Confessions
Augustine
When Saint Augustine wrote his Confessions he was facing, and responding to, a growing spread of asceticism in the Roman world.
The Confusion
Neal Stephenson
In the year 1689, a cabal of Barbary galley slaves — including one Jack Shaftoe, a.k.a. King of the Vagabonds, a.k.a. Half-Cocked Jack, lately and miraculously cured of the pox — devises a daring plan to win freedom and fortune. A great adventure ensues, rife with battles, chases, hairbreadth escapes, swashbuckling, bloodletting, and danger — a perilous race for an enormous prize of silver ... nay, gold ... nay, legendary gold that will place the intrepid band at odds with the mighty and the mad, with alchemists, Jesuits, great navies, pirate queens, and vengeful despots across vast oceans and around the globe.
The Continuum Encyclopedia of Symbols
Udo Becker
Tracing symbols to their cultural, religious, or mythological origins, this informative book explores a rich array of objects and concepts which contain hidden or encoded meanings behind their ordinary, outer appearance. An invaluable aid for artists, writers, and all those who search for the deeper significance lying within the ordinary and everyday. 1,500 entries. 900 illustrations.
The Cook's Alphabet of Quotations
Maria Polushkin Robbins, Maria Polushkin
Maria Polushkin Robbins has compiled an astonishing array of quotations about cooking and dining from centuries of observations, numbering in the hundreds. They range from the philosophical to the ridiculous. Included are memorable quotes by Nora Ephron, Julia Child, Lewis Carroll, Vladimir Nabokov, and many more. Line drawings.
Cook's Ingredients
Editors of Reader's Digest
Adrian Bailey, wine-magazine editor, food journalist, and author of several cookbooks, brings the culinary know-how; and Philip Dowell, contributor to the Time/Life Foods of the World series, furnishes the photographic excellence for this innovative and useful food guide. The setup is elegantly attractive and extremely practical. Part I is all pictures (Dowell spent more than a year collecting the color plates), with similar food items (usually life-size) shown together on one page for easy comparison. Divvied up among a number of food categories—such as herbs, oil, cheese, and vegetables, dried pulses, fruit, baking goods, and pasta, fish, poultry, game, and sausages, coffee, tea, and alcoholic drinks—each pictured ingredient is followed by a brief but informative paragraph explaining its origin, uses, and flavor. Take "galangal." It's identified as the ground, dried root of a Chinese plant, ginger-peppery in taste, and used in curries and liqueurs.
CookWise: The Hows & Whys of Successful Cooking, The Secrets of Cooking Revealed
Shirley O. Corriher
Can you tell whether a recipe will work before you cook it? You can if you really know what's cooking.
Cookie Craft Christmas: Dozens of Decorating Ideas for a Sweet Holiday
Valerie Peterson, Janice Fryer
Make every Christmas a cookie craft Christmas! The holidays offer just the right combination of cold weather and family togetherness for cookie crafters to elevate their skills to showstopping new heights. With more than 60 new Christmas cookie designs, along with festive New Year’s cookies and lovely Hanukkah treats, Cookie Craft Christmas delivers colorful inspiration to cookie decorators just when they need it most.
Cooking Moroccan
Tess Mallos
From Morocco’s savory little dishes—Filled Pancakes, Fennel and Olive Salad, Sweet Tomato Jam—to a celebration of "Dishes from the Palace," here are all the tastes and scents of Moroccan cooking. Spicy kebabs, rich vegetarian and meat tagines, perfect couscous, and rosewater-infused desserts are just a few of the pleasures waiting to be discovered in Cooking Moroccan. 250 color photographs explain special techniques and show finished dishes; ingredients integral to each cuisine are featured in special expanded focus sections, and cultural tips—a discussion of the traditional Moroccan mint tea service, a look at the spicy tradition of chorizo sausage—immerse the reader in regional cuisines. The practical and inspirational meet in this lavish exploration of Moroccan cuisine.
The Cooking of Southwest France : Recipes from France's Magnificent Rustic Cuisine
Paula Wolfert
"An indispensable cookbook."
The Cooking of Southwest France: A Collection of Traditional and New Recipes from France's Magnificent Rustic Cuisine, and New Techniques to Lighten
Paula Wolfert
Greeted upon its publication in 1983 as one of the truly great works of culinary art, Paula Wolfert's The Cooking of South-West France is an exploration of the gastronomic delights of one of France's most extraordinary regions. While its cuisine makes use of sophisticated ingredients like foie gras, truffles, and Armagnac, it is, at heart, rustic, abounding in such deeply flavorful dishes as cassoulets and the delicious preserved meats and poultry known as confits. In her five years of research Wolfert has collected and refined over 150 recipes from both local home cooks and some of France's greatest chefs, and has produced a book anyone who is serious about food will want to own. |
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