Tuesday, November 20 2007 10:15 PM EST2007-11-21 03:15:02 GMT
The Director of the Culinary & Wine Institute at Carolina, Patrick C. Duggan, is demonstrating two recipes for WIS News 10. The instructions and ingredients are below.More >>
Breads like Banana-Nut have won over the taste buds of many, and former WIS News 10 anchor Scott Hawkin's Banana Rasberry Bread makes over an old favorite. More >>
The folks at WIS are sharing their favorite holiday recipes with you. See how former WIS News 10 anchor Susan Aude makes her delicious, easy and quick corn bake.More >>
Native to central Asia, scallions are at once crisp and tender, cooling and hot -- perhaps that's why they travel so seamlessly between salads, soups and main dishes. More >>
Native to central Asia, scallions are at once crisp and tender, cooling and hot -- perhaps that's why they travel so seamlessly between salads, soups and main dishes. More >>
The tiny seed can be toasted and used whole, tossed into a jar of fermenting pickles, ground into a powder, or crushed and mixed with vinegar to form the familiar condiment that we spread onto sandwiches. More >>
The tiny seed can be toasted and used whole, tossed into a jar of fermenting pickles, ground into a powder, or crushed and mixed with vinegar to form the familiar condiment that we spread onto sandwiches. More >>
Stuffed with meats, veggies or cheeses, savory pies are a favorite on kitchen tables around the world. Dig in and check out this variety of recipes.More >>
Stuffed with meats, veggies or cheeses, savory pies are a favorite on kitchen tables around the world. Dig in and check out this variety of recipes.More >>
Shake up some of your favorite St. Patrick's Day ingredients with a twist on tradition. Click through for recipes featuring corned beef, cabbage and potatoes.More >>
What are your favorite things to cook your family? Once you have submitted your recipe, we'll post it online with your name and state for everyone to see.More >>
By the Editors of Saveur
Thank heavens for the recent bonanza of fish cookbooks.
Relying on older books can be problematic: The world has changed, the seas have changed, and the kinds of fish that are abundant and available have certainly changed.
Below are four titles released in 2011 and 2012 that help us make better choices—and more delicious fish dishes—than ever before.
British author and gentleman farmer Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall has teamed up with the aptly named Nick Fisher—the BBC's go-to seafood pundit—for The River Cottage Fish Book (Ten Speed Press), which includes practical instruction on everything from gutting to filleting to defrosting fish, with thorough guidance regarding sustainable practices.
At its heart are dishes like curried mussels served in a creamy, herbaceous, wine-laced broth that are so appealing you can't wait to visit your fishmonger.
Recipes are organized seasonally — reasonable, as most fishes' flavor and availability changes across the year. It also means that Seaver groups seafoods with sides that suit them naturally — summery grilled king crab legs with grilled kale drizzled in almond oil; broiled Arctic char with a wintry ragout of turnip, celery, and chestnuts.
Artist and designer Jake Tilson's books, for which he creates the recipes, the photographs, and even the fonts, are always engaging.In at the Deep End: Cooking Fish Venice to Tokyo (Globe Pequot Press) is downright thrilling; it tells the tale of Tilson's quest to overcome his fish phobia.
He catches mackerel off the coast of northeast Scotland; he snorkels in the shark-infested waters of Australia's Great Barrier Reef. But mostly he cooks the dishes he's discovered in his travels: Venetian cuttlefish in its ink with polenta; a classic Swedish gravadlax.
In February, Phaidon Press is publishing Fish: Recipes from the Sea, a new collection from the archives of Italy's seminal Silver Spoon cookbook, with full-color photographs and illustrated encyclopedia-style entries on the fish called for in every dish.
There's step-by-step instruction in techniques such as scaling and skinning, shucking oysters, and preparing octopus, while the seductive recipes run to fried skate with butter and capers, and sautéed cod with a luscious pea cream.
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