Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Look Good Feel Great Cookbook or Oz Clarkes Pocket Wine Guide 2007

Look Good, Feel Great Cookbook: How Eating Superfoods Can Help You Turn Back the Clock with Over 80 Comfort Food Recipes

Author: Jenny Jones

The hot topic in healthy cooking today is superfoods. Just look at the covers of women's magazines like Fitness or Shape and you'll see headlines about the healing, anti-aging properties of foods like blueberries, nuts, spinach, salmon, and more. Former talk-show host Jenny Jones has been eating superfoods for years, which might explain why she is 59 years old, she looks great, and she never gets sick. But Jones is no health food fanatic. She wouldn't touch tofu with a 10-foot pole. She uses superfoods in her everyday, homestyle cooking, and is sharing over 80 of her personal recipes in a cookbook to pass on her "fountain of youth" secrets for the first time. There are recipes like Fresh Blueberry Muffins, Caramelized Onion and Roasted Red Pepper Dip, Broccoli Bean Pasta, and Sweet Potato Chocolate Cake. Jones believes that if food doesn't taste great, no one is going to eat it. Every recipe includes a list of the health benefits, a shopping list, and a handy list of any special equipment you'll need. Making this book even more special, all of the photography in the book was shot by Jones herself, and she will be donating 100% of her profits to benefit breast cancer research, treatment, and education at City of Hope Cancer Center.

Publishers Weekly

Former talk-show host Jones explains "superfoods" to readers unfamiliar with famously antioxidant- and micronutrient-rich foods such as blueberries, fish, garlic, pumpkin and spinach. She offers her readers recipes for fairly healthful, if uninspired, American comfort foods, including Blueberry Pancakes, Chicken Soup, Bean Salad, and Mixed Berry Cobbler; and introduces some new dishes, like the ill-named Prostate Pasta. Elementary, obvious content is also evident in subsections like "My Terms and Techniques Explained," where Jones guides readers to "Read the recipes first"; in the list of "Ten Kitchen Tools I Can't Live Without, Okay... Twenty," she includes a food processor and cutting board. Jones did her own food photography and talks readers through that as well ("By turning the plate to the exact right spot, I got the nice reflections that you see"). Perhaps fans of Jones's talk show will appreciate the author's personal, chatty style. (Apr.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Former talk-show host Jones loves to cook and at one point owned a small catering business. A healthy diet has always been important to her, and superfoods-those high in antioxidants, such as blueberries and peppers-are a big part of her diet today. Following an introductory section covering "Starting from Scratch To Cook from Scratch," among other topics, she presents 80 recipes organized into chapters such as "My Favorite Breakfasts," "Salads for Sure," and "Gotta Have Cookies." Each recipe includes a shopping list, prep time, and a list of health benefits. Jones's approach is a reasoned, unsensational one, and her conversational style should reassure novice cooks. Interestingly, she also took all the photographs for the book herself, and she includes notes on how she styled and "propped" each shot. Expect demand. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.



Look this: Low Carb Italian Cooking with the Love Chef or Family Circle Eat What You Love Lose

Oz Clarke's Pocket Wine Guide 2007

Author: Oz Clark

Indispensable as ever, Oz Clarke's now-classic pocket wine guide has been thoroughly and meticulously revised and updated for 2007, with much-anticipated lists of favorite wines, top values, and producers and regions to watch, as well as with new vintage reports. For increased browsability, this year's guide will also include an all-new country-by-country index.  As user-friendly as it is complete, Oz Clarke's Pocket Wine Guide 2007 lists each wine, grape, winery, producer, and region alphabetically for easy reference. It is a perfect pocket reference for novices—and essential for the seasoned wine lover wanting the latest information.



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