Larousse gastronomique

by Prosper Montagné

Paper Book, 2001

Status

Available

Publication

New York : Clarkson Potter, c2001.

Description

The ultimate guide to classical cuisine, now updated for the era of food processors and microwaves, completely freshly illustrated in full color and Americanized by the renowned author of Tastings. Over 900 full-color photographs and 70 black-and-white illustrations.

User reviews

LibraryThing member StoutHearted
Highly regarded as a French gourmand's Bible, I keep this book close to the kitchen as a culinary dictionary. Entries are organized alphabetically, and brief recipes are filed where appropriate. For example, if you want to find different ways to cook sole, look up "sole," and the entry will provide
Show More
an explanation of the subject, tips on how to select and prepare the fish, then different recipes that focus on ingredients rather than step-by-step instructions such as "Turn the oven to 400 degrees...."

My edition is old, from the '60s or '70s, but it is still is useful to have around. Larousse Gastronomique is a companion to the kitchen and certainly not a replacement for a cookbook, as the recipes are there more for inspiration than direct instruction.
Show Less
LibraryThing member Bestine
Not really a cookbook; more like 'fascinating facts about anything culinary.' I can waste hours and hours just opening pages at random. I especially enjoy all the historical information. Oh, what fun!
LibraryThing member jveezer
This is THE reference for me that I run to whenever I need to look up an ingredient or cooking term. It's especially enjoyable for some of the obscure stuff. I did not know that bit about the unreliability of the recipes as I've never tried one.
LibraryThing member jontseng
Comprehensive coverage of French cuisine; obviously weaker elsewhere. Recipes are notoriously unreliable. Nice pictures.
LibraryThing member jontseng
The paperback edition has all the content of the hardcover, but fewer recipes (no loss given general unreliability of Larousse recipes). Suffers more from lacking the wonderful pictures which adorn the larger edition.
LibraryThing member bostonbibliophile
Awesome reference book on all things cooking and baking and food.
LibraryThing member jason.goodwin
I had this book on the shelf for years, and supposed it to be snooty and French. It is - and terrific stuff, too.
Handling a roadkill just after Christmas I browsed the book for venison recipes and discovered one (see Roebuck) attributed to Christian Dior, of all people. To my slight surprise it
Show More
read well - it had, I imagine, a sort of New Look simplicity. And it was a triumph.
Now I browse the great tome occasionally, finding all sorts of treasures, including little biographies of extraordinary people, mostly French cooks and critics.
Show Less

Language

Original language

French
Page: 0.2146 seconds