Toaster Ovens / Toasters
Home

Small Appliances

Toaster Ovens / Toasters

Cat Cora's Kitchen: Favorite Meals for Family and Friends

Cat Cora's Kitchen: Favorite Meals for Family and Friends
View larger imageEmail a friend

Cat Cora's Kitchen: Favorite Meals for Family and Friends

SKU: 

0816-WS1101-A04007-0811839982

In Stock
Availability: Usually ships in 1 business days
List Price: $22.95
Our Price: $17.26
You Save: $5.69 (25%)
Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.
Description:

What could be better than family and friends gathered around a table laden with laughter and good food? The Food Network's Cat Cora is the perfect companion in the kitchen to help create meals and memories to share and remember. With recipes inspired by Cat's Greek heritage and her roots in the American South, honed by her experiences in restaurants in France and California, Cat Cora's Kitchen shines with simplicity and flavor. Organized by menu, these dishes tempt palates with specialties such as freshly baked Spana-kopita, the traditional Greek favorite of spinach, dill, and feta in pastry, and savory chicken stew, redolent of wine, garlic, and cinnamon. Desserts are also not-to-be-missed, with treats such as the Orange-Scented Almond Cookies or an unusual rolled version of Baklava. The pantry offers basic recipes for homemade stock and a resource section gives suggestions for finding unusual ingredients. With gorgeous photographs throughout, these approachable, elegant dishes will leave everyone asking for the recipe.

Product Details:
Author: Cat Cora
Paperback: 204 pages
Publisher: Chronicle Books
Publication Date: August 12, 2004
Language: English
ISBN: 0811839982
Product Length: 8.7 inches
Product Width: 8.02 inches
Product Height: 0.67 inches
Product Weight: 1.64 pounds
Package Length: 8.6 inches
Package Width: 7.9 inches
Package Height: 0.7 inches
Package Weight: 1.55 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 11 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.0 ( 11 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 8 found the following review helpful:

3Some flaws  Oct 01, 2005
By dek
This is an engaging book, with some interesting variations on a number of basic dishes. It is limited in its ambition, a niche book. I have enjoyed using it as inspiration for a number of meals. However, one recipe that was appealing was a total failure. Her Olive Oil Cake turned out to be a soggy mess, dumped in its entirety. I suspect the amount of flour called for, 1/2 cup, was wrong. If I were a better baker, I might have caught that, but then I believe in giving a recipe by a distinguished chef a fair try before changing it. This one will be changed. Nevertheless, I really enjoy this book.

16 of 19 found the following review helpful:

5My slim but delicious Greek cookbook. Highly recommended  Oct 08, 2004
By B. Marold "Bruce W. Marold"
Cat Cora and her very southern American accent always presented something of an anomaly when she appeared on the Food Network with Rocco DiSpirito doing the Greek half of the Mediterranean food segments paired with Rocco's Italian dishes. This book fills out the explanation given on TV that Cat (Catherine) was born and raised in Jackson, Mississippi to Greek parents embedded in a strongly Greek neighborhood with all that entails, as seen in detail in the movie `My Big Fat Greek Wedding'.

Cat has been working several different Food Network shows as well as several of her own California culinary shows and appearances on network talk shows for the last few years, establishing herself as a culinary celebrity staple equal to Tyler Florence and Sara Moulton, and just a notch below fast cooking diva Rachael Ray and super food nerd Alton Brown. This is her first book of recipes / memoirs and she has matched the quality of her equals, Tyler and Sara, and has made a very worthy contribution to the literature on Greek cooking.

This is not a reference book on Greek food like Diane Kochilas' `The Glorious Foods of Greece' nor is it a popular survey of Greek cooking such as the recent `The Olive and the Caper' by Susanna Hoffman. It is a personal history of Cat's food experiences in her childhood Jackson home, in the ancestral home of her family on the Aegean island of Skopelos, Greece, in her California restaurant kitchens in northern California, and in her modern home kitchen. This orientation with the liberal notes on the niceties of Greek ingredients, her experiences with famous influences such as Julia Child, Jacques Pepin, Thomas Keller, and Alice Waters, and stories of her US and Greek family members make this a more than usually entertaining personal cookbook.

Although the recipes are divided between four different venues, there is not a lot of differences between, for example, the dishes prepared in Jackson and the dishes prepared on Skopelos. They are all Greek recipes, methods, and ingredients. The Jackson recipes are the least Greek, as there is some Johnny Reb influence in some barbecue recipes, but every single recipe has both an English main name and an Greek name. Extra points to Cat for consistency in uniformly providing both names. Makes things much easier when comparing her recipes to standard works such as Kochilas' book.

The first overall impression is the omnipresence of lemon as an ingredient. It is so pervasive that I wonder why Nancy Harmon Jenkins did not feature lemons in a chapter of her excellent `The Essential Mediterranean'. Another oddity is that the recipes from the island of Skopelos contain no fish. While Cat makes no note of this fact, it confirms an observation I saw in a book on Greek island cuisine that all the good Aegean fish is carted off to Athens to be sold. Little of it is eaten at home.

Menus of dishes that typically go together organize all the recipes in the four sections. This enhances the use to which books of this type are most commonly put, as sources for themed entertaining. If you want to do a Greek dinner, this book is an excellent resource.

Cat has the usual litany of praise for fresh ingredients and the usual tips for finding them. She has some special comments on important Greek ingredients such as feta. Apparently, most non-Greek Feta is bland when compared to the real thing, and, Dutch feta seems to be especially off the mark, but Cat does not elaborate. She is also especially fussy about getting red pearl onions instead of white for several dishes.

I have made several dishes from this book and these I have found uniformly tasty and relatively easy to make. As all recipes are organized by dinner menu, there are a roughly equal number of appetizer, main dish, salad, and dessert recipes. The star of many of the dessert recipes, of course, is phyllo dough. I wish she had not mentioned that our freezer staple phyllo dough is a pale, fragile product compared to fresh phyllo, but I'll live, and may even seek out a local source for fresh phyllo.

Like the Italian cuisine, there are lots of recipes for wild and bitter greens, beans, artichokes, tomatoes, bread, shellfish, and sardines. There are also plenty of recipes for chicken and lamb, some recipes for pork and rabbit, and not many for beef, although veal stock does play an important role as a pantry item. There is a really super lamb and cheese sandwich recipe and a fair number of grilled food recipes.

This is very much the kind of cookbook you want to get if you just happen to be in an adventurous culinary mood, but don't want to spend a lot of loot. The book has just the right mix of easy recipes, showoff recipes, and unusual tastes.

Highly recommended for a good read and a very good culinary change of pace.


17 of 21 found the following review helpful:

5The rest of the story...  Sep 16, 2004
By Mom
Cathy was in the kitchen - a lot! "I'm cook'en, Mommy!" she'd exclaim as she banged spoons on the bottoms of empty pots. As a young girl, we always knew when Cathy was having breakfast - by the aroma of burning toast wafting through our house.
But that was before CIA and France and California. Now Cat really does catch the flavor of our Southern Greek family and our simple, flavorful meals. Greek-American food is good and good for you. The ingredients are fresh, inexpensive, and nourishing - especially for a growing family. Gather your family and friends and make some memories with Cathy's recipes in your kitchen; that's what life is all about, and you'll "Be cook'en" too.

9 of 11 found the following review helpful:

2Beware of errors  Jan 11, 2007
By Z. Taylor
I have made a couple of recipes from this book, including the Koto Kapama, which was very good. But I just made the olive oil cake (p. 22) and the recipe is completely WRONG. It calls for 1/2 cup of flour, which results in something that doesn't qualify even remotely as cake, and does qualify as completely inedible and disgusting (sad to say, as I just wasted about $15 worth of ingredients and my even more precious time on this mess). The same recipe on the Food Network site, which also features Cora, calls for 2 cups of flour--a bit different! I just wish I could find a way to stop others from making the same mistake; in any case, it certainly saps my desire to cook ever again from this book, which also has a rather confusing layout and organizational style. Too bad--I wanted to support a fellow Greek.

2 of 2 found the following review helpful:

4Interesting book on Cat Cora's cooking  Jul 21, 2009
By Steven A. Peterson
Cat Cora is well known as one of the "Iron Chefs" on the Food Channel. Background? On the back dust cover, we note that "Cat Cora was raised in a small Greek-American community in Jackson, Mississippi, where she learned to love both her southern and Greek heritages, including the food." This cookbook reflects that dual heritage. The end result is kind of interesting. Cora herself notes the key influences on her work (Page 1): "For me, one kitchen set me on the path to becoming a chef, and another kitchen changed my views on how I cook. The first was my parents' kitchen in Jackson, Mississippi, and the second was the kitchen of my Aunt Demetra and Uncle Yiorgios on Skopelos, one of the Aegean Islands in Greece."

Fair enough. But it is the recipes that make a cookbook. And, I must say, I find some interesting exemplars here. One can assess a recipe pretty handily after having cooked a bunch over time. And this book contains a bunch of nice recipes that I aim to exploit in the near future.

For instance. . . .

"Chicken stewed in wine, garlic, and cinnamon." Pretty straightforward ingredients (e.g., chicken, cinnamon, kosher salt, freshly ground pepper, cloves of garlic, extra virgin olive oil, chopped onions, dry white wine, water, tomato paste, and grated Myzithra cheese [which I had never known about]). There is some work with the recipe, but it is clearly doable--and it sounds like the end result would be a delicious treat!

"Slow roasted pork with Bourbon." Kosher salt, black pepper, pork butt/shoulder, cloves of garlic, sage leaves, flour, olive oil, sweet-hot mustard, brown sugar, Worcestershire sauce, and bourbon. Again, the process seems like ordinary cooks can handle it pretty well.

One of the key little pieces of Greek cooking is something called "Tzatsiki" (cucumber yogurt). The recipe here is so straightforward that it is scarcely possible to fail to create something that will be tasty!

"Grilled asparagus with tangerine aioli." This will probably take someone like me a bit of extra effort. But, I really enjoy asparagus, and anything to add some taste highlights makes sense to me. And this recipe surely does that.

All in all, a solid cookbook. The photos that are in the book give a nice sense of the outcome of the process (I wish that there were more such photos). Overall, this book provides a set of recipes that look quite doable and that promise tasty outcomes!


See all 11 customer reviews on Amazon.com
Web business powered by Amazon WebStore