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Tip: Technique: To Salt or Not to Salt?

Properly salted water makes a big difference to the taste of pasta. To cook one pound of pasta, add 2 tablespoons of salt to 4 – 5 quarts of boiling water. The water will froth a bit when the salt is added. Stir in the salt, then stir in the

Tip: On the Side: Cranberry classics for today

Cranberry sauce is an iconic Thanksgiving side dish that, like lots of iconic holiday side dishes, can be tricky to tinker with. People like their traditions, but “newer” versions are often truly better… just don’t try to tell anybody that! Since

Tip: Countdown: Cinderella, Cinderella!

Iron the linens and set the tables (whether seated or buffet-style) the day or more before a special event. If necessary, cover tables with large clean sheets to keep everything in pristine condition. Cover stacks of plates on a buffet with napkins

Glossary

Silicone with Stainless Steel

What is it?

A strong, pliable non-toxic material.

Why you'd want it?

It provides a no-slip heat resistant grip on metal handles, and is heat-safe to 400 degrees.

Ice-Hardened Steel

What is it?

High carbon stainless steel that has been further strengthened by cooling heated steel to very low temperatures. Ice-hardened steel is used to make blades for cutlery.

Why you'd want it?

Ice-hardening produces stronger, harder blades that hold their edges very well.

Carbon Steel

What is it?

A metal commonly used in bakeware manufacturing. To prevent rusting, carbon steel must be “aluminized”, or coated with nonstick, tin or enamel.

Why you'd want it?

It’s strong and heavy, so carbon steel pans are durable and hold their shapes well.

Contributors

Staff Contributor Peggy S

I am a newbie at Meyer Corporation but I can see why so many people have worked here for years. It’s such a great place to land; why would anyone ever want to leave? I am a culinary writer, having started out way back when, answering mail and testing recipes for Chuck Williams at Williams Sonoma, when it had fewer than a dozen stores. I was lucky enough to produce ten national cooking series for Jacques Pepin, Mollie Katzen and Martin Yan for public television, veered off into the non-profit world of international adoption and parenthood, and just kept cooking.

I am working in the culinary realm once again, enjoying every delicious thought that I try to put into words. My office is adjacent to the warehouse, its sample shelves abounding with product, more cookware than one can imagine. It’s heaven.

Emily Luchetti

Emily Luchetti is the executive pastry chef at Farallon and Waterbar Restaurants in San Francisco. With six cookbooks to her credit and numerous awards, including a 2004 James Beard Award, patrons can always count on a delicious end to their meal.

Emily has been at Farallon since its inception in 1997. She has been executive pastry chef of Waterbar since it opened in 2008. Her history with Farallon and Waterbar’s co-owner Mark Franz began when they met at Jeremiah Tower’s legendary Stars Restaurant in 1984. Emily began her tenure on the savory side of the kitchen but switched to the sweet side in 1987 and was pastry chef until 1995. Emily also co-owned StarBake, a retail bakery, with Jeremiah Tower.

Emily is the author of Stars Desserts (HarperCollins, 1991), Four Star Desserts (HarperCollins, 1995), A Passion for Desserts (Chronicle Books, 2003), and A Passion for Ice Cream (Chronicle Books, 2006). Her latest book is The Fearless Baker (Little, Brown and Company, 2011).She created the dessert recipes for The Farallon Cookbook (Chronicle Books, 2000). Her first two books were rereleased as Classic Stars Desserts. (Chronicle Books, 2007).

Emily has also received honors including the 1998 San Francisco Focus Magazine Pastry Chef of the Year, the 2001 Women Chefs & Restaurateurs Golden Whisk Award and the 2003 Food Arts Magazine Silver Spoon Award. In 2009 The San Francisco Chronicle named her one of 20 Visionary Chefs in the Bay Area. In 2009 she was inducted into the Culinary Pioneers of America. Emily is a Dean of The French Culinary Institute located in New York and California. She formerly served as Vice Chair of The James Beard Foundation.

Emily Luchetti and her recipes appear regularly in national newspapers and magazines She has been featured on numerous television programs including The Food Network’s The Ultimate Kitchen, Sweet Dreams, Cookin’ Live, Sara’s Secrets, The Martha Stewart Show, Essential Pepin. She was the co-host of the PBS Series, The Holiday Table.

Emily graduated from Denison University in 1979 with a BA in Sociology. She attended the New York Restaurant School, worked at several New York City food establishments and spent a year cooking in France before moving to The San Francisco Bay Area. She currently resides in Sausalito.

Georgeanne Brennan

Georgeanne grew up in southern California and was educated at San Diego State University, the University of Aix-Marseille in Provence, and the University of California, San Diego, where she earned a Master's Degree in History. In 1970 she and her husband returned to southern France with their small daughter (their son was born there) and bought an old farmhouse where they made and sold goat cheese, and raised and sold feeder pigs for two years before taking teaching jobs in Northern California, although they returned to France at least once a year thereafter.

In 1982 Georgeanne and a partner, Charlotte Glenn, started Le Marché Seeds, a national mail-order specialty vegetable seed company. With customers all over the United States, including emerging organic market growers, Le Marché was featured in such magazines as Family Circle, Metropolitan Home, Organic Gardening and Vogue, as well as in the food and garden sections of numerous newspapers.

Out of her these activities came her first book, The New American Vegetable Cookbook (1984) co-authored with Isaac Cronin and Charlotte Glenn. Since then, she has written POTAGER: Fresh Garden Cooking in the French Style, which has been called a modern classic by Patricia Wells, published into both French and German, and was also a finalist for the prestigious James Beard Award, as was her next book, The Glass Pantry; Preserving Flavors. Shortly thereafter she won a James Beard award for her cookbook memoir, The Food and Flavors of Haute Provence. Her book, Aperitif, won a Julia Child award and Savoring France (the Series) a Versailles International Cookbook award.

The Mediterranean Herb Cookbook (2000), which celebrates herbs and the Mediterranean way with olive oil, was followed in 2001 by Olives, Capers, and Anchovies: The Secret Ingredients of Mediterranean Cooking, (published in Dutch in 2002) both from Chronicle Books. These were followed by Great Greens, also from Chronicle Books. In 2006, she brought to life Dr. Suess's quirky take on food with The Dr Seuss Green Eggs and Ham Cookbook, (Random House 2006).

Her most recent book is Gather, Memorable Meals for Entertaining Throughout the Seasons.

In 2007 her memoir, A Pig in Provence (Chronicle Books, 2007; paperback Harcourt 2008) was published to much acclaim, and has been printed in both Dutch and Polish.

She is currently working on a dual voice memoir of friendship and continuing to work on a mystery series set in Provence, as well as the Davis Farmers’ Market Cookbook (spring 2012).

In addition to her books Brennan writes regular features for The San Francisco Chronicle newspaper's food section has contributed to Fine Cooking, Bon Appétit, Cooking Pleasures, and Organic The New York Times, Garden Design, Metropolitan Home, Horticulture, and Organic Gardening. She has been featured in Food and Wine, Gourmet, and Sunset magazines.

In 2000, Georgeanne opened her own cooking vacation school in a restored 17th century convent located in a medieval village in Haute Provence, not far from her own small farmhouse. The week long experience for small groups features gathering and cooking from the kitchen garden - the time-honored cuisine du potager - as well as shopping in village markets and preparing the equally honorable cuisine du marché. Seasonal activities include mushroom hunting, gathering wild herbs, visits to olive oil mills and local cheesemakers, as well as visits to her favorite restaurants, antique markets and nearby historic sites. In 2006 she discontinued this program in favor of something closer to home: ‘Provence in California’ – culinary weekends at her small farm in Northern California, where participants gather and cook from her garden.

She also co-founded, in 2008, the Annual Provence Writing and Cooking Retreat, a week-long experience held at a farmhouse in the upper Var, a still very rural region of France.

She has been a featured speaker on Provence at the Culinary Academy of America at Greystone and at COPIA: The American Center for Food, Wine and the Arts and a spokesperson for the California Tree Fruit Agreement.

She also has been a guest chef on Crystal Cruises, a frequent guest at the Chef's Holidays at Yosemite, Whistler School of Cooking in Vancouver, B.C., and at Rancho la Puerta in Tecate, Mexico, as well as a guest teacher at cooking schools nationwide. Additionally, she has taught food and memoir writing at the University of California at Berkeley and Davis Extensions.

Active in the Slow Food movement for many years, she has served as a jury member for Slow Food International Award, a member of Slow Food's American Ark Selection Committee, and is currently co-leader of the Slow Food Yolo Convivum.

She is a member of Les Dames d'Escoffier.

Georgeanne lives with her husband on their small farm in Northern California. They have four children.

Georgeanne Brennan is an award-winning cookbook author, writer, and teacher specializing in garden fresh cooking, in season, with a Mediterranean slant.

Georgeanne Brennan.com
gbrennan@georgeannebrennan.com

Georgeanne Brennan’s business provides private cooking classes, culinary consulting including school districts, and writing and cooking workshops in California and Provence, France.

Her business activities merge her mulitple talents for food, wine, teaching, and writing. Her consulting client list includes Center For Ecoliteracy in Berkeley, CA, Farm to School, Davis, CA and the Yolo County Department of Agriculture, Woodland, CA.

Videos

  • A to Zest - Intro to Cookware

    A to Zest - Intro to Cookware

    Find out the key elements to consider when choosing cookware, and learn the difference between a pot and a pan.

  • New Orleans Dinner Fried Okra

    New Orleans Dinner Fried Okra

    Deep Fried Okra & Shallots with Fresh Cilantro is the perfect side to accompany any southern meal.

  • Anolon Nouvelle Copper Lid

    Anolon Nouvelle Copper Lid

    The Elements of Great Cooking with Anolon Nouvelle Copper NonStick Cookware Lid Animation.Deep seated dome lid fits securely into the rims to lock in flavors and nutrients.

Articles

The Shape of Things
The Shape of Things
Choosing Cookware Part 2: Features (shapes, lids, handles)
by PotsandPans.com Culinary Team of PotsandPans.com
Listed in Cookware, Technique
Learn about the different shapes of pots and pans and what they’re used for, then select the pans that are just right for you. Read more
Pans By Any Other Names
Pans By Any Other Names
Choosing Cookware Part 1: Materials
by PotsandPans.com Culinary Team of PotsandPans.com
Listed in Cookware
Learn how to select pots and pans that are just right for you. Read more
Take Two
Take Two
Recipes Paired with Two Wine Suggestions: One Classic, One Adventurous
by Lauren V of PotsandPans.com
Try these recipes paired with two wine suggestions – one classic pairing and one adventurous pairing. Read more

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