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The Best Skillet Recipes: What's the Best Way to Make Lasagna With Rich, Meaty Flavor, Chunks of Tomato, and Gooey Cheese, Without Ever Turning on the Oven or Boiling a Pot of

The Best Skillet Recipes: What's the Best Way to Make Lasagna With Rich, Meaty Flavor, Chunks of Tomato, and Gooey Cheese, Without Ever Turning on the Oven or Boiling a Pot of
By Cook's Illustrated Magazine

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Product Description

One pan is all you need! From breakfast all the way to dessert, one skillet is all you need for fast, flavorful meals. it's no surprise that meat, fish, and pasta dishes come together nicely in a skillet But pot pie can also be made in the pan. So can pizza, casseroles and souffles.

Put away that second pot for boiling pasta and cook it in its sauce right in the skillet. Start pizzas on the stovetop in the skillet and finish with a hot blast in the oven (still in the skellet). Spruce up your stir-fry repertoire with new and innovative ideas.

One pan means less clean up. The Best Skillet Recipes means a world of great and easy meals.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #17282 in Books
  • Published on: 2009-03-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 368 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
In this latest addition of the Best Recipe Classic series, Cooks Illustrated editor Christopher Kimball and his team of kitchen scientists celebrate the untold versatility of that ordinary workhorse, the 12-inch skillet. An indispensable tool for eggs, pan-seared meats and sautéed vegetables, the skillet can also be used for stovetop-to-oven dishes such as All-American Mini Meatloaves; layered dishes such as tamale pie and Tuscan bean casserole; and even desserts such as hot fudge pudding cake. In the trademark style of other America's Test Kitchen publications, the cookbook contains plenty of variations on basic themes (you can make chicken and rice with peas and scallions, broccoli and cheddar, or coconut milk and pistachios); ingredient and equipment roundups; and helpful illustrations for preparing mango and stringing snowpeas. Yet the true strength of the series lies in the sheer thoughtfulness and detail of the recipes. Whether or not you properly appreciate your skillet, this book will at least teach you to wield it gracefully. (Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


Customer Reviews

This is a great cookbook for people with limited time and limited space.5
I've owned this book for less than a month and am already addicted to it.
Not everyone has a large and well-equipped kitchen with several stovetop burners and a large selection of pots and pans. Not everyone has all day in which to prepare a meal.
This cookbook satisfies both stumbling blocks.
Most of the meals can be prepared in much less time than traditional recipes and with many needing only one pan means that cleanup is also quick and easy.
I'm now retired so do have more time to cook than I did in the years in which I worked, however I also have other activities that sometimes take up a lot of my time and I still want to have a good home-cooked meal. (Not at all a fan of fast food.)
Some of the recipes do take longer to prep and have a significant list of ingredients but the directions are clear and concise and easy to understand.
I like that the book contains CI's ratings of various "quick" ingredients such as Supermarket Chicken Broth, Extra-Virgin Olive Oils and even Fish Sauce.
Many of the recipes are down-to-earth plain foods but there are also recipes for more exotic dishes for the cook who wants to be a bit more adventuresome.

I have particularly found this cookbook helpful when unexpected guests arrived and the weather was somewhat nasty and no one felt like going out to a restaurant. I was able to put together a lovely main dish (Chicken and Couscous with Fennel and Orange) for four people with very little effort.

The Cookbook I Really use5
First off, I agree completely with the other 5-star reviews here. So I'll try to add something constructive. This is not a Coffee Table book. Don't expect traditional color pictures, there are almost none. There are, however, clear illustrations. This book is teaching me to cook with confidence and, unbelievably, eagerness. Even without photos, these recipes look manageable and inviting. Along the way, you build a repertoire of techniques and habits (setting up your "mise en place") that apply to all your cooking and baking. I think it appeals to all levels of cook, and would make a wonderful gift equally at at a wedding shower or a retirement celebration. Or for ypurself.

A Restaurant Line Cook's Secret Revealed5
Yes, this a great book, and practical too, one that I consult and use constantly. But even more importantly, it covers a technique that I'd been very curious about, and had not seen described in any other cook book: "Pan Roasting" -- starting meat or fish on the top of the stove, and finishing it in the oven. Now, when your waitress says, "The chef is just finishing your dish in the oven," you'll not only know what she means, you'll know how to do it. Would you like to turn out restaurant quality rack of lamb? With this book I was able to do it in a few minutes on the very first try!