Visitors to Salt Lake City generally take time to visit The Lion House, the historic home of Brigham Young, the second president of the LDS Church and first territorial governor of Utah. The basement cafe is legendary and has become a favorite lunch spot for locals and tourists alike. The Lion House has come to mean good food. Now, with the publication of this trilogy of Lion House Cookbooks, cooks across America can enjoy traditional and international recipes that have made The Lion House famous worldwide.
Five hungry kids, a husband in the NFL, and staying in shape—popular blogger Christy Denney has her work cut out for her in the kitchen. Her solution? Simple, quick, and mouthwatering recipes. The Girl Who Ate Everything compiles all of Christy’s favorite tried and true recipes, as well as brand new and equally tasty ones created just for this book. From Chicken Pot Pie Crumble to Cinnamon Roll Sheet Cake, these recipes will have your family begging you for more!
Undoubtedly one of the most popular cookbook to date in the Western market, Lion House Recipes has been a tried-and-true favorite of family cooks for twenty-five years. In celebration of this significant milestone, the staff of the Lion House Pantry has compiled Lion House Classics, a new edition of irresistible recipes with updated cooking methods and east-to-find ingredients. All the delectable dishes you love -- Lion House Rolls, Chicken cordon Bleu, chocolate Cream Cake -- are included, along with more than two dozen new recipes. dozens of mouth-watering, full-color photographs offer visual inspiration. Discover why this new twist of a favorite cookbook makes it even more indispensable than the original!
Offers a new collection of more than 100 recipes and 50 full-color photographs to help you make such favorites as the legendary Lion House Rolls, Chocolate Cream Cake, Buttermilk Scones and Honey Butter, Chocolate Party Puffs, Lion House Pumpkin Bread, and Layered Cream Cheese Brownies. You'll also find dozens of brand-new recipes--soon-to-be favorites such as Butterscotch Pull-Aparts, Cinnamon Apple Dumplings, and Aloha Cookies--and discover secret baking tips for turning out perfect rolls, pie crusts, and pastries. Includes a DVD.
First book in a ndw series of Lion House spiral-bound specialty cookbooks, this book contains more than seventy recipies for crusts, pies, tarts, and sauces. Full-color photographs, easy-to-follow instructions, and a DVD packed with baking tips will help you create scrumptious, irresistible pies.
At long last, the companion cookbook to the hit YouTube cooking show—including recipes for 120 simple, delicious Italian-American classics. When Laura Vitale moved from Naples to the United States at age twelve, she cured her homesickness by cooking up endless pots of her nonna’s sauce. She went on to work in her father’s pizzeria, but when his restaurant suddenly closed, she knew she had to find her way back into the kitchen. Together with her husband, she launched her Internet cooking show, Laura in the Kitchen, where her enthusiasm, charm, and irresistible recipes have won her millions of fans. In her debut cookbook, Laura focuses on simple recipes that anyone can achieve—whether they have just a little time to spend in the kitchen or want to create an impressive feast. Here are 110 all-new recipes for quick-fix suppers, such as Tortellini with Pink Parmesan Sauce and One-Pan Chicken with Potatoes, Wine, and Olives; leisurely entrées, including Spinach and Artichoke-Stuffed Shells and Pot Roast alla Pizzaiola; and 10 fan favorites, like Cheesy Garlic Bread and No-Bake Nutella Cheesecake. Laura tests her recipes dozens of times to perfect them so the results are always spectacular. With clear instructions and more than 100 color photographs, Laura in the Kitchen is the perfect guide for anyone looking to get comfortable at the stove and have fun cooking.
In the early 1980s, on assignment from the American Museum of Natural History, Raymond Sokolov crisscrossed America in search of traditional regional cuisines. He returned with a cornucopia of recipes that few at the time seemed eager to preserve--recipes such as boudin blanc, persimmon fudge, and, for the truly adventurous, roast bear paws. The essays here collected were meant to celebrate these vanishing, quintessentially American foods. Since its first publication, however, Fading Feast has proven to be not a farewell, but the forerunner of renewed interest in these regional treasures. Written with panache and gusto--and featuring eleven essays not included in the original version--this new edition is as timely and entertaining now as when Sokolov first set out to record our native culinary customs.
Part autobiography, part culinary history, Steal the Menu is former New York Times food editor Raymond Sokolov’s account of four decades of eating. From his pathbreaking dispatches on nouvelle cuisine in France to finding top-notch Chinese dishes at a New Jersey gas station to picking the brain of the most Michelin-starred chef in the world, Sokolov captures the colorful characters and mouth watering meals that define food today. Throughout, he shares a lifetime of personal anecdotes, including infuriating President Nixon’s daughter over a wedding cake, as well as prescient observations on one of the most tumultuous—and exciting—periods in gastronomic history.