Author(s): Karla(Author) ; Tregenza, Patrick(Photographer); Bunce, Renshin Judy(Photographer) Oliveira
Publisher: Gibbs Smith Publishers
Publication Date: 2007-08-31
Pages:
Review: Here is a collection of recipes originating from the modern ground zero of vegetarian culture. The recipes within this book are straight from the working kitchen of the Tassajara Zen Center in California and are the result of years and years of the center’s guests contributing to the incredible menu. Although this book inspires me to eat healthy, some of the best recipes are in the cookie section! The Krunch Bars and Sesame Cookies are fantastic. I also love the spreads and the Nut Loaf, which is great as an appetizer but a big slice makes a great burger sandwich!
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Author(s): Sara Sloan
Publisher: Williamson Publishing Company (VT)
Publication Date: 1984-03
Pages: 192
Review: I went to the library looking to preview a couple of brown bag cookbooks so I could broaden the lunch selection at my house. “P B & J or Bologna and cheese?” Those are the current two options and I thought it might be nice to pack something different every once and a while. So not wanting to buy before I tried, I found this little baby in our online library catalog and tried it out.
It is, by far, the best laugh I have had all year. After fifty pages of nutritional dribble, the author finally starts the recpies. I mean, instruction is all well and good, but I don’t need that much information on *lunch*. I just want to put something remotely nutritional into my kids bag that they will actually *eat*.
That leaves me to the hysterical bit. Here’s the first recipe, I KID YOU NOT.
Peanut Butter Sproutwich
1/4 cup shredded lettuce mixed with alfalfa sprouts
1 tlb lemon juice
1 tlb toasted sesame seeds
1 tlb craberry sauce or relish
4 tlb peanut butter
2 slices date bread (and next comes the tasty part)
2 slices BACON, cooked crisp and drained
I know, I know!!! I couldn’t stop laughing either! I pulled myself together just to lose it again on the next selection:
Peanut Butter and Tofu Sandwich
I’ll spare you the ingredients. Next comes the best one of all, recipe number three, my personal favorite from the Peanut Butter selection:
Peanut Butter and Egg sandwich
2-4 tlb peanut butter
1-2 tsp pickle relish, well-drained (oh, I like mine runny, ya know)
1 hard-boiled egg (soft wouldn’t do???)
salad greens (cause apparently you can’t have peanut butter without greens)
2 slices wheat berry bread
All I can say is: LOL. LOLROF. LOLROFLMAO. No, that doesn’t quite do it. LOLROFLSMTKCRTSIYHAS. (Laugh Out Loud Roll On Flor So Much That The Kids Come Running To See If You’ve Had A Stroke.) I mean, we live near Graceland and all and are required by law to know the ins and outs of a friend peanut butter and banana sandwich, but doggone it, even The King (gracious Southern boy that he is) wouldn’t have said “Thankya, thankyaverymuch.” with this in his bag.
So if you are in for a really, really good laugh (one of the best I’ve had all year) snap this baby up. The Seawich tacos (with raw cabbage, cocktail sauce, AND mayo) are not to be missed. Five stars for comedy. None for stuff kids will actually EAT. This book is an essential volume in our house. I agree with the previous reviewer that a lot of the suggested recipes taste pretty terrible, which is why I didn’t give it 5 stars. But still, there are so many creative combinations, plenty of them taste good–the carob fudge is DELICIOUS, for example, and the peanut butter cups totally rock too–and the advice on things like how to wrap sandwiches for the freezer and how to make healthy ingredient substitutions are worth the price of the book. It’s great; I use it several times a week and I almost always bring my lunch to work with me.The information and ideas presented in this book are basically flawless and oh so helpful. However, the big disappointment is in the recipes which are easy, yes, but unappetizing. I’m all for having an adventurous palate, but unless you’re a pregnant woman with unusual cravings, most of the recipes will not appeal to the average adult, much less the average schoolchild. Still, if all you’re looking for are ideas on lunch packing and presentation, it would be simple enough to substitute your and your family’s favorite dishes.
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Author(s): Miriam Jacobs
Publisher: Globe Pequot
Publication Date: 2003-10-01
Pages: 208
Review: I was looking for some creative ideas to make lunch more interesting, but this book covered too many of the obvious choices. STill, I found some new ideas and I think it was worth buying.This is the perfect lunch cookbook for me. It is an adult lunch cookbook (though I’m sure many of the recipes are kid friendly). It is healthy without being dietetic. The recipes are easy. Everything I have tried has turned out really well. There are creative ideas in here which have inspired me to think of other lunch ideas. This book is exactly what I was looking for.As another reviewer noted, this is truly a gem of a cookbook! I found a copy at the library and only wish it were still being sold by Amazon.
I am a busy mom who works part-time outside the home. I have a somewhat-picky husband and we both tend to eat breakfast and lunch at work because we’re rushing out the door in the morning. I like to bake muffins and breads that we can take with us.
I look for the following things when choosing recipes for baked goods:
-Whole grain flour (at least 50%)
-Not a ton of sugar
-Not a ton of fat
-Healthy “extras” like fruits and/or vegetables included (apples, grated zucchini or carrot, etc)
Sometimes, I find one or two of these features; rarely do I find them all. But the baking recipes in this book focus on all of these! Nearly every muffin, cake, or bar “brownie” here has these elements. Also, her banana muffins are the only recipe I’ve ever found that uses this much banana (three bananas in a batch of nine muffins!), which is very helpful when that ripe bunch of bananas on the counter becomes the very overripe bunch of bananas about to go into the trash because the freezer is already stuffed full of overripe bananas to be used later.
The Carrot Blondies are sooooo good… kind of like a mild, not-too-sweet carrot cake.
The Oriental Zucchini-Apple Salad is very unique and surprised me with how good it is. The dressing that goes with it is very much like a light pesto; I am planning to use it in other dishes to substitute for the typical full-fat pesto sauce.
For ease of preparation, the author does rely heavily on a food processor for mixing ingredients. I have only a small food processor that doesn’t always hold all the batter for one recipe. However, I’ve been able to work around this by using either my KitchenAid stand mixer or my Cuisinart immersion blender (depending on the thickness of the batter).
I will admit that the Apple Pie Cake was a disappointment. Like another reviewer here, I expected something different–more like apple pie filling with a bit of cake-i-ness to hold it together. Instead, the apples were tough, the flavor was blah, and the texture was unappealing. I felt a little embarrassed serving it to my guests.
That notwithstanding, I still give this book five stars, because I have never found another source for so many muffin/baked goods recipes that are truly healthy, easy, and delicious! Like another reviewer noted, I also love that the ingredients are easy to find and keep on hand… no unusual and expensive “sugar substitutes” or strange “oil alternatives” found only at health food stores. This is a little gem of a cookbook, and if you can find it, get it!Many of these recipes looked good, and healthy, so I flagged several to try. Maybe it’s luck of the draw, but the first two we tried were terrible. I left my husband with the recipe for Baked Sandwiches and then kicked myself for not thinking it through more thoroughly. It’s more like a strata with eggs, and there is no seasoning, not even salt and pepper. It was a sodden, bland mess.
Second, the Apple Pie Cake–OK, I admit that when I read the recipe, I knew it was drastically different than anything I’d seen. I was guessing it would basically be like apple pie filling with just enough binding to hold the apples together. Unfortunately, this recipe, too, was underspiced, and the baking time of 25 min meant that the apples were still crunchy and the “batter” still unset. I put it back in for another 30 min. This was not inedible, but certainly nothing I’d ever make again.
The most useful part of the book may be lists of different sandwich ideas. I have one more recipe I will try before returning this to the library for good. some good recipes, however, I was looking for more basic/quick lunch ideas for my kids. This book is aimed more towards adults than kids, and while the recipes seem good, they are a little more involved and time consuming than I was looking for.
Price: $10.95 Buy This Book
Author(s): Susan Yuen
Publisher: Mutual Publishing
Publication Date: 2008-08-01
Pages: 152
Review: I love all things kawaii and the food here certainly falls into that category. I am vegetarian so much of what is in this cookbook would have to be modified for me but you could actually easily use Tofurky cold-cuts to make many of the adorable characters for the bento boxes. This would actually be much healthier too!
I would love to see the author do another book - perhaps one with more vegetarian options?
I think the design of the book is excellent too - more Americans should get into bento!Cute recipes and designs. Gave me ideas to use cookie cutters for other foods to make shapes and come up with other ideas. Good looking food too!This is a beautifully produced book with step-by-step pictures and really cute lunches. The only complaint I have is that most of the critters and characters in the lunches are made of bologna, cheese, hot dog, spam, or kamaboko (a type of fish paste) and are ornamented with seaweed and/or cake decorations. I was hoping these cute figures would be more healthy and/or edible. There are other recipes for Japanese foods but they had more salt and processed foods than I was expecting. I wanted a more American-ized take on bento boxes with fresh food and ingredients that are available in the average American grocery store. If you are looking for Japanese-style food for kids, though, you will love this! I am tempted to keep it as a reference for Play-Doh creations.This is a great little book - I use it all the time. I especially like the fast and simple recipes in the back. I am in Japan right now, (husband is in the Air Force) so it’s very easy for me to get the ingredients and supplies. I think all of the recipes and ideas can be adapted anywhere though… especially if you have an Asian market nearby…and hey; there’s always the internet! I’m sure I’ll use this book when I get back to the states…enjoy! I hope Susan Yuen writes another one soon…This cookbook is a fun and creative way to spend quality time with your children or anyone making food that taste great and fun to eat.
Price: $14.95 Buy This Book



