A great question, heres my contribution:
Rachael Ray, who is so busy on the food network on cable,
$40.00 per day, Tasty Travels, etc. + her own syndicated
talk show on King World, backed by Oprah Winfrey's production
company, has got to be one of the most down to earth, common sense approach to any of us who have labored in the kitchen
preparing our favorite cuisines.
Rachael specializes in nutritious, very tasty meals, but the
difference is she puts out a good meal in less than a half hour,
and that to me is a unique accomplishment in itself.
The one thing she does not do is bake, as she never felt she could get used to following formulas, rather than recipes, so
she feels uncomfortable attempting to bake a cake, or even making cookie dough, or pie shells, but that is her business.
Rachael has by her own admission stated that she has attended
no cooking schools, and does not prefer to be called a chef.
She is a regular cook, with some great cooking experiences
under her belt, as her entire family were all in the food preparation
business at one time or another, her mother and grandfather taught her the tricks of the trade, and she just kicked it up a notch.
She has authored six cook books that I know of, and is working on the seventh.
Another great chef, who did go to cooking school, is Bobby Flay,
who also appears on the food network, in the Iron Chef America
series, and other series he has made, all on the food network
cable channel.
Bobby specializes in American southwestern cuisine, and knows
a thing or two about mole sauce, kicked up salsa picante, and all
the peppers that are on the market, and some that aren't.
Emeril Lagasse is another fine chef, who also appears on the food network, he has his own hour on the network, and presents some fine southern style cuisine, along with French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese(Emeril's heritage) cajun, French-Creole,
and Chinese and oriental dishes too.
He always produces tasty dishes, and shows them to the public,
in between commercial ads, which there are many.
I also have to mention Julia Child, she mentored many younger fine chefs, Sarah Moulton for one, and Julia raised the bar in food
appreciation awareness, as the James Beard for excellence award will attest.
Julia had many TV chef programs on the Public Television
Stations, as she constantly demonstrated her expertise with
the many different types of cuisines she chose to present.
Having her cook books in your food kitchen administration is always a good thing, she really knows her way around a kitchen.
Jacques Pepin is yet another fine chef, from France who chose to live and study food science in Columbia University, New York.
His food preparations are always top drawer, and he understands how the human tongue reacts to different flavors,
as he made a study concerning the taste buds and how they react to different food stimuli, really helped him improve his
own cuisine, he is an excellent chef, and serves on many review boards, long live chef Pepin.
These are some of my more prominent favorites in the world
of food preparation, there are, of course, others, Sandra Lee,
Ina Garten(A-1 chef, in my opinion) Giada DeLaurentiis,
Mario Batali, Martin Yan, Madju Joffrey, Indian cuisine specialist,
Ming-Tsai, Amy Colemen(great nutritionist/chef) to name a few.
As far as cook books are concerned, I think the "Joy of Cooking"
is one of the best for a single volume reference, unless you
get into east-west fusion cooking, or some other more exotic
cuisine, and there is always the Better Homes and Gardens
Cook book, thats been around since my mother was a small
girl.
But on the whole, Rachael Ray's cook books are very stimulating
tasty, easy to prepare, and very convenient on time spent on
preparation, she makes it all easier for any busy person on the go and has very little time for kitchen duties, she is the one to
fall back on, she has been there and done that.
Thats my message, good luck.
Donald H. Sites
sueanddon350@sbcglobal.net
2007-01-20 06:04:08
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answer #9
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answered by sueanddon350@sbcglobal.net 2
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