MAY
Big Book of Salads Starters, Sides, and
Easy Weeknight Dinners by the Editors of Cooking Light Magazine
Taco Salad. Creamy Chicken… Caesar… and Pasta Salads. Cobb Salad. Topped with cheese, nuts, tortilla chips, tangy-zippy dress- ings, and dare we mention…bacon? These salads aren’t just a lean woman’s dream. Now everyone can enjoy favorite salads again—with Cooking Light Big Book of Salads.
Look forward to salad for dinner—really! Most salads tend to fall into one of two camps: the bland bowl of pale, naked greens (the salad people talk themselves into eating because it’s “good for them”), or the loaded- with-goodies jumbo restaurant salad (the kind that’s got more calories than a slice of cheesy lasagna). Now readers can have the best of both worlds: the Cooking Light Big Book of Salads includes over 150 recipes for incredibly tasty, interesting, and healthy salads that are perfect for weeknight meals, cookout sides, and mouthwatering starters.
CATEGORY: Cooking/General PUB DATE: 5/1/2012 PRICE: $21.95 US/ $23.95 CAN FORMAT: Flexi-bind PAGES: 288 SIZE: 9” x 9 1
/2 ”
PHOTOS: 200 ISBN 10: 0-8487-3646-X ISBN 13: 978-0-8487-3646-0
This fl avorful, healthy fare hits all the notes everyone loves.
The best toppings? Got ‘em: Candied nuts, creamy goat cheese, sweet dried cranberries, spicy prosciutto, pungent Stilton and Gorgonzola, juicy pears, salty olives, and crunchy croutons. Readers will learn how to make the most of in-season produce, like peaches, arugula, strawberries, corn, tomatoes, winter squash, and more.
Tips and techniques provide everything needed to make amazing salads. Readers will learn how to buy and store greens so they stay crisp, how to spot fruit and veggies at the peak of fl avor, how to properly dress a salad, how to whisk homemade light dressings (we’re not just talking about a wimpy squeeze of lemon), how to perfectly grill chicken and cook pasta, beans, and grains like farro— and more.
16 n Spring/Summer 2012
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