The Kitchen Ecosystem: Integrating Recipes to Produce Delicious Meals by Eugenia Bone

    • Categories: Main course
    • Ingredients: smoked pork butt; onions; baking apples; apple cider (alcohol-free)
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Notes about this book

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Notes about Recipes in this book

  • Scallop crudo with ginger

    • mjes on September 16, 2021

      I wish I had the option of spring ginger but . . . the primary challenge in this recipe is to get the scallops as thin as one wants. Otherwise, this is a simple recipe with exceptional results - scallops work well with the ginger, garlic, and lemon. I am anxious to try this with other recommended fish.

  • Chicken with sour cream and mushrooms

    • Barb_N on September 27, 2019

      Looking to clean out the fridge, I chose this over Jacques Pepin’s crispy chicken thighs with mushrooms so I could add Greek yogurt. I only had 8 oz of mushrooms so I bulked up the vegetables with celery, extra onion and arugula stirred in just before the yogurt. I won’t hesitate to make this again. Did not post photo due to all my changes.

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Reviews about this book

  • Food52

    2015 Piglet Community Pick. This book has definitely helped me be more cognizant of options for fully utilizing ingredients so that less ends up in my compost bin.

    Full review
  • ISBN 10 1322411506
  • ISBN 13 9781322411507
  • Published Sep 30 2014
  • Format eBook
  • Page Count 400
  • Language English
  • Countries United States
  • Publisher Random House
  • Imprint Clarkson Potter

Publishers Text

Paradigm-shifting, The Kitchen Ecosystem will change how we think about food and cooking. Designed to to create and use ingredients that maximize flavor, these 400 recipes are derived from 40 common ingredients--from asparagus to fish to zucchini--used at each stage of its "life cycle": fresh, preserved, and in a main dish.

Seasoned cooks know that the secret to great meals is this: the more you cook, the less you actually have to do to produce a delicious meal. The trick is to approach cooking as a continuum, where each meal draws on elements from a previous one and provides the building blocks for another. That synchronicity is a kitchen ecosystem.

For the farmers market regular as well as a bulk shopper, for everyday home cooks and aspirational ones, a kitchen ecosystem starts with cooking the freshest in-season ingredients available, preserving some to use in future recipes, and harnessing leftover components for other dishes. In The Kitchen Ecosystem, Eugenia Bone spins multiple dishes from single ingredients: homemade ricotta stars in a pasta dish while the leftover whey is used to braise pork loin; marinated peppers are tossed with shrimp one night and another evening chicken thighs and breast simmer in that leftover marinade. The bones left from a roast chicken bear just enough stock to make stracciatella for two. The small steps in creating “supporting ingredients” actually saves time when it comes to putting together dinner.

Delicious food is not only a matter exceptional recipes—although there are an abundance of those here. Rather, it is a matter of approaching the kitchen as a system of connected foods. The Kitchen Ecosystem changes the paradigm of how we cook, and in doing so, it may change everything about the way we eat today.



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