The Arab Table: Recipes and Culinary Traditions | 
enlarge | Author: May Bsisu Publisher: William Morrow Cookbooks Category: Book
List Price: $34.95 Buy New: $20.75 You Save: $14.20 (41%)
Rating: 18 reviews Sales Rank: 68261
Media: Hardcover Pages: 384 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.5 Dimensions (in): 9.9 x 8 x 1.6
ISBN: 0060586141 Dewey Decimal Number: 641.592927 EAN: 9780060586140 ASIN: 0060586141
Publication Date: September 1, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
It is one of the world's oldest and most intriguing cuisines, yet few have explored the diverse dishes and enchanting flavors of Arab cookery beyond hummus and tabouleh. In 188 recipes, The Arab Table introduces home cooks to the fresh foods, exquisite tastes, and generous spirit of the Arab table. May S. Bsisu, who has lived and cooked in Jordan, Lebanon, Kuwait, England, and now the United States, takes you along a reassuringly down-to-earth and warmly personal path through exciting culinary territory. The Arab Table focuses intimately on the foods of Arab countries such as Lebanon and Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Syria. The book offers a bountiful range of appealing dishes: cold and hot mezza, or little dishes; vibrant salads and fresh vegetable preparations; savory soups, stews, and hearty casseroles; baked and grilled meats, poultry, and fish; cooling drinks; and ambrosial desserts. There are recipes for familiar dishes including Falafel, Chicken and Lamb Kebabs, and Baklava, as well as a diverse selection of lesser known delights greatly enjoyed around the world, such as Eggplant Pomegranate Salad, Zucchini with Bread and Mint, Grilled Halloumi Cheese Triangles, and Arab Flatbread. Celebration dishes, the cornerstone of Arab cuisine, include Moroccan and Lebanese Couscous, Baked Lamb with Rice and Chickpeas, and Baked Sea Bass with Rice and Caramelized Onions. No Arab cookbook would be complete without an ample selection of soups and stews, the customary way to break the fast at the end of each day during Ramadan. The Arab table is also well known for its sweets: Semolina Pistachio Layer Cake, Milk Pudding, and, of course, date-, nut-, and cream-filled pastries perfumed with rose and orange-blossom water are just a sampling of the desserts included here. Along with these treasured recipes collected from May's extended family, friends, neighbors, and her own discoveries, The Arab Table is also a resource for learning about the traditions and customs associated with this time-honored cuisine. Throughout, essays on Arab holidays, from Eid Al Adha, the feast celebrating the end of the pilgrimage to Mecca, to Ramadan and Mubarakeh, the celebration for the birth of a baby, are explained and menus are provided for each. May enlightens readers as to customary greetings (How do you say Happy Ramadan?), gifts (What do you bring to an Arab home during Ramadan?), and wishes (How do you acknowledge the birth of a baby?) that are traditionally extended during these special occasions. Now you can bring the abundance and flavors of The Arab Table to your table.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 13 more reviews...
One of my favorite cookbooks November 1, 2008 Thoughtful Reader (Manhattan, KS USA) I've been delighted with this book. After leafing through it at a bookstore, I bought it even though it seemed a little pricey, because its recipes seemed so interesting and it was so visually beautiful. With most cookbooks, I've found that the quality of the recipes has varied, but with this book very dish I've tried has been a winner. One of the things I find especially helpful is that the recipes call for ingredients that I can find locally (I live in the rural midwest, which can be very limited in its culinary offerings). It's hard to find recipe books on Arab cuisine. In quality, I rate this book up there with Claudia Roden's "A New Book of Middle Eastern Cuisine" (although the latter book is far more encyclopedic in coverage). That pretty much says it all.
The Best! October 25, 2008 Banan El Hajj (New Mexico) So many recipes & history. I love this book. Everyone that saw it wanted one too.
Virtually no illustrations ... July 13, 2008 Nasr Anaizi (Pittsford, NY) 2 out of 5 found this review helpful
I found this book to be a turn-off mainly because it lacks illustrations. I hope the next edition will take care of this major flaw of otherwise a decent effort.
Cream of the Crop, a MUST HAVE! January 28, 2008 A. Hassan (belchertown massachusetts) The Arab Table by Mary Bsisu is a must have for anyone interested in Middle Eastern cooking. I have read the other reviews and agree that it is a 5 star book. One thing of note---one of the other reviewers criticized Bsisu for citing too many contributors to her book. Why? She had her own recipes and if she collected recipes from others that indicates only that she knows a good recipe when she finds it and if she felt that it belonged in her book than good for her for adding it, it can only benefit us the readers. I used to live in the caribbean and made perfect baklava there many times. When I came back to the States all my batches of baklava were ruined by sugar syrup that had crystallized by the next day. For the life of me I couldn't figure out what was going on and wondered if it had something to do with the humidity?!?! My sister in law cooks her sugar syrup for 10 minutes, my mother in law for an hour, so I knew it had to be something scientific, maybe due to temperature not length of time cooked. Neither my MIL or SIL could explain it. WHile reading BSISU's cookbook (it makes fine reading even when you don't have anything particular you want to look up), i came across a recipe for Kunafa bi Jibin, or Shredded Pastry with Cheese. In this recipe, she gave instructions on making the sugar syrup, including " Let the syrup boil until it has reached the thread stage (about 225 on a candy thermometer)". HELLO! this was my mistake and this is the ONLY cookbook i have seen this mentioned in out of many, many middle eastern/greek cookbooks. So I applaud her (and THANK her because imagine making a whole pan of baklava only to have it ruined by the next day---heartbreak). BUT, to the subject of the other reviewers comments about her book being a collaboration of recipes from many people, I have to point out that the ONLY place this temperature is mentioned is in the Kunafa with cheese recipe, not the Sugar syrup recipe (which is on the page before), or the baklava recipe, or the regular konafa recipe. I do think that this is an omission because such a simple instruction should have definitely been in the sugar syrup recipe, and the fact that it is not leads me to believe that the recipes came from different people or sources. Anyhow, the price of the book definitely pays for itself just for saving my baklava. The explanations of customs and holy days are interesting and entertaining, and nowadays any book that can shed light (in a positive way) on how arab/middle eastern people live can only help to broaden the understanding between people which will benefit us all.
The Arab table cookbook December 26, 2007 Rima A. Kamal (Anapolis, MD) Very comprehensive, representing the best of Arab culinary traditions. Explains ingredients and methods well, makes it easy for people in the U.S. to find ingredients or get the same result using "western" ingredients. Would recommend to friends who have never made Arabic dishes before.
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