My Key West Kitchen: Recipes and Stories by Norman Van Aken and Justin Van Aken

  • Mamey milkshake
    • Categories: Beverages / drinks (no-alcohol); South American; American South
    • Ingredients: mamey fruits; milk; buttermilk
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Notes about this book

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Notes about Recipes in this book

  • Mamey milkshake

    • TrishaCP on February 11, 2015

      Absolutely delicious. If you can get ripe mamey, make this! Substituted plain yogurt for buttermilk and that worked well.

  • Oven-roasted mojo chicken

    • TrishaCP on March 08, 2016

      I used chicken pieces instead of roasting a whole chicken, but I loved the flavor of this dish. I was able to marinade it about 24 hours, and you definitely need to turn the chicken due to the amount of oil in the mojo (excessive-I halved it).

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Reviews about this book

  • Epicurious

    But perhaps the most endearing aspect of the book are the loving tributes to Key West personalities and locales done in a way that the Van Akens know best--through food.

    Full review
  • ISBN 10 1909487775
  • ISBN 13 9781909487772
  • Published Oct 07 2017
  • Format Paperback
  • Page Count 192
  • Language English
  • Edition Reprint
  • Countries United Kingdom
  • Publisher Kyle Books

Publishers Text

Award-winning chef Norman Van Aken has been cooking in Florida for 40 years. My Key West Kitchen is his love letter to Key West, where he first found the passion to cook, and where the unique cultural makeup of the island influenced his cuisine today. Follow Chef Van Aken as he strolls through Key West, reminiscing and re-creating dishes from “little joints” and restaurants both past and present. Organized by well-known Key West neighborhoods, the chapters include “Duval and Downtown Crawlin',” “Places in the Hoods,” “Places on the Water,” and “Around Town These Days.” In each, Norman includes recipes for his own take of the first foods and drinks he experienced in Key West and how they seemed “different than ordinary American fare,” from the Sunday Fish Fry at Capt. Tony's to the Rib Sandwich and Dark & Stormy from the Bahama Village Elk's Club. Norman also focuses on the home cooking of Key West, whether it's “Yard Bird” Fricasse with Collard Greens and Pot Likker from the Tropical American South, Plaintain Soup from the Spanish Caribbean, or Nassau Grouper in Banana Leaves with Coconut “Run Down” from the British Caribbean. Interspersed throughout each chapter as well, Norman revisits eight menus from his past and chooses three of his favorite recipes from each, including the Sunshine Lime Pie from his very first cooking job at The Midget in 1973 to the Wild Mushrooms on Brioche with Sherry Cream and Serrano Ham that he created at the infamous Café at Louie's Backyard in 1987. Norman and his co-author and son, Justin, also include many examples of what they are cooking today like a Tamale Scramble with Chorizo and Jack Cheese or Justin's Best-Ever Peanut Butter Ice Cream. Finally, Chapter 5, The Bodega, includes 20 must-have pantry recipes to guarantee successful cooking in your own Key West kitchen.



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