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B**D
Excellent Baking Tutorial for Busy People. Read it all!
`the weekend baker' by baking teacher and `Fine Cooking' editor Abigail Johnson Dodge' has succeeded in the very difficult task of giving us baking recipes which can be insinuated into the busy schedules of people who still find the need to bake. Ms. Dodge has taken up the challenge and has succeeded in showing us how to bake some really very respectable desserts in a relatively short time without compromising quality. In the process, Miss Abigail has reinforced one of Rachael Ray's cardinal lessons. You simply cannot cook or bake successfully without knowing what you are doing and without some planning. In fact, to bake quickly or `intermittently' (more on this later), you actually need better planning than if you pick up a recipe from a conventional baking book and go to it.Ms. Dodge has really accomplished a major feat with this book in that she has simplified several major types of baking without compromising on the quality of her presentation and without leaving any pitfalls unmarked for the unsuspecting newbie. For those of you who know baking books, do not expect the kind of details on ingredients, variations, equipment, and techniques which you may find in a book by baking heavyweights such as Flo Brakker, Rose Levy Beranbaum, Nick Malgieri, Alice Medrich, or Gayle Ortiz. The author's entire focus is on presenting recipes that work under certain time constraints. The odd result of very successfully achieving this objective is that many of the recipes are even longer than their analogues that are not written to conserve time. This reinforces my statement that to cook or bake when time is of the essence, you need more knowledge and more planning than with conventional recipes.Thus, while almost every presentation of general advice on cooking has you read the recipe though before beginning, Ms. Dodge insists that you read through the recipe at least three times. For scatterbrain know-it-alls like me who think they know better than the recipe writer, I would up that count to at least five times. Whenever you cook or bake at home, you want to minimize time pressure, especially when you are working through a recipe for the first time.Like almost every cookbook with a theme I have reviewed recently, Ms. Dodge does not stick limit herself to the scenario suggested by her title; however, she has done such a good job of realizing the task set in her subtitle, `irresistible recipes, simple techniques, and stress-free strategies for busy people' that I will not carp on her straying from the weekend paradigm. But, in order for you to get the very best benefit from Ms. Dodge's book, you really must read all the introductory material and the general material that opens the recipe section from which you plan to bake a recipe. For starters, there are Ms. Dodge's guidelines on how to use the book on page 16 of the introduction, just before she describes her three types of recipes. Also, one really needs to read the notes on equipment and ingredients. These sections succeed at attaining that fine balance between what you really need to know and what may be useful to know, but won't hurt if you don't.The three recipe classes Ms. Dodge has worked up for time sensitive situations follow.First, there are `baker's express' recipes which can be prepared in a hurry. These are all recipes which can actually be done in about an hour, the time you may have between arriving home after work and the time the desserts may be needed after dinner. This chapter opens with ten tips on what makes a fast baking recipe. All these tips are concise and common sensible, but they cannot be used without some knowledge and experience. You cannot bake in shallow pans unless you have acquired these pans in advance. You cannot substitute baking on the stovetop unless your recipe has been tweaked to work in this situation. You cannot use the microwave unless you know all the dangers associated with running it too long with sensitive ingredients such as butter or chocolate. These tips may go a long way toward enabling you to convert a conventional recipe into an express recipe, but not without the leisure to think things through and write out the steps when you are not under time pressure.Second, there is `baking in stages' where the total time required to complete a baking job may be several hours or even a day or more, but the time you actually need to attend to the baking is a small fraction of this time. The paradigm of this type of baking is yeast-leavened goods. Yeast doughs just naturally have long rest periods where they rise. And, refrigerating the rising dough for part or all of this time can slow these rising times. Ms. Dodge's book is not the place for dealing with thorough discussion of bread baking, but it is ironic that slowing the dough's rise is commonly considered one of the best ways to improve the flavor of the bread.Third, there are `productions', where time ceases to be an issue and the primary object is to impress your audience. As these products involve more elaborate techniques, the author introduces some new equipment, but retains a lot of her focus on achieving big results with simple techniques. My favorite example is her three-layer carrot cake that requires but one baking pan, with layers created by partitioning the sheet into three parts.This book will not replace your favorite Maida Heatter recipes, but it will go a long way toward making you a more nimble baker when you want to impress on short notice.This book is highly recommended for people who really want to bake, but feel they do not have the time. Baking still requires time, knowledge, and equipment, but Ms. Dodge shows you how to get the most out of a short supply of time. Highly recommended.
R**H
Superb book.
Being an avid baker I have just about all decent dessert cookbooks.I recently took a class given by Ms. Dodge and purchased the book, it's outstanding. Simple, quick, easy to do ahead and *hold* for completion in 1-3 days. Having company? Start the dessert on Friday, finish on Saturday or Sunday. Spend time with your guests, not in the kitchen.Just an all-around terrific book. I strongly recommend it.July 2007 I initially posted over a year ago0: After using this book for quite some time now, I had to come back and tell you... it's the best. I really do enjoy it and purchased it for my daughters.May 2010... still a favorite book of mine, and everyone I have gifted it to enjoys it.
C**L
Great book for beginning and/or busy bakers
Well written, easy-to-use book that will be of use to not only beginning bakers, but experienced-but-busy bakers. Dodge provides a wealth of information that is often missing from other cookbooks: (1) what steps can be done in advance, (2) what can be frozen, and WHEN in the baking process it can be frozen, (3) useful adaptations, such as the pan size to use when you double a recipe, and flavor modifications. The measurements are given in cups and teaspoons, and the recipes are geared towards a home cook.She has a great peanut butter cookie recipe that requires NO flour, which is helpful if someone in your family cannot eat gluten.Recipe chapters are divided into two overall categories: "baker's express," and "cooking in stages." Each one of those categories contains the following sections: cookies and bars; cakes, large and small; breads; mousses, custards, and puddings; pies, tarts, cobblers, crips. In summary, this is a book that the home baker will actually use, and with great success.
J**E
Budding Baker Loves It
My daughter recently took a baking class on Craftsy.com with Abigail Dodge as the teacher, so I was thrilled to find her this cookbook. As a bonus, the copy I purchased was signed by the author. I like that the recipes are in order of time it takes to complete so that she can find a recipe to try based on the time she has to bake. The recipes are very thorough in their instructions, just like Abigail Dodge was in her online class. Overall we are very pleased with the book.
Y**A
The Weekend Baker
The Weekend Baker: Irresistible Recipes, Simple Techniques, And Stress Free Strategies For Busy People is a Very nice book with so many good recipes and Helpful Tips.
P**C
Good recipes, good commentary
I am an experienced baker, but still found lots of good ideas in this book. Good for more organized, but flexible baking. Fun as well as useful.
K**R
Great Book for the Busy Baker
Just received and love this book! Divided into sections for super-quick, make in steps, more elaborate... Just what a busy baker needs! Good variety of recipes, but you can also take the techniques and use them on your own recipes. Really like and recommend this book!
A**G
a godsend for working people who love to bake
I have almost 20 books on baking and this has rapidly become my most used, favorite book. It delivers everything that it promises and most importantly for me, does not sacrifice taste and quality for speed. Simply put, this is a book you can trust because the recipes work. The same attention to detail that she puts into recipe design is also evident in the design of the book. The print is large without being distracting, the wide margins are made for notes.
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