T. Susan Chang
T. Susan Chang regularly writes about food and reviews cookbooks for The Boston Globe,NPR.org and the Washington Post. She's the author of A Spoonful of Promises: Recipes and Stories From a Well-Tempered Table (2011). She lives in western Massachusetts, where she also teaches food writing at Bay Path College and Smith College. She blogs at Cookbooks for Dinner.
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Culinary scholars and serious home cooks share their hard-won wisdom in 11 new cookbooks. They've spent years toiling in the kitchen, and now these experts are here to help you perfect your roast, indulge your sweet tooth or feed your 12-year-old.
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Some of the comfort foods we crave when the weather starts to cool require a lot of time and effort to get to the table. But these simple fish dishes offer warmth, autumnal flavor and the soulful reassurance of a full-bodied broth — without all the effort.
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At this time of year, most gardeners have too much of a good thing. What to do with it all? T. Susan Chang offers some tasty breads you can make in the blink of a baker's eye.
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Black pepper, basil, balsamic vinegar — in ice cream? If typical frozen treats leave you feeling a bit pedestrian, food writer T. Susan Chang has some recommendations that may sweep you off your feet.
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Tucked in their natural confines and simmering in their own briny juices, these delicate meats cook up quick and delicious on the direct heat of the grill. But you may have to eat quickly, too. You can make them in dozens, yet somehow they vanish off the plate as inexorably as the last evening tide.
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Out of fellow-feeling for friends who eat gluten-free, food writer and noodle lover T. Susan Chang pondered a life without wheat that is not a life without noodles. When it comes to wheat-free, she says, Asian rice noodles are the crossover stars. But they're not alone.
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This season's standouts praise America's culinary traditions from coast to coast — and everywhere in between. Authors of these plainspoken and charming cookbooks craft memorable recipes around just a few well-chosen flavors: meals for every day that are anything but.
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If you find yourself tearing through egg yolks in the kitchen, with a surplus of whites left behind, don't just toss them out. It's the white that gives life to sweet and spicy nuts, sichuan pork and classic cookies like macaroons and financiers.
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Apple cider — the alcoholic variety — was part of the foundation of America. Now its sweet descendant turns up often in school lunchboxes and at blood drives. But cider isn't just good for sipping; the apple slurry lends earthy sweetness to savory dishes in a brine, a vinaigrette and a glaze.
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This year, cooks poured their hearts into these carefully crafted, kitchen how-tos. T. Susan Chang says these cookbooks are like a properly seasoned skillet — heavy-duty, battle-tested and much to be prized.
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It can be hard to resist the crispy, salty temptation to "Have It Your Way," but you can ditch the fast-food fries and make your own -- in the oven. It takes a bit more time, but you won't mind when you taste your piping-hot potatoes, chicken and other favorites.
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Summertime inspires dizzying feats of laziness in the kitchen. Liquid lunches, random fruit meet-ups, meals consisting of things you can throw in a blender -- anything to avoid summer's Public Enemy No. 1: the stove. These easy-to-make, easy-to-eat salads won't impose on your downtime.