The Making of a Cook

Front Cover
Atheneum, 1971 - Cooking - 559 pages
"Cooks who believe that "another French cookbook" is just what we don't need can be assured that this is a book of a different kind. What we need to keep from French cuisine is the peerless techniques. With those techniques we can create countless new dishes based on American ingredients - corn, sweet potatoes, molasses, brown sugar, pine nuts, pecans, avocados, limes, American wines, Bourbon - which are rarely used in France. No one has surpassed French cooking methods, and so far they remain the foundation of most Western food preparation. Nevertheless French cooking terms remain mysterious to many women. While I have used some of these specific terms, I have translated them or explained them so that the particular process is quite clear. The techniques and recipes are part of what French food writer Robert Courtine calls la cuisine des femmes, in contrast to the grande cuisine of chefs. Consequently, although there are some complicated dishes, there is nothing here that cannot be performed in the home kitchen. It is true that there are born cooks who can serve remarkable meals, apparently without planning or recipes and without spending hours at the stove. Unfortunately most of us need directions, practice and time. In my opinion the directions needed are not so much recipes as solid basic techniques that can be applied to countless preparations. Although this book has recipes for eggs, soups, meats, fish, etc., as most conventional cookbooks do, the internal arrangement is different. The information is organized according to methods or techniques. For each technique, I have tried to give you an explanation of the chemical and physical changes that take place in the pot while you are at the stove. There are chemical reactions that can be critical for your results in the kitchen, but do not worry - no chemical formulas are to be found in the book. By giving principles and proportions which you can apply to many different preparations, I hope to help you to make your own way to creative cookery."--taken from Introduction, page [ix]-x.

From inside the book

Contents

GOOD INGREDIENTS FOR GOOD DISHES
13
MIRACLES IN A SHELL
33
HAPPY MARRIAGES
69
Copyright

11 other sections not shown

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1971)

Madeleine Kamman was born Madeleine Marguerite Pin in Courbevoie, France on November 22, 1930. She attended the Sorbonne and studied cooking at Le Cordon Bleu in Paris. She was working as a reservations manager in Paris for Swissair when she met her future husband Alan Kamman. They married in 1960 and moved to the Philadelphia area. In 1968, she was teaching cooking at home and in adult education classes when she wrote a letter to The New York Times food editor criticizing a recipe for snails provençale on toast that was printed in the newspaper. After moving to Massachusetts, she opened a cooking school and restaurant in Newton Centre. She later taught cooking in Annecy, France and at the Beringer Vineyards in St. Helena, California. She also opened another school and restaurant in Glen, New Hampshire. She wrote several books including The Making of a Cook and When French Women Cook. From 1984 to 1991, she had her own PBS series. She died on July 16, 2018 at the age of 87.

Bibliographic information