The Splendid Grain: Robust, Inspired Recipes for Grains with Vegetables, Fish, Poultry, Meat, and Fruit by Rebecca Wood

Notes about this book

  • Eat Your Books

    1998 International Association of Culinary Professionals Award Winner

Notes about Recipes in this book

  • Wild rice tortillas with poached huevos rancheros and ginger-peach salsa

    • dinnermints on August 08, 2014

      This was okay....the rice/masa harina mixture definitely needed more water than is called for. The peach salsa is okay; I've had better. It does look pretty cool on the plate, and that's even without the blue masa harina.

  • Corn and quinoa raspberry muffins

    • Christine on September 04, 2013

      It had been so long since I looked in this cookbook, I forgot it had recipes for grain flours and not just for whole grains! I was happy to find this recipe and use up some quinoa flour lingering in my pantry. This recipe makes a tasty corn muffin that is much lighter than my usual recipe. They are on the drier side and not very sweet, but I never had any desire to make super-sweet, super-moist corn muffins like the ones they sell at bakeries that almost taste like cake! I used cranberries which were a suggested fruit substitition and while they are very good, I do think raspberries would be better since they are naturally sweeter & would complement better. I made 18 instead of 12, likely due to adding extra fruit which bulked up the batter. I probably could have pulled them out a little sooner since the batter was stretched out for a larger yield, and this likely would have made them a bit less dry as well. I would make these again, and will definitely try with raspberries next time.

  • Quinoa and winter squash potage

    • TrishaCP on January 14, 2012

      Really good comforting winter soup. I think butternut is probably a bit weak for the flavor- this soup really needs the sweetness and depth of the kabocha squash if possible.

  • Jicama and buckwheat salad

    • TrishaCP on May 24, 2012

      Quite bland- maybe because I used farro instead of buckwheat.

  • Millet, quinoa, and burdock pilaf

    • dinnermints on January 14, 2019

      This was very flavorful. I'd never cooked burdock root before, and it has a nice nutty flavor. I used red quinoa, and agree with the author that red or black quinoa makes for a much prettier dish. The wine flavor was good but pretty pronounced (1/3 of the liquid was wine); next time I'd reduce it from 1 cup to 1/2 cup.

  • Barley Provencale

    • lorloff on November 09, 2020

      This was quite flavorful. Made with black barley and it came out well. You need to be a fan of whole grains which my husband is not. It might be better using pearled barley.

  • Warm red cabbage and rye berry salad

    • dinnermints on August 12, 2016

      Not a knock-your-socks-off kind of dish, but good, and I'd make it again. I decreased the walnuts to 1/2 cup and the chevre to 3 oz (although it did call for 1/2 cup crumbled, which is maybe the same amount). For the herbs, I used a combo of tarragon, oregano, and marjoram since it's what I had on hand. I'd cook the rye berries differently - she uses a steam method that I love for brown rice, but the rye berries got a bit mushy this way - better to cook them in a bunch of water and drain.

  • Plum-peach crisp

    • nadiam1000 on August 07, 2017

      I used in season peaches and pluots and left out the orange zest - did not miss it. I think a touch of ginger or lemon would also be nice here. I doubled the streusel mixture and put a little extra on the crisp. I froze most of the extra streusel to top another pie or crisp, or even banana bread. A big hit with the family.

  • Corn quiche in a tef crust

    • TrishaCP on May 01, 2012

      The combination of egg and corn blended together in a quiche crust was delicious, and would be particularly good with in season corn. (I used corn I froze last summer.) But I had real issues with the tef crust being too dry and crumbly, and to be honest, it just didn't taste all that good. I would definitely make this again, but with a different crust.

  • Great gingerbread

    • TrishaCP on October 24, 2011

      This was a total recipe fail. In spite of my better judgement, I decided to follow the recipe to the letter. The temp (425) is way too hot for the 50 minute cook time recommended in the standard version of the recipe. Also, I think the proportions of the flour are off. The 1/2 cup of whole wheat pastry flour isn't enough to give a rise to the gingerbread- I think you'd be better off using 1/2 cup teff to 1 1/4 of pastry flour instead. For those of you that want to make this- I definitely will NOT be making this again.

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  • ISBN 10 0688097669
  • ISBN 13 9780688097660
  • Linked ISBNs
  • Published Jan 15 1997
  • Format Hardcover
  • Page Count 448
  • Language English
  • Countries United States
  • Publisher HarperCollins Publishers Inc
  • Imprint William Morrow

Publishers Text

With 250 luscious recipes, along with eight pages of color photographs, The Splendid Grain dramatizes how you can incorporate extraordinarily healthful grains into your life without changing your lifestyle. Grains can transform taste and texture in unsurpassed ways like these: --Nutty, sweet oats form the delicious crust of fried chicken --Piquant quinoa heightens and absorbs the savory juices of gingered lamb --Hearty buckwheat becomes a sweet, delicate, Parisian-inspired crepe --Thai black sticky rice flavored with coconut makes unforgettable exotic banana dumplings. The natural and native history of each grain is also explored along with its health benefits.

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