Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Cover Copyright Dedication Author’s Note Acknowledgments Chapter 1: There are only two ways to cook. Chapter 2: Five knives do 95 percent of the work. Chapter 3: Don’t buy a matched set. Chapter 4: A griddle is not a grill, a saucepan is not a saucier, and a skillet is not a sauté pan. Chapter 5: Kitchen lingo Chapter 6: Mise en place Chapter 7 Chapter 8: We eat with our eyes, nose, ears, and sense of touch. Chapter 9: Shake hands with a knife. Chapter 10: Basic knife cuts Chapter 11: Specialty knife cuts Chapter 12: What does a forkful look like? Chapter 13: How to boil water Chapter 14 Chapter 15: Know why customers walk through the door. Chapter 16: Keep guests informed. Chapter 17: The oldest cookbook Chapter 18 Chapter 19: Good beef is 30 days old. Chapter 20: The primal (or prime) cuts of meat Chapter 21: USDA prime and the “other” prime Chapter 22: Searing meat doesn’t “seal in the juices.” Chapter 23: Look, smell, poke, cut, taste. Chapter 24: Recognizing doneness in meat Chapter 25: Goat is the most popular meat in the world. Chapter 26: Fresh fish smells like the water it came from. Old fish smells like fish. Chapter 27: The freshest shrimp might be frozen shrimp. Chapter 28: Don’t drown a lobster. Chapter 29: Why convection ovens are faster Chapter 30: How to calibrate a thermometer Chapter 31: Internal temperatures for meat Chapter 32: Food can get hotter after cooking. Chapter 33: Buy it whole and cut it up. Chapter 34: Undercut a poultry breast before slicing it. Chapter 35: The kitchen brigade Chapter 36: The four salts in a kitchen Chapter 37: When and when not to add salt Chapter 38: Ten mistakes of the inexperienced cook Chapter 39: Eight ways to make a plate look better Chapter 40: Focus the flavor. Chapter 41: A sauce is only as good as its stock. Chapter 42: Don’t boil stock. Chapter 43: Roux: the longer, the darker Chapter 44: Five mother sauces Chapter 45 Chapter 46: Mount with butter to perfect the sauce. Chapter 47: Clarified butter Chapter 48: Menu types Chapter 49: A menu is only as good as a chef’s ability to write a recipe. Chapter 50: Menu-plan for leftovers. Chapter 51: Amuse-bouche is a gift from the chef. Chapter 52: When sautéing, make it jump. Chapter 53: Boil, shock, drain! Chapter 54: Rip, don’t cut salad greens. Chapter 55: How to keep salad dressing from separating Chapter 56: Pesticides Chapter 57: Small local farms can produce more food per acre than large corporate farms. Chapter 58: Don’t buy on the first pass. Chapter 59: Nine ways to make a restaurant more green Chapter 60: Keeping kosher Chapter 61: Keeping halal Chapter 62: Hindu food practices Chapter 63: All vegans are vegetarian; not all vegetarians are vegan. Chapter 64: Rice: the shorter, the stickier. Chapter 65: Sushi means vinegar rice; sashimi means fish only, no rice. Chapter 66: Starch makes the potato. Chapter 67: Soft cheeses melt best. Chapter 68: Put the inexpensive stuff first. Chapter 69: The smoke point Chapter 70: Refined or unrefined oil? Chapter 71: Proper frying takes place from 350°F to 375°F. Chapter 72: How to put out a grease fire Chapter 73: Quick reactions to emergencies Chapter 74: Call it out! Chapter 75: Don’t marinate at room temperature. Chapter 76: Cleaning removes dirt. Sanitizing kills germs. Chapter 77: A customer’s allergy is a chef’s problem. Chapter 78: Many foods are poisons. Chapter 79: A $2 chicken can cost $2 million. Chapter 80 Chapter 81: How to pair wine and food Chapter 82: Wine substitutes Chapter 83: Don’t hesitate to recommend a beer pairing. Chapter 84: Drying intensifies flavor. Chapter 85: Spices were once used as money. Chapter 86: Egg dating Chapter 87: Hunter/gatherers liked flatbreads. Chapter 88: Select flour by protein content. Chapter 89: Sifted flour is not the same as flour, sifted. Chapter 90: Freeze for ease. Chapter 91: Water your oven! Chapter 92: Sweetbreads have nothing to do with bread. Chapter 93: Goats discovered coffee. Chapter 94: How to survive when lost in the kitchen Chapter 95 Chapter 96: Why the chef’s jacket is double breasted Chapter 97: Surprising items in a chef’s toolkit Chapter 98: Take it to the cooler. Chapter 99: A cook knows how to make something; a chef knows why to make it that way. Chapter 100: A chef’s routine is the customer’s special event. Chapter 101 About the Author
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion