Think Like a Chef

Think Like a Chef

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Editorial Reviews

With Think Like a Chef, Tom Colicchio has created a new kind of cookbook. Rather than list a series of restaurant recipes, he uses simple steps to deconstruct a chef's creative process, making it easily available to any home cook.

He starts with techniques: What's roasting, for example, and how do you do it in the oven or on top of the stove? He also gets you comfortable with braising, sautéing, and making stocks and sauces. Next he introduces simple "ingredients" -- roasted tomatoes, say, or braised artichokes -- and tells you how to use them in a variety of ways. So those easy roasted tomatoes may be turned into anything from a vinaigrette to a caramelized tomato tart, with many delicious options in between.

In a section called Trilogies, Tom takes three ingredients and puts them together to make one dish that's quick and other dishes that are increasingly more involved. As Tom says, "Juxtaposed in interesting ways, these ingredients prove that the whole can be greater than the sum of their parts," and you'll agree once you've tasted the Ragout of Asparagus, Morels, and Ramps or the Baked Free-Form "Ravioli" -- both dishes made with the same trilogy of ingredients.

The final section of the books offers simple recipes for components -- from zucchini with lemon thyme to roasted endive with whole spices to boulangerie potatoes -- that can be used in endless combinations.

Written in Tom's warm and friendly voice and illustrated with glorious photographs of finished dishes, Think Like a Chef will bring out the master chef in all of us.


From the Hardcover edition.

Cookbooks by chefs can be daunting. They're apt to include tricky restaurant recipes, or, alternately, watered-down "translations." Tom Colicchio, chef at Manhattan's top-rated Gramercy Tavern, has a better way. Think like a chef, he advises, and you tap into food preparation creativity--the ability to forgo recipes, when you wish, for spontaneous kitchen invention. In a series of innovative chapters that explore cooking fundamentals, culinary themes and variations, and "plug-in" component preparations, Colicchio provides a cooking "anatomy" for gaining kitchen mastery. The book's 100-plus recipes are offered not as ends in themselves (though they stand as delicious examples of Colicchio's simple yet sophisticated style), but as illustrative keys to the culinary processes.

How does it work? Beginning with a chapter that reviews basic cooking techniques, and includes exemplary stock- and sauce-making formulas, the book then presents a series of "studies," building-block recipes like Roasted Tomatoes, followed by simple-to-sophisticated variations, such as Roasted-Tomato Risotto. A chapter called "Trilogies" explores clusters of three-ingredient recipes--duck, root vegetables, and apples is one ingredient grouping--that show how various techniques, applied to the same ingredients, yield various exciting dishes. "Component Cooking," which focuses on vegetables (Colicchio's major source of inspiration), provides recipes like Corn and Potato Pancakes to be used for assembling a "plate." Concluding the book is "Favorites," a selection of Colicchio's specialties that range from My Favorite Chicken Soup to Poached Foie Gras, a taste bonus that also stimulates the cooking imagination. Illustrated with more than 100 color photos, and including a wide range of tips, Think Like a Chef succeeds at helping readers see through a chef's eyes--and in so doing to visualize cooking with fresh insight. --Arthur Boehm

Customer Reviews

Beginning Culinary Students Take Note--Also this is Really a 4.5

Reviewed by C. Farley, 2010-01-06

Having been downsized for my last time I am in the process of attending Culinary School for retraining. But I am also a home/family cook since I was a teenager. What is the difference between a cook and a chef? This excellent book takesthe time to explain, demonstrate and give critical benchmarks to judge your own growth as a chef. The recipes are beautifully photographed. Good tips on necessary materials too. I hadn't started my chef knife collection because they were so many local, conflicting opinions. Chef Tom said this and this--my collection has begun. The recipes are doable and would work for some family dinners. What I wish he spoke more of--how the heck did he do such flawless presentation? All his sliced potatoes and veggies laying in perfectly spaced rows. I can barely fit them in the pan. Looking forward to the next book.

Not a challange for the more advanced cook

Reviewed by Lael Eckman, 2009-11-23

Great book, easy to follow and give some excelent info on basic skills. Not challangeing for someone who already knows basics.

A book worth having

Reviewed by Charles E. Holmes, 2009-11-18

Think Like A Chef is a book any aspiring, or good chef can learn from. Not only are their good recipes and techniques but the book also accomplishes and fulfills its title by getting the reader to think more like a chef and to be more adventurous and trusting in the meals and dishes you create. I heartily recommend this book to all.

Think like a chef

Reviewed by Lonnie W. Morris Jr., 2009-11-11

It was dissapointing.I expected a good cook book with great sauce reciepes.The show had many great sauces,with no showing ,what went in the sauces.He seems to be a great chef,but his book falls short.

great recipies

Reviewed by Julie Diaz, 2009-10-01

Recieved quickly. Enjoy the pictures. Would recommend it to a friend. I bought it for several family members