My Bombay Kitchen: Traditional and Modern Parsi Home Cooking
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| My Bombay Kitchen: Traditional and Modern Parsi Home Cooking | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Persians of antiquity were renowned for their lavish cuisine and their never-ceasing fascination with the exotic. These traits still find expression in the cooking of India's rapidly dwindling Parsi population--descendants of Zoroastrians who fled Persia after the Sassanian empire fell to the invading Arabs. The first book published in the United States on Parsi food written by a Parsi, this beautiful volume includes 165 recipes and makes one of India's most remarkable regional cuisines accessible to Westerners. In an intimate narrative rich with personal experience, the author leads readers into a world of new ideas, tastes, ingredients, and techniques, with a range of easy and seductive menus that will reassure neophytes and challenge explorers.
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| 08-04-08 | 5 | 1\1 |
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This book is SUCH a delight! It brought back SO many memories along with all the subtle nuances of own mother's cooking! The 'Mamas Italian Eggs' recipe is a MUST try for any egg lover!( It's now a staple in my house!)
I love the author's attention to detail. Things like the correct order and time to add ingredients, even the amount of salt to add! This book is scattered with personal stories which are quite fun to read, along with the evolution and adaptation of recipes. Some of you might think there's more story telling than recipes, but trust me, each recipe is amazing. This book is great for any beginner or novice cook too, simply because it has such simple step by step instructions. In short-my new favorite cookbook! (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-06 07:28:19 EST)
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| 07-18-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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This book is perfect for Indians who live abroad and really miss home cooked food. I grew up in Zoroastrian household and the few recipes I've tried from here came very close to the food I ate growing up.
The introduction to the book also makes it a great gift to non-Zoroastrians who are interested in the culture and the cuisine ! I bought a copy for myself and a few more to give away as gifts. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-28 08:03:39 EST)
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| 06-08-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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A wonderful cookbook that I've read cover to cover. My husband is Indian, I own a dozen Indian cookbooks and this is easily my favorite (and he and I love the results). In addition to My Bombay Kitchen's delicious recipes, fascinating history of Parsis, and friendly, accessible tone, I love that this cookbook dispenses with glossy photos and obsessively detailed instructions and instead teaches the reader to cook by using the seven senses (smell, sight, hearing, touch, taste, sixth, and common). The author is not just teaching me how to cook Parsi food, but how to use seasonal, fresh produce and techniques that will improve the taste and presentation of any dish.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-18 19:34:38 EST)
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| 04-28-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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Great book, I have tried a number of recipes and all have worked out very well
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-09 07:41:18 EST)
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| 04-23-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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Some people use cookbooks, I read them. I believe a cookbook, especially an ethnic or exotic one, should be as entertaining as a novel, as detailed as a travel guide, and as warm and witty as a good neighbor's kitchen. It's rare to find a cookbook that fits the bill as completely--and cleverly--as this one. No tiresome list of esoteric ingredients and daunting prep, Niloufer's explanations of products, procedures and substitutions are clear and organized enough for newcomers to Middle- and Far-East cooking to march confidently, yet salted with options for more advanced cooks to flex their jazz and improv muscles. The obsessive attention to detail and organization presciently addresses issues like storage and substitution, often with memorable mirth. (In a description of a recipe that can be successfully "thawed": "Note, I didn't say 'frozen.' Anything can be successfully frozen.") Moreover, she provides a brief and eloquent history of the Parsi people, giving the reader a solid foundation to better appreciate this somewhat obscure culinary creole.
Of course, the deal breaker is, "How's the food?" Well, her Major Ordle's Chutney is the best mango chutney I've ever made (and she explains why), her Mother's Wobbly Cauliflower Custard slides into a pie shell to become God's own quiche, and her masur (without tongue, thank you) is itself worth the price of admission. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-04-29 07:31:09 EST)
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| 03-25-08 | 4 | 0\2 |
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Anyone who loves parsi must get this book. I enjoyed preparing and serving the dishes to my friends. I also recommend Finger Licking Different!!!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-04-23 07:29:10 EST)
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| 01-20-08 | 3 | 5\6 |
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I never can quite believe cookbook editors and designers who put these tomes together making them difficult to use as, yes, a cookbook. The recipes are densely packed into a design that practically shouts out: "Don't Bother." Additionally, except for the use of a garlic/ginger paste in nearly all dishes there is really very little in these recipes to make them stand out or be unique from countless other Indian cookbooks. including the very good and useable "Indian Home Cooking" by Suvir Saran. I think the author is a bit full of herself.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-03-26 07:35:25 EST)
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| 01-07-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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Having grown up in Bombay, I loved this book. Have tried a few of the recipes, and it took me back to when I lived in Bombay. And, as a Parsee, I loved it all!!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-01-21 08:03:48 EST)
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| 01-07-08 | 5 | (NA) |
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An immensely personal, approachable cookbook that does not rely on overly stylized food photographs to sell recipes. For anyone who likes to read and cook, or to read cookbooks! Wonderful does not begin to sum it up, kudos to Niloufer, and beautiful drawings by David. I hope to make it to Parsi New Year at Chez Panisse this year!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-01-21 08:03:48 EST)
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| 01-02-08 | 5 | 1\1 |
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I was drawn to this book because I'm half Parsi and I've always wanted to recreate the delicious dishes I've enjoyed during the childhood weekly visits to my Parsi relatives. Those days were almost a longed for memory until I found 'My Bombay Kitchen'. From 'Dhansak' to 'papeta per eedu' - its all in this book!
Parsi cuisine is known for its uniqueness in that it blends meat and vegetables into wholesome, delectable dishes that really aren't hard to make. This book is detailed, enjoyable, easy to read & follow and gives you lots of choices and explanations regarding seemingly exotic ingredients and cooking techniques used. Ms Ichaporia has beautifully divided the book into sections based on the kind of dish, with each recipe reading like a story. (There is a whole chapter on eggs - dare I say the cornerstone of Parsi cooking!) The beauty of Ms Ichaporia's narrating style is that it is simple and so wonderfully narrative that this book doesn't need those seductive and mouth watering pictures of well garnished & presented dishes that are usually difficult to prepare. I have used this book to introduce Parsi cuisine to my husband, friends and the other side of my family and it has always delighted their taste buds. I still get rave reviews on the easy to make 'Akuri' that I attempted for a recent brunch party. Highly recommended if you are a fan of Indian, Parsi or just simple, wholesome and flavourful cuisine that is as easy to cook as it is delightful to savour! (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-01-07 08:21:42 EST)
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| 12-31-07 | 5 | (NA) |
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Here is a book about home cooking. Yes, it is Parsi home cooking, but it is still the kind of food that grandmothers and mothers make for their families. That is, if they are gifted cooks. Get this book. For example, try the lamb and potato stew on page 115. Comfort food of the first order. The instructions are easy to follow, and not difficult for even a novice to prepare. I love this book.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-01-03 08:04:12 EST)
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| 12-17-07 | 5 | 3\3 |
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Alice Waters calls Niloufer Ichaporia King "one of the great cooks I know." It makes Waters crazy that King has steadfastly refused to open a restaurant. But it delights Waters that, on the Parsi New Year, King consents to cook a feast worthy of her mother's Bombay kitchen at her legendary restaurant.
I've never been to that dinner. Nor have I ever enjoyed an Indian meal that King might claim as her own. I'm the standard American who claims to love Indian food --- I look over the menu and wonder one thing: how hot to order the curry. Oh, and maybe whether to get the king-size beer if I've thrown sanity to the winds and ordered a vindaloo. But smart friends have said "My Bombay Kitchen" is the cookbook event of the year. And Alice Waters --- she created Chez Panisse and almost singlehandedly launched the good food movement --- certainly knows her way around an entree. And as even a skim of her book indicates, Niloufer Ichaporia King doesn't cook the mundane fare I'm used to. One reason fits all: Niloufer Ichaporia King's people are not quite "Indian". The Parsis were Persians who migrated to southern India from Persia. They had a highly evolved culture, heavily shaped by the teachings of Zoroaster, a prophet who lived in the seventh century before Christ. King calls Zoroastrianism "a religion of conduct rather than piety," for it holds that all people --- that includes both sexes --- are equal, that we are stewards of the earth, and that life is "an ongoing struggle between light and dark forces within each human being." Because Bombay is a port city and a commercial hub, its tastes were sophisticated when King was growing up there. So was its food --- as King writes, Bombay had "a real magpie cuisine" that drew upon the old ways and, at the same time, featured local modifications of the food of other traditions. King learned about food from her mother and the family cook, then went off to boarding school, where food was "a constant preoccupation" and luxury was "a can of baked beans after lights out." Though she moved to America, she had a keen memory of her childhood meals and the joys of "a diet not constrained by religion." With the help of her mother's recipes --- and her mother --- she began to use her training as an anthropologist to chronicle Parsi cooking. Most of her recipes will be of interest primarily to hard-core foodies. Are you likely to make your own Indian breads? Have a hankering to whip up some brain cutlets? Can your butcher get kid for you? And how about banana leaves to wrap fish filets? So what's left to the amateur chef --- or, more urgently, the home cook who'd like a modest expansion of his/her repertoire? Just enough recipes to justify the purchase --- and whet the palate for the more adventurous recipes. So I'm starting with Parsi crudités, a selection of off-the-beaten track vegetables (jicama) and fruits (green mango crescents), accompanied by bowls of salt and cayenne pepper and lime wedges. Then it's on to carrot and coriander soup, served hot or cold. Lamb shanks spiced with a ginger-garlic paste, cumin seeds and red chiles. Irish stew (yes, Irish stew). Cashew cream chicken, with its "thick, creamy" gravy. Caramelized fried rice. And a cauliflower custard. Which recipe will most tempt you? I vote for the custard. It took me just minutes to prepare. It was, like so many great dishes, even better the second day. And, I can happily report, it was at once as familiar as quiche and exotic as...well, Bombay. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-31 08:00:03 EST)
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| 10-18-07 | 5 | 3\3 |
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This would have to be one of the best written cook books of all time-filled with interesting information about Parsi life too
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-12-17 17:19:37 EST)
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| 10-11-07 | 5 | (NA) |
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Like many great affairs, it began in the bedroom and moved to the kitchen. I was so entranced by Ms. Ichaporia-King's writing that I had the book at my bedside for weeks of enticing, and entrancing late night reading. I then brought the book into my kitchen for what I anticipate will be a lifetime of delicious meals. I used to cook for profit, but now just for pleasure and it is a book that can be either inspirational (oh, I think I will try that spice combination with my old favorite pork dish) or instructional (so that is how you make chili pickles) and most often both. I hate when Amazon says "people who liked this book, also liked..." But I will say for people who liked Simple French Food by Richard Olney, The Zuni Cookbook by Judy Rogers, or Nose to Tail Eating by Fergus Henderson, they will adore this book. I now have a little Bombay in my kitchen, and everyone is thrilled about my latest affair.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-10-18 07:54:36 EST)
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| 07-18-07 | 5 | 1\4 |
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Wonderful! A seductive introduction to the fascinating cuisine of a little-known and ancient culture. Well written to boot.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-10-11 07:55:15 EST)
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| 07-05-07 | 5 | 4\4 |
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I received my order of "My Bombay Kitchen: Traditional and Modern Parsi Home Cooking - Niloufer Ichaporia King."
I STRONGLY recommend this book. My wife is Parsi, and I enjoy cooking Parsi cuisine (along with many other cuisines, but Parsi cuisine is a favorite) and have a number of books on the subject, so I looked at how she treated some recipies I had already done, Patrel and Dhansak Masala. I've visited where my wife grew up in Bombay on M Karve Road near the Eros theater. There I also enjoyed Goan cuisine (my wife's 'nannys' were Goan and are superb cooks of both Goan and Parsi cuisine). Reading this book made you feel like you were back in Bombay learning a cuisine at the hands of someone who had mastered the cuisine and was gracious and competent enough to be teaching it to you with the clarity and style of a master teacher. Clearly this book is written by a Parsi in America, paying attention to the difficulties of obtaining certain ingredients, noting appropriate substitutions, yet showing the knowledge that could only come from someone who had been a part of the culture in Bombay - maintaining a most authentic result. The book isn't simply a collection of exquisitely presented recipies demonstrating exemplarary versions of those recipies, but the recipies are presented within the cultural context of the Parsi traditions, noting the culinary likes and dislikes of Parsis, what are mainstays of the tradition, etc etc. Delightfully written - a pleasure to read (excellent editing) and a clear presentation of information that I've struggled to get elsewhere. Dhansak Masala is a complex spice mixture composed of dhana jiru and sambhar masala, each complex mixtures in their own right, with endless variations as numerous as there are cooks. I have searched high and low on the internet for these recipies only to find ones far more mediocre than the excellent verrsion she has presented in this book. Her explanation of making Patrel would have saved me endless hours trying to find out that Colocasia leaves are actually taro root leaves. She lays out the techniques in a clear style reminiscent of Julia Child of exactly how to assemble this dish. I know that reading each recipe cover to cover will be a treasure trove of information. I could go on and on, but suffice it to say that if you have an interest in Parsi or even Indian or Persian cuisine, this is a must have for your collection. I really couldn't recommend a cookbook more highly. I'm not alone either - she is strongly recommended by Alice Waters, who wrote the forward of this book, famous for her restaurant in Berkeley, Chez Panisse and a major influence to cooks everywhere on the use and incorporation of local fresh ingredients being used in her food preparations. Also Paula Wolfert, who has written an excellent book on Moroccan Cuisine among her many accomplishments, and Dianne Kennedy, whose Mexican cookbook is a classial reference of Mexican cuisine. And other esteemed chefs and editors. I really couldn't be in better company in recommending a book. Finally, my ultimate critic of my cooking, my wife, has been absolutely delighted by the recipies in this book, partiularly the Parsi scrambled egg recipe. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-19 07:46:02 EST)
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| 07-04-07 | 5 | 2\2 |
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I love this cookbook! I felt, as I read it, that Nilouofer was sitting at my kitchen table giving me directions as I cooked her family cuisine. I learned about Parsi culture and food and the recipes are easy to follow(some Indian recipes seem to use so many ingredients that it can be off putting although the results can be spectacular) and really do seem like the kinds of dishes that a Parsi family would regularly eat. The results are terrific. A wonderful cookbook.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-19 07:46:02 EST)
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| 06-12-07 | 5 | 1\1 |
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I've been waiting for years for this book. I'm a huge fan of Niloufer's cooking,she cooks at Chez Panisse once a year for the Parsi New Year. The recipes are clear and easy to follow and the flavors, and scents will make you want to linger longer over your food.
Reading Niloufers' stories are as complex and texured as her cuisine. (Review Data Last Updated: 2007-07-05 07:37:25 EST)
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