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- Description
- Product Details
- About the Author
- Read an Excerpt
Description
The New York Times Food columnist and beloved home cooking authority welcomes the next generation of chefs into the kitchen with 100 recipes that are all about what YOU think is good. Whether you’re new to cooking or you already rock that kitchen, these 100 recipes make it easy to cook what you like, exactly how you like it. Recipes include: Fresh Custardy French Toast • OMG, I Smell Bacon! (spicy and candied, too) • Granola Bar Remix, feat. Cranberry and Ginger • The. Last. Guacamole. Recipe. Ever. • Fast Pho • Garlicky, Crumb-y Pasta • Classic Caesar Salad with Unclassic Cheesy Croutons •Crispy Pork Carnitas Tacos • Mexican Chicken Soup & Chips • Shrimp Scampi Skillet Dinner • Korean Scallion and Veggie Pancakes (Pajeon) • Fluffy Buttermilk Biscuits Put a Spell on You • Rise & Dine Cinnamon Raisin Bread • Buttery Mashed Potato Cloud • Deep Dark Fudgy Brownies • Think Pink Lemonade Bars
IACP AWARD FINALIST • NAMED ONE OF THE BEST COOKBOOKS OF THE YEAR BY THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW AND TOWN & COUNTRY
In Kid in the Kitchen, Melissa Clark, who has been cooking with her own kid for years, takes you step-by-step through how to understand and create each dish. These recipes are fun, insanely delicious, and will help you become a confident cook. There are tons of tips and tweaks, too, so you can cook what you want with what you have. Make amped-up breakfasts, sandwiches that slay, noodles and pasta for every craving, plus sheet pan dinners, mix and match grain bowls and salads, one-pot meals, party classics, and the richest, gooiest desserts. This is the fun, easy way to awesome food.
Melissa will explain the most helpful kitchen tools and tips, from the proper way to hold a chef’s knife to why you need a Microplane grater right now. She’ll even clue you in on which recipe rules you can break and how to snap amazing food photos to share!
Product Details
ISBN-13: 9780593232286
Media Type: Hardcover
Publisher: Clarkson Potter/Ten Speed
Publication Date: 11-10-2020
Pages: 288
Product Dimensions: 7.50(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 10 - 17 Years
About the Author
Melissa Clark is the author of the New York Times bestseller Dinner in French, as well as Dinner, Dinner in an Instant, and Comfort in an Instant. She is a columnist for The New York Times Food section. Daniel Gercke has written cookbooks about pies, chickens, and zombies, as well as The Dr. Seuss Cookbook (2021). Melissa and Daniel live in Brooklyn with their daughter, Dahlia.
Read an Excerpt
Hi! If you love to eat, you should learn how to cook. Because no one cooks or eats exactly like you do. You have your own tastes and needs. Maybe you need school snacks and after-school snacks. Maybe you want to cook for sleepovers or video game parties. The things you’re into aren’t always what grown-ups are into. Your tastes may change and evolve, but you definitely have strong opinions about what’s good. And learning how to make food YOU think is good is what this book is about. Making the food I wanted, when I wanted it, was why I baked my first cake without any help at the age of eight. I desperately craved a purple layer cake with rainbow sprinkles, and there was no way my mom was going to make it for me when it wasn’t my birthday. So I dug out the Joy of Cooking and made a floury mess, dyeing the batter with red and blue food coloring. It turned the batter a lovely shade of lavender—and I ate so much of it that my tongue and fingers turned lavender, too (yum). But when I took the cake out of the oven, it baked up into a scary shade of gray. And, apparently, I forgot to add the baking powder, because it was flat as a flip-flop. But I frosted it in violet-tinted buttercream and topped it with sprinkles. I was psyched to share it with my best friend, Kimmy, who lived down the block. We thought the gray flip-flop cake tasted amazing. So, yeah, I’ve come a long way since then. I write cookbooks and recipes forThe New York Times for a living, and now most of what I cook turns out pretty well. When it’s flat and gray, it’s flat and gray on purpose. But ever since sharing that flip-flop cake with Kimmy, I realized that one surefire way to make myself—and my friends and family—really happy was to make (and share) the food I loved to eat. Cooking never fails to bring joy. I strongly believe that everyone who loves to eat should learn to cook. That flip-flop cake taught me another lesson, too: Cooking isn’t about getting things perfect—it’s about having fun (and licking the bowl) while you do it. You do have to learn some basics to get going. Every dish has a few fundamental steps that will make it work. In this book, I take you step-by-step through the process of understanding and making a recipe. You’ll find a set of rock-solid starting points that will help you cook exactly what you want to eat. The Tips & Tweaks will teach you how to adapt each recipe to suit your current mood or that of the people you arecooking for. So I hope you’ll mess around with these recipes, hack them, hype them, make them yours. As long as you’ve got the basics and you’re having fun, whatever you make is bound to be delicious! Now get in that kitchen and own it! —Your friend, MelissaRead an Excerpt