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15 Reviews
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
This book rocks!,
By WhatTheDormouseSaid (everywhere) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Every Grain of Rice: A Taste of Our Chinese Childhood in America (Hardcover)
Great little stories but the REAL gems are the recipes. Not only do they work, they also deliver in the flavor department!I've been looking for a good char sui pork recipe since I was a teen. I've tried a bunch and I've been burned by them all, except the recipe in this book. Fabulous (and it freezes well too!) Great book.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Getting in touch with my roots,
By "cwyc_1" (Ottawa, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Every Grain of Rice: A Taste of Our Chinese Childhood in America (Hardcover)
After having moved away from home for a number of years, I started to realize and appreciate the important role of food to Chinese culture, family and traditions. Much to my chagrin, I had learned very little about the Chinese family kitchen while growing up. While I was nourished by the comfort foods my mother and aunts had made for us, I had very little knowledge of the mechanics of producing these offerings of love.Blonder and Low have done an impressive job of bringing back to the memories of my childhood, where food plays such a central role in Chinese family life. I have tried many of the recipes in this book and most of them have turned out just the way I recall my mother making them. And most of all, the stories and anecdotes demonstrate how Every Grain of Rice inextricably links culture and food to Chinese traditions. The authors recall momentous occasions such as Chinese New Year and donning their "best" clothes; the excitement of receiving little red "luy see". This book is all about comfort foods. It's about home cooking in the Chinese family. You will rarely find these dishes in a restaurant. My cousin was looking through this book and disdainfully noted how the recipes were so "chop suey". I don't know if his description is correct, but you will rarely find these dishes in a restaurant. Perhaps he was comparing it to the sometimes over-complicated and sophisticated, "gourment-style" Chinese cookbooks. It is certainly not that. It is purely about childhood memories of growing up Chinese in North America.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Impress Your Friends,
By
This review is from: Every Grain of Rice: A Taste of Our Chinese Childhood in America (Hardcover)
As the Caucasian parent of children adopted from Asia, I'm always interested in cookbooks that offer a healthy dose of cultural ed along with the recipes. This one does both things beautifully -- I have enjoyed the stories and the pictures very much. I have also made dozens of the included recipes, always with excellent results. (Living in an urban center with easy access to Chinese ingredients helps, but the difficulty level of many of these dishes is not as high as with some other Asian cookbooks I own, and should not be too scary even for beginning cooks.)The ultimate endorsement has to come from Chinese-American friends at the weekend school I attend with one of my kids. After having some of them over for a Lunar New Year party and serving the soy sauce chicken, steamed whole fish, and several other dishes from the book, I have gained a small reputation at the school as "that white woman who can cook Chinese food." The following year I made the steamed New Year's Cake (nian gao, in Mandarin) and took it to weekend school. Two of the faculty actually asked me for the recipe. I vow that one day soon I'm going to get the bamboo leaves out of my freezer, gird my loins, and cook up a batch of those time-consuming Jeng. Authors Ellen and Annabel have convinced me that the results might just be worth the effort.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A treasure!,
By
This review is from: Every Grain of Rice: A Taste of Our Chinese Childhood in America (Hardcover)
I must have thirty or forty books on Chinese cooking, and most are full of the kinds of restaurant dishes and banquet dishes that aren't terribly representative of what Chinese families actually eat when they dine together. This book is different. It's full of what you might call Chinese comfort food- the food the authors grew up eating, and that reminds them of home. A lot of it is the kind of food most Westerners never get to taste unless they're lucky enough to be the guest of Chinese hosts- food like winter melon soup, or humble food like jook.Add to that the beautiful watercolors and the authors' stories of growing up together (and eating together) and you have an absolute treasure of a book. No matter how many Chinese cookbooks you may own, you need this one.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A real treat!,
This review is from: Every Grain of Rice: A Taste of Our Chinese Childhood in America (Hardcover)
Delicious Chinese recipes interwoven with Ellen's and Annabel's stories about their Chinese American life and beautifully illustrated by Ellen's watercolors. I have tried the siu mei, oyster beef and broccoli, pan fried prawns with ketchup sauce, chicken in foil, and the almond cookies. They were all doable and crowd-pleasers.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Lovely and calm cooking,
By A Customer
This review is from: Every Grain of Rice: A Taste of Our Chinese Childhood in America (Hardcover)
This is a joyful, thoughtful, and respectful approach to food as part and parcel of one's family life. The recipes I've found to be not super-easy, but yet very doable -- not fancy restaurant cooking, but delicious at-home Chinese cooking at its best. Try the siu mai (a type of dim sum) recipe -- it's fantastic.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A fortunate melding of the traditional and modern,
By A Customer
This review is from: Every Grain of Rice: A Taste of Our Chinese Childhood in America (Hardcover)
When these beautifully written family stories-- woven into the magnificent tapestry of recipes--are not touching the reader's heart poignantly, they are pulling the smile strings with charming humor. The wide variety of recipes ranging from rice and noodles to vegetables, entrees, and holiday specialties are sure to please the most perceptive palate. Throughout the finely crafted book are marvelous illustrations by co-author Ellen Blonder. A lightness and fun aspect emerge from the illustrations putting the reader in a festive mood.
5.0 out of 5 stars
A "Family" Recipe,
By A Customer
This review is from: Every Grain of Rice: A Taste of Our Chinese Childhood in America (Hardcover)
A friend of mine shared this book with me - and after reading the first two pages I knew I had to have it. I am a remarried ex-NBA player and I find I enjoy cooking for the family. When my 11 year old daughter tries to help in the kitchen I inevitably end up shooing her out of the way because she is messing up my kitchen. In those first two pages Ellen and Annabel showed me that by sharing rather than shooing, I can enrich my life and connection to my child in a way that is fun for the both of us. I may never cook a lot of chinese food in my house, but the authors shared an important family recipe that I will always treasure. Greg Smith
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the best chinese cookbooks I've seen.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Every Grain of Rice: A Taste of Our Chinese Childhood in America (Hardcover)
As an Irish American woman married to a Chinese American man, I found the stories delightful and the recipes helpful. I too have spent time in the kitchen with my in-laws watching them cook, wondering how they arrive at such wonderfully delicious flavors. I am glad to own a book that will help me duplicate such flavors and help my children learn how to cook chinese food.
4.0 out of 5 stars
A walk down memory lane,
By A Customer
This review is from: Every Grain of Rice: A Taste of Our Chinese Childhood in America (Hardcover)
I have long ago moved out of my parents house and never learned to cook the way my mom did. This book brought back great memories of sitting around watching my mom cook - wheter it was just for a family meal, or for a special occasion. After reading the stories and drooling over the pictures, I had to get a copy for my sister. This book is not your ordinary cookbook - it's more a walk down memory lane. So if you want some Chinese resturant dishes - don't buy this. But if you want to see receipes and stories of growing up in a Chinese family in the States, this is a great book.
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Every Grain of Rice: A Taste of Our Chinese Childhood in America by Annabel Low (Hardcover - May 26 1998)
Used & New from: CDN$ 5.35
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