQ is obviously a work of love by the authors, a down home friendly book. I don't have interest in trying rattlesnake meat or bull testicles, but within the covers there's probably something of interest for most readers.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) This book is great because it takes all the best BBQ recipes from around the nation and fits them into one book. However, there is a problem in that all the recipes use specific ingredients geared towards their own region. So recipes are either easily made or you will have to substitute ingredients. This recipe book is organized well and easy to read. It tells interesting facts about many BBQ places from around the world. My favorite recipe had to be from Williamson Bros. in Georgia. This book actually makes you feel like you have been to each BBQ restaurant or that you wish you were there as you're reading.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) When I ordered this, I knew that it wasn't going to be the traditional cookbook, and that proved to be the case. I regard it more of an homage to the BBQ culture, with some useful recipes thrown in. It wouldn't be fair to say that I had low expectations, so much as I expected to see the limitations of this format. It is OK as far as it goes.
Echoing some other reviewers, I also found the recipes a bit heavy on the pork. Other recipes seemed a tad bizarre (unless that raccoon is certified 'Grade A,' I'm not touching it), while others seem more interested in hawking a product than promoting good cooking. The recipes I found most useful tended to be the accompanying dishes and desserts rather than the BBQ itself. I will return to this book for a moderate number of recipes, but if I had to pay money for this, I'm not sure that I would.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) AMERICA'S BEST BBQ takes the reader on a cross-country journey to experience some of our best BBQ joints. The writers visited restaurants from all over America. Some of them, holes in the wall; some, very high-end establishments. The various types of BBQ are represented (if it's real BBQ, no imitations). Memphis probably feels that they didn't get their fair share of coverage, but that's part of the fun of a book like this. Arguing over who should and shouldn't have made it.
Not only is the book descriptive about the various BBQ places, but also it includes some great recipes. The recipes aren't all just for meats. Some of the recipes are for really cool sides and desserts. What really makes this book, though, are all the pictures. AMERICA'S BEST BBQ is full of glossy full-color photos, which often times are much more interesting than the text. Buy this book for your BBQ lover.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) Having just bought a new gas grill I was hoping that this book would offer some great new recipes - and it did! This book is filled with recipes that will make your mouth water. A great read for anyone cook, chief griller or food enthusiast! Excellent read that offers something delicious for everyone!
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) I have to say that I was not sure this was going to be something that I would use but I was wrong. It has great recipes for BBQ of all kinds of meats including wild game, many recipes for coleslaw and potato salad which I am sure I will be trying quite a few this summer as they sound really good. They even have a dessert section which looks yummy too. There are lots of recipes from different well know restaurents and I like the fact that you have the same thing cooked different ways from different parts of the country. I love anything BBQ and this is a must have for the summer. Great Dad's day gift and you won't be sorry.
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| 20. Weber's Real Grilling: Over 200 Original Recipes by Jamie Purviance | |
![]() | Paperback
list price: $24.95 -- our price: $15.47 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0376020466 Publisher: Oxmoor House Sales Rank: 4303 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review Key Features: * One-of-a-kind grilling cookbook with over 200 original recipes, each with a color photos * Photos illustrate tips and techniques throughout * Recipes are big on flavor with easy to find ingredients * Tabbed chapters and included page flags to mark your favorite recipes * From basic preparation to advanced fire-tending methods, Weber’s Real Grilling™has all the tools for successful grilling Reviews
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