Rating: Summary: Everything you need to know. Review: An excellent primer and introduction to vegetarianism and vegetarian cooking. Recipes are all doable, with easily located ingredients (via local health food stores, if necessary). All recipes feature nutritional information and thorough instructions. Our family favorite; saffron risotto timbales on a roasted tomato sauce--very classy.
Rating: Summary: Not worth it... Review: As a teenage vegan (and beginner at cooking), I can't say 'The Vegetarian Times: Complete Cookbook' offered much to me. The ingredients are extensive, hard to find, and many are animal-based. You can put in vegan-substitutes for a lot of these, but let's face it... that usually doesn't turn out right. The preparation time was pretty long too. As far as nutrition is concerned, this book offers a calorie/fat/protein chart at the end of each recipie. Most are relatively low in calories, fat, sugar, and salt. I also thought the book was compiled well, everything is easy to find. Also, this has lots and lots of recipies... If you're vegan, just learning to cook, or at all skeptical, this book really isn't for you. 'The Complete Cookbook' puts quantity over quality and takes up an inch and a half of valuble shelf-space...
Rating: Summary: Not worth it... Review: As a teenage vegan (and beginner at cooking), I can't say 'The Vegetarian Times: Complete Cookbook' offered much to me. The ingredients are extensive, hard to find, and many are animal-based. You can put in vegan-substitutes for a lot of these, but let's face it... that usually doesn't turn out right. The preparation time was pretty long too. As far as nutrition is concerned, this book offers a calorie/fat/protein chart at the end of each recipie. Most are relatively low in calories, fat, sugar, and salt. I also thought the book was compiled well, everything is easy to find. Also, this has lots and lots of recipies... If you're vegan, just learning to cook, or at all skeptical, this book really isn't for you. 'The Complete Cookbook' puts quantity over quality and takes up an inch and a half of valuble shelf-space...
Rating: Summary: 3 out of 5 recipes isn't bad Review: As long as you don't mistake this book for an introductory cookbook, this cookbook is not so bad as some are making it out to be. It's an introduction to vegetarian cooking, not an introduction to cooking. It's for proficient cooks who want to try vegetarian. A better title for this book might be The Yuppie Vegetarian Kitchen of the Nineties. One point no one has mentioned yet makes this cookbook distinctive. Except for the one recipe I note below, the food presents very attractively. This is almost never true of other vegetarian cookbooks I have used. If you are a decent cook concerned with presentation (as you might be if you were taking food to a party, or having people to dinner), this may well be the book for you. I will review each recipe I have tried to give you a feel for the book, so you can decide whether it may be for you. I have made these recipes from the book, in this order. - snow peas stuffed with radish creme (dairy) - cucumbers stuffed with hummus (vegan) - two rice salad (vegan) - wild rice and apricot stuffing (vegan) - raw cabbage dressed with balsamic vinegar (don't remember the title but it may have been something like Low Fat Slaw). (vegan) I liked the first three of these five recipes, so the book made a good impression on me. Three out of five recipes that work in any cookbook is a decent batting average. Remember, there's no accounting for taste! The snow peas with radish creme were very tasty: ground radishes in a cream cheese base, stuffed into blanched snow peas. You would have to like radishes, but the cream cheese tones the radishes down a bit. It's meant to be an appetizer or finger food for a party. But, I think the book told you to blanch the snow peas too long; the snow peas were a little limp for stuffing. Also, you have to open each blanched snow pea carefully and insert the stuffing. Snow peas have a backbone like string beans used to have before they became green beans; you have to find that thread and pull it out. You are also supposed to use a 'pastry bag' or some such thing (I don't have the book in front of me) to pipe the radish creme into the snow peas. I don't know about you, but I don't have any such thing in my kitchen. The radish creme thins as it comes to room temperature (as it will during your party) so you are picking up a limp snow pea with runny stuffing. This defeats the point of a party finger food which is to allow your guests to nosh without fear of accident. I took this to a party and it was pronounced tasty but messy. I will make the radish creme (to use as a dip) again. BTW, you have to grind the radishes which I did with an Amish kitchen gadget. I can't recall what the book suggested but they may expect you to have a food processor. The only hard to obtain ingredients are fresh snow peas and radishes, which may be out of season. Opening limp snow peas and stuffing them is fussy, but if you are having a party, you may not mind going to the extra trouble. The cucumbers stuffed with hummus are very, very attractive to look at. Hummus is well cooked chick peas, ground to the texture of mayonnaise and seasoned with spices. It's usually a dip or a sandwich stuffing. In this recipe, you make hummus such that it has a bit more body than usual; this hummus is unusual also because it includes diced black olives. You cut cucumbers into thick slices and scoop out the seeds with a melon baller, and stuff the hummus where the seeds would be. This too, is meant to be an appetizer for a party. They are an excellent finger food, stand up to an evening on the buffet table well, crunchy and refreshing to eat, too. I took these to a party and they got rave reviews. I thought the hummus was mediocre, myself. It called for canned chick peas --that's a BAD HUMMUS tipoff right there --but the guests did seem to like them well enough. Now to make hummus you need a way to grind chick peas. If you cook them yourself, you could use a potato masher or a fork or a food mill, but canned chick peas are really too firm for that. A blender, meat grinder, or food processor is more the thing. (One thing about this book and other cookbooks annoys me. They call for canned chick peas but don't tell you how many raw chick peas to start with if you prefer to cook them yourself!) You must have a melon baller -- you can't fake it with a knife. You may not have one but it is not as outlandish as the pastry bag with the piping attachment. All the ingredients are easy to obtain at any grocery store. Preparation was very simple. I will definitely make this again (but not with canned chick peas!) The two rice salad is stunning to look at and very, very good. It is a mixture of brown rice, wild rice, green peas, red pepper, toasted sliced almonds, in a spicy dressing. It seems to me the first time I made this I did not use the whole teaspoon of black pepper as directed and next time I did to see if they knew something I didn't --nah! I took this salad to a party. Not only was it pronounced appealing to look at and good to eat, but I was asked for the recipe. It calls for instant brown rice which is widely available -- even Walmart has a store brand. It calls for 'instant' wild rice -- something I have never seen -- and a tablespoon of ginger juice. Maybe there's such a thing as Ginger Juice just like you can buy carrot juice, but not around here. Between squeezing the ginger root and cooking the wild rice the old fashioned way, the recipe is TIME CONSUMING to make. If'n you had one of those new fangled JUICERS it might not be such a struggle. The salad is a lot of work, but I would not be embarrassed to take this salad anywhere and I bet you no one else will be bringing the same thing. Of course, even regular wild rice can be hard to find and when you do find it, it's not cheap. The wild rice and apricot stuffing was a disappointment. It wasn't dreadful, but I wasn't impressed. It was very appetizing to look at indeed, but too sweet and the flavors didn't really blend, and the apricots were too chewy for a stuffing. Of course it had cooked wild rice to which you add chopped dried apricots and other things. You bake it in the oven either in a pot or stuffed into a vegetable. I suspect that if you stuffed this into a duck or a cornish hen (which would add moisture, fat, cooking time, and a foil to the sweetness of the apricots) instead of a vegetable it would be quite good. But vegetarians don't do that :-) The raw cabbage with balsamic vinegar was just that: raw cabbage sitting in balsamic vinegar. Oh sure: you grate the cabbage as for slaw, you add some other vegetables, herbs and such, and let it sit in the fridge as you do with slaw. But after tasting it, why bother? The cabbage never wilted, the other ingredients were overpowered by the balsamic vinegar, and it is frankly shocking to look at slaw in brown dressing (Balsamic vinegar is chocolate brown.) A mediocre recipe I would not serve to guests.
Rating: Summary: Great for 1995, Mediocre for 2004 Review: I bought this book several years ago. I have since picked up a couple of other books. I have tried some recipes but generally do not use this book. Based upon its non-use, I have to give it 2 out of 5 stars. This is why: While the nutrition and introducton sections are the strengths of the book especially the long descriptions of the ingredients and the types and such of vegetarians. After trying a bunch of their recipes, too many of the recipes are experimenting with substitutions for meat that are hit or miss in whether they taste good or not (Recipes remind me of taking a large chunk of Tofu, and calling it a pot roast - vegetarian cuisine can be so much better than that!). The book also tends to under-spice the food - adding to the blandness in many dishes. They may convince you to try out vegetarianism, but the recipes may not hold you. Some recipes you may not be able to do since the ingredients may be hard to find in some areas, though in the last couple of years it has got better. If you are looking for a good Vegetarian cookbook, there are other, better, books out there (to be fair, mostly since this book came out). As far as explaining about vegetarianism and vegetarian ingredients this is a good reference. Keep in mind, though, that there have been books published since this one that are just as good information-wise with better recipes. Upshot: There are a lot of creative recipes, but you will have to do a lot of trial and error to figure out which ones work the best. The introduction, nutritional and general information is its strength, and if you decide to get the book, this should be the reason, but be sure to check out the books that have come out in the last 5 years before you do!
Rating: Summary: The best vegetarian cookbook I own! Review: I must own 30 vegetarian cookbooks and this is the best one of them all. I often reccomend this cookbook to vegetarians and meat-eaters alike. I find that it is the best resource for everything from meal planning to fast meals to finding a recipe to use up some vegetable or another. I could not reccomend it any more highly. It has more than paid for itself.
Rating: Summary: Flavorful, Creative, and Satisfying Review: I purchased this book about 8 months ago and have become fully reliant on it. It's because of the Vegetarian Times Complete Cookbook that I've changed my eating habits entirely and lost 30 pounds largely by following a more healthful, satisfying diet. Each recipe I try is better than the last! I find the recipes to be flavorful, creative, fun to make, and full of variety -- from Caribbean black bean cakes with mango salsa (a little work, but worth the effort) to lentil burgers, from falafel wrappers to vegetable dipping sauces. I've always been a junk food junkie and vegetables rarely crossed my table. Now, they're in almost every meal I eat. Many recipes are fast and easy, and others take more preparation time. I set aside a few hours on a Sunday, once a month, to prepare and freeze some favorites as well as some new recipes. I never hesitate to try something new!
Rating: Summary: Don't buy this book! Review: I wouldn't recommend this book to anyone who is just starting on a vegetarian way of life, and would not, in fact, recommend it to anyone unless you are an accomplished chef who can fix bad recipes. I have made a few recipes in each section - appetizers, soup, main course, etc. - and found the results to be complete disasters 80% of the time. Usually the food is underspiced, overcooked, or just a terrible mix of ingredients. The few recipes in this book that have worked, like the Couscous stuffed Squash, are marred by typos. A really awful cookbook considering its source and promise. While the introductions and other information are good, the recipes do not deliver.
Rating: Summary: look elsewhere Review: I've had this book about 4 years-before I had a computer and knew enough to check a book's rating here on Amazon.[com]. The reason I'm writing this is because for the umpteenth time I tried consulting this cookbook. This book has aways frustrated me. I wondered whether it was me, or others felt the same way. Shortly after getting the book, I tried making some bean recipe with plums. Tons of prep work, no clue on how to prepare cilantro. Am still eating the one black bean recipe for nearly 4 years, nearly every day. Its the only recipe I found that didn't require research to figure out what the ingredients were and how to find them. I realize now that this book has severely [hurt] my efforts, its just too frustrating. Example: Someone told me of a dish called "Samosa", and explaned briefly what it was. I saw something on TV about making Samosas, and have at least a clue what they look like. But if you're just browsing this book and see "Samosas", what would the average person know about it? This book is total discouragement. In order to keep my meat consumption down, I've been forced to eat the same foods again and again. So many times I've come back to this book, but just give up. I've tried to take over some of the cooking in the household, and while I'm no culinary genius, this book always leads me nowhere. Recently, I tried mashed potatos from this book. ("Pesto"?) They weren't very good. I thought maybe it was me. Based on others' reviews, stating there are lotsa errors in the book, I now wonder if maybe the recipe was just in error. This book cost good money, has sentenced me to several years of boring eating. Now that I've checked what others have to say about the book, I know its not me. I advise you to look elsewhere, but skip this book. I'm gonna look for a better book. You'd think that the same folks who put out a vegetarian magazine would make a great cookbook. Not so.
Rating: Summary: skip this book Review: I've just finished making the third recipe from this book, and once again it turned out yuck. Each has had the wrong amounts( the vegetable samosas had 3 times the ammount of filling for the wrappers), or neglects key instructions (such as don't let the pumpkin ravioli touch or they will stick together horribly). Once you spend alot of time, even if it magically turns out ok, the finished product is only so-so. Stick with the Moosewood books for beginner vegetarian cooking.
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