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The Gold Cook Book

de Louis P. De Gouy

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Afegit fa poc perMawMawLaura, mycatolog, ferskner, pandr65, 15621BCR, aniosi, Hookom, biblioteca privada, flwyd
Biblioteques llegadesEdward Estlin Cummings , Ernest Hemingway
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The Gold Cookbook is my favorite cookbook, it was last published in the 1970's. It was written by Louis DeGouy in 1947, and is a true Kitchen Bible. Louis was a former chef at the Waldorf-Astoria.

Chef DeGouy's passion for food and its history stands out in each recipe of this massive volume, a passion which, thanks to him, I have come to share. DeGouy's recipes are works of art.

The Gold Cookbook, has a very wide range of recipes. It also covers the basic techniques used in cooking. DeGouy provides separate chapters on baking bread, barbecuing, fondues, meats, variety meats, seafood, making sauces, soups, salads and many other topics. Despite being published in 1947 the techniques and recipes provided remain very useful today.

One of my favorite things about the book is the coverage DeGouy provides about making compound butters, sauces and rouxes, he not only devotes and entire chapter to them, but they are covered throughout the rest of the book. For example many of his meat recipes, include a sauce specific to that particular recipe.

The book itself is thick with thousands of gilt-edged pages, uniquely, the recipes are not indexed by page number, rather each recipe has its own number.

It's also unique in that the ingredients list is worked into the text of the recipe. So you have to read the recipe before you know what the ingredients are. His recipes are more than just recipes each is also a story, often of the history of the recipe, with tips to make the recipe better, recipe variations, and interesting tidbits of information on cooking. The book is a virtual cooking school, and in all the years I have looked and hundreds of cookbooks later I have never found better.

The Gold Cookbook, has no photographs.

There are no recipes using pre-packaged or processed ingredients, no use of canned soups, frozen bread-dough, or ready to bake biscuits in cardboard tubes. ( )
  edwardv | Oct 16, 2010 |
If I could only have one cook book (gasp) this would be it. It is full of history, facts and of course a whole lot of fabulous recipes. I stole my first copy from my Mom and made sure that my daughter had a copy when she went off to college, a long with a good knife and a good set of pots. ( )
  bruce_krafft | Oct 17, 2008 |
If you can't find it anywhere else, go to Mom's old book. All from scratch since there wasn't a lot of 'convenience' in 1948! ( )
  cookebooks | Jan 6, 2008 |
A classic from a master chef of a by-gone age, with an introduction by Oscar of the Waldorf. It is an excellent, comprehensive cookbook, written for an inexperienced audience. It contains clear instructions and an astonishing variety of dishes from appetisers (starters), drinks, desserts, candy, breads, meats, vegetables, "alimentary pastes" (pasta), fish and shellfish, soups and on and on. It is full of wonderful little stories and the latest scientific info (of the time), including a paean to battery chicken farming that resulted from the discovery that vitamin D supplements allowed chickens to be raised indoors. It makes for slightly uncomfortable reading to those with today's organic mindset -- "Given plenty to eat, room to cackle, and a comfortable air-conditioned building, the hen produces eggs on a factory assembly line schedule ... their contentment can be measured by the fact that battery hens produce 15 percent more eggs than their less-civilized sisters who live on the range". This and other anachronisms notwithstanding, it is a superb book that deserves to be read and used in the spirit of Mrs Beeton and Eliza Acton. ( )
  aelfgifu | Apr 12, 2007 |
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