Reviews for Tassajara Cooking

Tassajara Cooking by Edward Espe Brown Summary and Reviews

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Book Reviews of Tassajara Cooking

Book Review: How to Cook
Summary: 5 Stars

This book is a how-to-cook, not what-to-cook book. Instead of individual recipes, the emphasis is on how to take ingredients and create tasty and appealing meals from them without much fuss. The book begins with a short chapter on knives and how to use them. It then moves on to various cooking methods, such as sautéing, and braising, before briefly listing common vegetables and their seasons. The main part of the book is organized into 3 sections: vegetables (ordered by season), other ingredients (fruits, nuts, grains, dairy, etc.) and combined foods (condiments, soups, sauces, and casseroles). The book closes with a brief section on caring for kitchen equipment.

Rather than specifying exact amounts, Brown describes the general idea for creating a recipe for each vegetable. He suggests several ingredients that might go well together with the vegetable at hand, and a cooking method, but it is left up to the reader to decide what ratios and amounts to use. One advantage of this approach is that the recipes can easily be scaled to feed one person or one hundred. Instead of specific cooking instructions, Brown draws the cook's attention to factors that may affect the taste or aesthetic qualities of the dish, and leaves it up to the cook to make the final decisions. The lack of specific amounts in many of the recipes might be disconcerting to some, especially those who are just starting out in the kitchen. Others will find Brown's approach liberating, and they may finally learn to cook, instead of just following recipes.

Although the recipes are entirely vegetarian, the book could be useful for anyone who regularly cooks vegetables. Some of the recipes call for dairy or eggs, but in many cases, Brown also suggests options that would be suitable for vegans. In addition to covering common Western vegetables, Brown includes suggestions for cooking some sea vegetables and other common Japanese ingredients like miso.

Book Review: Not a recipe book - but truly conveys "Joy of Cooking"
Summary: 4 Stars

Maybe you are learning to cook by following recipes in good cook books, and (one hopes) varying from the recipes based on the ingredients at hand. This is a wonderful companion for the student chef - and very much worth a little time tracking a copy down second-hand. (The book is, sadly, out of print.)

The book is so friendly and accessible, with early editions including amateurish drawings and hand-printed messages, with such a playful (while certainly informative) tone, there is no intimidation. At the front of the book is a good orientation on knife care and safe chopping, as well as different styles of chopping (the "julienne" versus the "round cut," for example). The book is then organized into food groups, with chapters on basic ingredients essential for healthy (and tasty) vegetarian cooking. The facts about each vegetable, legume, or grain, and some very basic recipes to show how it might be prepared - with a strong encouragement to improvise!


Book Review: Probably one of the best guides to learning how to cook
Summary: 5 Stars

Back when I was a teenager, in the early 1970's, I decided to become a vegetarian. I nearly gave up. There was no 'vegetarian option' on menus, and precious few vegetarian cookery books about either. I had two. One was a stern Mitteleuoropa tome heavily concerned with 'Food Reform', full of recipes utilising grated carrots and lots of nuts. The other was a macrobiotic tract which was more of a work of philosophy than a practical cookery book. Then along came this cheerful, laid-back Californian Zen monk who said "Hey, relax. It's really not that difficult. Just watch me." And that's what it's like. Watching someone cooking. There are very few cookery books which can take the place of a one-to-one lesson, and Tassajara Cooking is one of them. There aren't that many actual recipes, it's more a case of 'you've bought some... brown rice, brussel sprouts, lentils, whatever. Now, this is what you do with them...'
With the hindsight of thirty-five years, there are faults you could find. There is probably more in the way of fat, sugar and dairy products than most modern vegetarins would like. If your'e looking for precise recipes for particular dishes, this is not the book for you.
On the whole, though, these are minor quibbles. This is without doubt, a book which celebrates food, in a way that few others do. And it it is without doubt, the book I would recommend to a beginning cook, whether or not they were a vegetarian.

Book Review: Takes the 'scary' out of cooking
Summary: 5 Stars

It's a good thing this book is back in print because mine is totally trashed! Tassajara Cooking is not for the intuitive cook who can fly around the kitchen throwing things together to make a meal. If you're not a confident intuitive cook, however, it will help turn you into one. I've got the First Edition and have referred to it over twenty years. I've never seen another cookbook like it. It takes the stress out of having to strictly follow a recipe and buy every single ingredient by teaching the fundamentals of creating something tasty and nutritious with what you have on hand. Its gentle presentation and hand-drawn pictures make it "comfort food" in book form, turning an intimidating kitchen into a fun and creative place. Think of the exhausting list of ingredients in the average soup recipe. The soup section makes the best soups I've ever had, with very few common ingredients. You just don't need all that other stuff to make great-tasting healthful food! I like Tassajara Cooking more than Tassajara Recipes, but I recommend both. And I HIGHLY recommend the Tassajara Bread Book.