400 Wok and Stir Fry Recipes Discover The Delights And Simplicity Of Successful Stir Fry Cooking With Sensational Classic And Modern Wok Dishes For Every Meal And Every Occasion
September 1, 2009 by Classic Recipes · Leave a Comment

Everything you could ever want to know about cooking with a wok in one sumptuous volume, with a comprehensive guide to getting the most from your wok and over 400 wok and stir-fry recipes.
User Ratings and Reviews
4 Stars Well Put Together Book For A Beginner
I just purchased this book, along with some utensils and a wok. Trying to vary up meals while cooking at home, which is becoming a trend not to go out to eat as often. So to save money and perhaps improve my culinary skills, I thought why not try stir fry, etc…
This book is an inch thick, dense (as my fiance and I joked about it halting a bullet it’s so dense), and is littered with helpful information in the first few chapters. The recipes have pictures, step by step instructions, and most of the time if it lists an ingredient, it’ll list another name it could be known as. I have, however, come across some ingredients I’m not familiar with, but I have a feeling I’d be able to order these spices online or find them in a local foreign foods market isle if I took the time to look. They’re usually not one of the major ingredients listed either, but I want to have everything together when I try a new recipe, even if I might doctor it later. I like to taste it how the writer intended, then alter it to meet my taste needs.
Overall, a lovely book. I think the only thing I would do differently would be to spiral bind it instead of standard book binding…so it’s easier to use in a kitchen environment.
1 Star Teeny, tiny, itsy, bitsy, ridiculously small print.
I have no idea if this is a good cookbook or not, I cannot read the print. It does have a great deal of pictures but I have no idea what the pictures are of. If you are young, with great vision, I think you will enjoy the book. HOWEVER, if you, like me, are over forty, pick a different book.
5 Stars The master collection of wok recipes
The cookbook starts out explaining stir fry equipment and tools. It further goes into showing and explaining all types of noodles and wrappers. The book outlines stir fry techniques and breaks it down into step by step directions. This is especially helpful for the person who has never cooked like this before. This is true asian cuisine cooked the asian way.
The cookbook goes into making your own dips and garnishes such as wasabi and soy dip, ginger and hoisin dip, thai red curry dip and as well your own sweet chili sauce.
This book covers finger foods, soups, appetizers, main dishes and even desserts…all made using your wok or bamboo steamer. It’s absolutely awesome. I could see this being a wonderful wedding gift given with a wok.
I think all 400 of the recipes have pictures, they’re all good quality pics with step by step instructions for ease of use. It even shows you how to chiffonade a mixture of fresh herbs. There are foods in here that I’ve never heard of such as Sotong Sambal (squid), Deep-Fried Plaice (flounder bones), Boemboe Bali of Fish which I still don’t know what it is. The list of ingredients is galangal, shrimp paste, mooli, poppadums, asian shallots, naan and many other ingredients I’d think you’d have to get at a Whole Foods type store. However, this book is certainly full of every imaginable wok/asian recipe as well as recipes for making plain old fried rice.
It might be a little over the top for the beginner but what is so great are the photos of step by step procedures. I think it would really break down a complicated recipe so even the beginner could handle it with ease. If you’re looking for a little more americanized asian cuisine then I would suggest The Complete Book of Asian Cooking: Ingredients, Techniques, 100 Classic Recipes, 800 Photographs by Sallie Morris. It has lots of step by step instructions with pictures as well.
4 Stars Nice Book, Need an Indoor Wok Though
I picked up one of those Weber Woks (terrific product, by the way). This book has loads of great looking recipes, but I think they are a bit extreme for a wok over charcoal; too many temperature changes required. If your wok is indoors, then this is a great book, and why I gave it 4 stars. If your wok is outdoors, try the book by Graimes.
A cookbook with a past.
August 29, 2009 by Classic Recipes · Leave a Comment
The Classic 1000 Cake and Bake Recipes Classic 1000 Cookbook
July 15, 2009 by Classic Recipes · Leave a Comment
The Classic 1000 Cake and Bake Recipes Classic 1000 Cookbook

Even in our time-pressured lives, cooks still love making cakes and breads. Not simply for special occasions, but as an everyday source of healthy pleasure, this book features everything from children’s treats through quick plain cakes to exotic and unusual international recipes. Plus, there’s a whole range of bread recipes from basic loaves to malt and fancy sweet, savory, and grain creations.
Restaurant Favorites at Home A Best Recipe Classic The Best Recipe
July 9, 2009 by Classic Recipes · Leave a Comment
Restaurant Favorites at Home A Best Recipe Classic The Best Recipe

The editor and founder of Cooks Illustrated magazine and his devoted staff turn their culinary skills to the deconstruction of complicated restaurant recipes in this solid cookbook, which captures “the magic of five-star recipes without the madness of their execution.” With the intention of simplifying and clarifying restaurant fare, the authors tested and retested complicated instructions and ingredients and pared them down to their essential elements. Thus, Insane Truffle Soup, served at Tru in Chicago, becomes Sane Truffle Soup, a recipe that keeps the essence of truffle flavor without blowing the home cook’s budget. And Le Bernardin’s Tuna Tartare with Piquillo Peppers, Roasted Tomatoes and Spicy Sweet Potato Tuiles becomes Tuna Tartare with Sweet Potato Crisps, where the roasted tomato garnish is replaced with sweet potato chips, which can even be purchased at a store. Hard-to-find or expensive ingredients and kitchen tools are substituted and replaced with easier to find equipment, and vague instructions are made more precise. Kitchen tips abound: among other suggestions, the editors offer advice on how to shred cheese without making a mess, peel and segment an orange and choose the correct cooking oil for any recipe. The novelty of some of these dishes, such as Green Eggs and Ham, will delight enlightened eaters. A fine addition to Cook’s Illustrated’s excellent book series, this volume should please cooks of all stripes.
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Dallas Classic Desserts Classic Recipes Series
May 13, 2009 by Classic Recipes · Leave a Comment
Dallas Classic Desserts Classic Recipes Series

A beautifully photographed cookbook celebrating the rich desserts of Dallas, this collection presents the best sweets from the city’s finest restaurants and chefs. A cosmopolitan melting pot of flavors, Dallas lays claim to hundreds of fabulously diverse eateries, each ranging in specialty from Southern and Tex-Mex fare to French contemporary, Latin American, and Asian cuisine. Highlighting iconic Dallas dishes and the confections made famous by the city’s favorite restaurants, “Dallas Classic Desserts” shares the secrets behind such indulgences as Fearing’s Caramelized Apple Fritters and Al Biernat’s Texas Pecan Pie
Gluten Free Baking Classics for the Bread Machine
May 5, 2009 by Classic Recipes · Leave a Comment
Gluten Free Baking Classics for the Bread Machine
User Ratings and Reviews
1 Star If you don’t have a Zojirushi, don’t buy this book!
If you have a bread machine that is not a Zojirushi, don’t buy this book! As she states in the book, the results will not be as good. Very disappointing…
And yes, it’s a very small book for the price.
3 Stars Not much there
I haven’t even tried the recipes, but I’m disappointed that this is such a little, limited book.
Cookbook review: Ten: All the Foods We Love and 10 Perfect Recipes for Each (Inside Bay Area)
April 1, 2009 by Classic Recipes · Leave a Comment

