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The Complete Robuchon | 
enlarge | Author: Joel Robuchon Creator: Robin H. R. Bellinger Publisher: Knopf Category: Book
List Price: $35.00 Buy New: $19.99 You Save: $15.01 (43%)
Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 1056
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 832 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.1 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 7.3 x 2.1
ISBN: 0307267199 Dewey Decimal Number: 641.5941 EAN: 9780307267191 ASIN: 0307267199
Publication Date: November 4, 2008 (New: Last 30 Days) Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
An incomparable culinary treasury: the definitive guide to French cooking for the way we live now, from the man the Gault Millau guide has proclaimed “Chef of the Century.”
Joel Robuchon’s restaurant empire stretches from Paris to New York, Las Vegas to Tokyo, London to Hong Kong. He holds more Michelin stars than any other chef. Now this great master gives us his supremely authoritative renditions of virtually the entire French culinary repertoire, adapted for the home cook and the contemporary palate.
Here are more than 800 precise, easy-to-follow, step-by-step recipes, including Robuchon’s updated versions of great classics—Pot-au-Feu, Sole Meuniere, Cherry Custard Tart—as well as dozens of less well-known but equally scrumptious salads, roasts, gratins, and stews. Here, too, are a surprising variety of regional specialties (star turns like Aristide Couteaux’s variation on Hare Royale) and such essential favorites as scrambled eggs. Emphasizing quality ingredients and the brilliant but simple marriage of candid flavors—the genius for which he is rightly celebrated—Robuchon encourages the beginner with jargon-free, impeccable instructions in technique, while offering the practiced cook exciting paths for experimentation.
The Complete Robuchon is a book to be consulted again and again, a magnificent resource no kitchen should be without.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
Unexpected, But Pleasing November 14, 2008 Sam Ryan (Harlem, NY USA) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
In a holiday season stuffed with extremely glossy, gorgeous books on cooking - more fetish objects or coffee table books than cookbooks - The Complete Robuchon is an outlier. I pre-ordered my book months in advance, expecting a lavish, opulent package of arty photos, personal anecdotes, and the other trimmings of a major, cellophane-sealed Chef's opus. Instead, what arrived at my door was a sturdy and stout cookbook, with colorless pages (and prose, for that matter) and not a single photo. At first, I was disappointed. But then, when faced with such a massive cookbook, I sat down and began reading it, front to back. Robuchon, for a chef who we all may associate with innovation and opulence, tasked himself in this book with creating something for the home chef, and for the chef beginning their journey into the complicated world of French cuisine. So what he focuses on, above all else, in this book is technique. You leave a section on vegetables not even questioning why you would take the time to blanch. It's that authoritative, clear, and informative. This isn't a coffee table book, and it isn't a book for a well-read French chef. It's a solid work, though, and an inspiring compendium of culinary knowledge - perhaps a little more basic than some might wish, but full of wisdom for everyone from beginners to... well, maybe intermediates.
Extremely Disappointed November 11, 2008 Christina M. Rivera (NYC) 2 out of 6 found this review helpful
I was looking forward to this book for awhile as I pre-ordered it. When I was in culinary school I actually did a report on Chef Robuchon and I have eaten at his restaurant in The Four Seasons Hotel, so I was excited to get recipes from his brilliant self. The book had horrible paper, no pictures, and the recipes are so basic and made for a beginner home cook. I would be better off buying the Joy of Cooking. I do not need a recipe for most of the recipes in the book. This is NOT the work of an outstanding chef...and not a book for other chefs. This is a book for the type of person who would watch "How to Boil Water" on the Food Network. Rachel Ray might as well have wrote it.
Disapointed November 11, 2008 Carlos H. Rios (Las Vegas, Nevada) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
Well, I was very disapointed to find no pictures in the book. The paper quality is not that great either. I pre-order the book back in August thinking that since it was written by Chef Joel's, it was going to be a great book but I was wrong. This may be an "ok" book for beginers or home cooks but not for the professional chef.
Was hoping for more. November 11, 2008 Thomas Vincent Cariano (Houston, Tx) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
Was hoping this was geared more like l'atelier; Recipes are more for home then from restaurant. no pics and no stories.
Priceless book November 8, 2008 dave (austin, tx) 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
This book is astonishing. It is indeed, as the New York Times declared, The Joy of Cooking for French cuisine--an ultimate authority you can count on for any occasion. There are all kinds of new preparations and delicacies which have entered French cooking through immigrant cultures. But there is a also the most refined take on technique you will ever find. Classic dishes, like pot-au-feu, that you may have learned from Julia Child or Paula Wolfert are here, but the steps, though simple to follow, are much more precise, and following them teaches you a lot about how subtle differences in method make a decisive difference in results. You will instantly see this when you make dishes that actually taste like the real thing you would have in France, not some Americanized version. This is far more than a cookbook; it's an education. Follow it and learn how a great chef works. Hint: it's not about blending weird, hard-to-find ingredients, or swirling sauce spirals on plates. It's all about subtle tweaks of basic techniques, the exacting understanding of a true master.
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