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Sources
We found virtually all of these recipes, or at least a starting point for
the recipe, in a published cookbook, and we have gratefully acknowledged
our indebtedness in all cases where we are confident of the source.
Beyond that, we want to make a few suggestions toward a basic library
of cookbooks. We continue to learn much from these authors.
- For cooking techniques and understanding of materials, Julia Child's
two volumes on The Art of French Cooking and her
The Way to Cook.
- For unrivaled elegance and intelligence, Betty Rosbottom's Cooking School Cookbook
and her American Favorites.
- For breadth of coverage and high standards throughout, Craig Claiborne,
The New York Times Cookbook, The Best of Craig Claiborne, and
Joy of Cooking (1997 edition).
- For Italian, Marcella Hazen, The Classic Italian Cook Book, Patricia Wells' Trattoria,
and Barrett and Wasserman, Risotto.
- For bread baking, Beard on Bread, Bernard Clayton's New
Complete Book of Breads, and The Tassajara Bread Book.
- For seafood, Franey and Miller, The Seafood Cookbook.
- For soups, Brother Victor-Antoine d'Avila-Latourrette, Twelve Months of Monastery Soups.
- For microwave issues, Barbara Kafka, The Microwave Gourmet.
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