Serve up new recipes and time-honored classics featuring everybody's favorite main course: chicken. Try Chicken Breasts Italian Style or Fried Chicken with Herbs. How about Chicken Curry or Stir-Fry Chicken with Ginger? Chicken Stew with Parsley Dumplings. Mexican Chicken with Salsa. Lemon Chicken. The possibilities are almost endless.
With an outstanding selection of kitchen-tested recipes from noted food authority Emalee Chapman - each one shown in a glorious full-color photograph - this beautiful, practical book offers a wealth of advice and inspiration to help you cook the most delicious chicken dishes ever. All the basics are covered - from choosing a fresh chicken to different techniques for cooking it. And an illustrated glossary provides a quick, convenient reference to essential terms.
Chicken is part of the Williams-Sonoma Kitchen Library, an all-new series of books written by outstanding international food authorities and created under the general editorship of Chuck Williams, founder of Williams-Sonoma, America's leading cookware stores and catalog. Each volume of the series concentrates on a single main ingredient or kind of food, and is expressly designed for practical, everyday use in the home kitchen.
Williams-Sonoma, purveyor of choice gourmet products and kitchenware, has also created a collection of succinct yet comprehensive cookbooks. Part of the series,
Chicken offers 40 recipes that reflect the company's signature good taste. The book presents a wide range of delicious chicken dishes, from classics like Fried Chicken with Herbed Buttermilk Crust and Chicken Cacciatore, to quick supper delights including Spicy Chicken and Basil Stir-Fry, to company dishes such as Chicken with Shrimp Paella and grilled specialties like Thai Chicken with Lemongrass, Garlic and Chiles. Also included are one-pot specialties such as Chicken with Andouille Gumbo and a chapter that puts basic roasted chicken to great second-day use in dishes like Warm Chicken and Couscous Salad. Readers will also find a "beyond chicken" chapter that offers treats like Turkey Meatloaf with Sage Gravy and Coriander-Rubbed Duck Breasts with Grilled Oranges.
Accompanied by color photos that show the dishes in all their glory, the recipes are completely doable, and should appeal to a wide range of cooks. Throughout, sidebars (like "How to Flambé") offer useful information on techniques and ingredients; a glossary and basics section are also helpful. Though small in size, the book provides an inclusive store of superior recipes and instruction. --Arthur Boehm