From a Maui native and food blogger comes a gorgeous cookbook of 85 fresh and sunny recipes reflects the major cultures that have influenced local Hawaiʻi food over time: Native Hawaiian, Chinese, Japanese, Portuguese, Korean, Filipino, and Western. IACP AWARD FINALIST • NAMED ONE OF THE BEST COOKBOOKS OF THE YEAR BY NPR AND LIBRARY JOURNAL In Aloha Kitchen, Alana Kysar takes you into the homes, restaurants, and farms of Hawaiʻi, exploring the cultural and agricultural influences that have made dishes like plate lunch and poke crave-worthy culinary sensations with locals and mainlanders alike. Interweaving regional history, local knowledge, and the aloha spirit, Kysar introduces local Hawaiʻi staples like saimin, loco moco, shave ice, and shoyu chicken, tracing their geographic origin and history on the islands. As a Maui native, Kysar’s roots inform deep insights on Hawaiʻi’s multiethnic culture and food history. In Aloha Kitchen, she shares recipes that Hawaiʻi locals have made their own, blending cultural influences to arrive at the rich tradition of local Hawaiʻi cuisine. With transporting photography, accessible recipes, and engaging writing, Kysar paints an intimate and enlightening portrait of Hawaiʻi and its cultural heritage.
If you have not had any experience with Asian cuisine, Mochi might be foreign to you. In Tokyo, Mochi is a delicacy that is enjoyed throughout the year; it is especially enjoyed for the traditional ceremony Mochitsuki. Mochi is a rice cake that is made with various flavors; can be eaten as a dessert or snack. Made from glutinous rice flour (mochiko) combined with other ingredients such as matcha, chocolate, food gel coloring, etc. to create sweet round pieces. Mochi can be enjoyed in various forms, even in ice cream form. Tokyo Mochi Recipes have put together some interesting recipes for you and your family to enjoy. There are even recipes for the children and teens to enjoy. This is how much of a delicacy mochi really is. Therefore, Mochi Recipes Cookbook has compiled 30 delicious Mochi quick foods for you. This cookbook will also teach you how to make Mochi with different varieties and flavors you can share with your loved ones.
What?s chewy and moist, comes in all shapes and flavors, great for picnics, parties, office treats for coffee break and EASY to prepare? Why, it?s a mochi dessert - always popular in Hawaii! In this grand collection of mochi recipes, not only can you find traditional recipes and today?s popular mochi desserts all in one cookbook, but also included are entrees, such as Siu Mai with Mochi Rice, Crisp Fried Shrimp, and Mochiko Chicken. There is also a microwave section for today?s busy lifestyle. The average microwave cooking time is around 10 minutes. Best of all, most mochi desserts can be prepared a day ahead and require no refrigeration.
"Amber's beautiful book is bursting with great ideas that make healthy eating a joy-and she's done a great job covering all the bases that, in my experience, teens and kids really want." -- Jamie Oliver Fifteen-year-old Amber Kelley is inspiring a whole new generation of eaters to get in the kitchen and have fun. She is the first winner of Food Network Star Kids, a member of celebrity chef Jamie Oliver's Food Tube family, and the host of her own web series on Foodnetwork.com and YouTube. Her work has been recognized by First Lady Michelle Obama, and Amber has been featured on national TV networks such as the Disney Channel, E!, and NBC's Today. Now, Amber's 80 most popular and delicious recipes have been hand-picked for her cookbook to empower teens to get in the kitchen. From nourishing breakfasts to start the day right, to school lunches to impress your friends, party ideas for every occasion, and even recipes for the best homemade facial scrubs to fight that dreaded teen acne, Amber shares her secrets for using the power of food to get the best out of her teen years. Includes 45 full-color photographs throughout.
This book is based upon the famous Japanese sweet commonly known as mochi. This sweet is very common in Japan and is a traditional dessert which prepared for generations. After reading this book, you'll surely get the hang of authentic Japanese sweet mochi. If one wants to perfect the art of making mochi, you must get this book and follow each and every step mentioned for making the perfect mochi. A mochi according to the Japanese terminology is a cake which is made of rice flour and which usually contains a fruit or other kind of sweet filling. Usually the filling is some type of fruit or jam. This book contains many different variations on a basic mochi. The ingredients used are mainly simple and very easy to get. There are some basic ingredients in each recipe which are repetitive. The only difference is the flavors and kind of filling one prefers for their mochis. This book contains the following sections with several variations of each: - Easy Japanese Butter Mochis - Chocolate Japanese Mochis - Strawberry Japanese Mochis - Japanese Mochis With a Variety of Flavors The best way to get started with Japanese mochi recipes is by getting this book. You can get the whole picture of how to make this dessert really shine. All the details have been mentioned in this book, from the quantity needed, to the preparation time and the complete guide as to how to make this unique desert.
In A Common Table, Two Red Bowls blogger Cynthia Chen McTernan shares more than 80 Asian-inspired, modern recipes that marry food from her Chinese roots, Southern upbringing, and Korean mother-in-law’s table. The book chronicles Cynthia’s story alongside the recipes she and her family eat every day—beginning when she met her husband at law school and ate out of two battered red bowls, through the first years of her legal career in New York, to when she moved to Los Angeles to start a family. As Cynthia’s life has changed, her cooking has become more diverse. She shares recipes that celebrate both the commonalities and the diversity of cultures: her mother-in-law’s spicy Korean-inspired take on Hawaiian poke, a sticky sesame peanut pie that combines Chinese peanut sesame brittle with the decadence of a Southern pecan pie, and a grilled cheese topped with a crisp fried egg and fiery kimchi. And of course, she shares the basics: how to make soft, pillowy steamed buns; savory pork dumplings; and a simple fried rice that can form the base of any meal. Asian food may have a reputation for having long ingredient lists and complicated instructions, but Cynthia makes it relatable, avoiding hard-to-find ingredients or equipment, and breaking down how to bring Asian flavors home into your own kitchen. Above all, Cynthia believes that food can bring us together around the same table, no matter where we are from. The message at the heart of A Common Table is that the food we make and eat is rarely the product of one culture or moment, but is richly interwoven—and though some dishes might seem new or different, they are often more alike than they appear.