I don't do many product or book reviews on my blog. There are enough sites that do reviews that I can leave it to them. Everyone has their own taste when it comes to cookbooks or kitchen utensils. I occasionally read reviews or recommendations on these types of products, but typically follow my instincts when deciding if I want to purchase a particular item. But when I was asked to review Keys to Good Cooking: A Guide to Making the Best of Foods and RecipesSome reference books are overwhelming, hard to read, so heavy that you need a forklift to carry them, and basically boring. Even with a whopping 553 pages, Keys to Good Cooking
Undertaking the writing of a book of this nature seems like a daunting task. But author Harold McGee has presented the material in such an easy going way that I found myself flipping through page and page and dog-earring several sections of useful information. Typically, I place my pizza from the oven directly on a cutting board to cool resulting in a soft and slightly soggy crust. From the information I learned about keeping pizza crusts as crisp as possible, I discovered that transferring them from the oven to a cooling rack and then cutting them with kitchen shears will keep the crust crispier as crusts quickly soften when place hot against a cutting board that traps steam. This advice seems simple enough, but it never occurred to me to cool my pizza on a cooling rack.
If you are a seasoned cook or just starting out in the kitchen, Keys to Good Cooking
Disclosure: I was sent a free copy of this book to review. All opinions are mine, and I was not compensated for writing this post.
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