Synopses & Reviews
A cookbook featuring more than 65 recipes that make use of the parts of vegetables that typically get thrown away, including stalks, tops, ribs, fronds, and stems, with creative tips for making the most of seasonal ingredients to stretch the kitchen dollar.
Make the Most of Your Produce!
Don’t discard those carrot tops, broccoli stalks, potato peels, and pea pods. The secret that creative restaurant chefs and thrifty great-grandmothers share is that these, and other common kitchen scraps, are both edible and wonderfully flavorful.
Root-to-Stalk Cooking provides savvy cooks with the inspiration, tips, and techniques to transform trimmings into delicious meals. Corn husks and cobs make for rich Corn-Pancetta Puddings in Corn Husk Baskets, watermelon rinds shine in a crisp and refreshing Thai Watermelon Salad, and velvety green leek tops star in Leek Greens Stir Fry with Salty Pork.
Featuring sixty-five recipes that celebrate the whole vegetable, Root-to-Stalk Cooking helps you get the most out of your seasonal ingredients. By using husks, roots, skins, cores, stems, seeds, and rinds to their full potential, you’ll discover a whole new world of flavors while reducing waste and saving money.
Synopsis
A cookbook featuring more than 65 recipes that make use of the parts of vegetables that typically get thrown away, including stalks, tops, ribs, fronds, and stems, with creative tips for making the most of seasonal ingredients to stretch the kitchen dollar.
In this era of vegetable obsession, our home vegetable gardens and farmers markets offer forests of leafy greens, emerald stalks, and plump squash. And yet, in the kitchen, most people cut, peel, trim, and throw away half of their produce. Focusing on the overlooked parts — broccoli stalks, fennel fronds, artichoke leaves, and even carrot tops — Root-to-Stalk Cooking reveals a whole new world of flavors while reducing waste and saving money. Watermelon rinds transform into Thai Watermelon Salad, cumin-toasted squash seeds are sprinkled over Roasted Winter Squash Soup, and leek tops that normally would go straight to the compost bin star in Leek Greens Stir Fry with Salty Pork. By thinking differently about the produce we buy and grow, Root-to-Stalk Cooking allows roots, stems, leaves, and seeds to take their rightful place at the table.
About the Author
Tara Duggan is a regular contributor to the San Francisco Chronicle and the New York Times Bay Area Report, and the recipient of a James Beard Foundation Award for food journalism. She is the author of The Working Cook; Waffles, Any Time; and The Burger; and the co-author of The Blue Bottle Craft of Coffee. She lives in San Francisco with her husband and two daughters and spends weekends at her family's off-the-grid organic farm in Mendocino, where she gets ideas for what to do with all kinds of kitchen scraps.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1 Roots
Beets • Turnips • Radishes • Carrots • Potatoes
2 Bulbs & Stems
Asparagus • Celery • Fennel • Leeks
3 Leaves
Cabbage • Chard • Kale • Herbs •
Romaine Lettuce
4 Flowers
Artichokes • Squash Blossoms • Broccoli • Cauliflower
5 Seeds
Corn • Fava Beans • Peas
6 Fruit
Apples • Avocados • Butternut Squash • Citrus • Tomatoes • Watermelon
Recipes by Type
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Index