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| The Shun Lee Cookbook: Recipes from a Chinese Restaurant Dynasty | 
enlarge | Author: Michael Tong Publisher: William Morrow Cookbooks Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $9.88 You Save: $20.07 (67%)
New (34) Used (17) from $9.88
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 266774
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 272 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 7.4 x 1.2
ISBN: 0060854073 Dewey Decimal Number: 641.5951 EAN: 9780060854072 ASIN: 0060854073
Publication Date: February 1, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: New & Unread Book with Remainder Marked- May Have Slight Handling Wear From Bookstore Shelf- Instock For Immediate Shipping
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| Customer Reviews:
With this book, your biggest challenge to Chinese cooking is... shopping February 21, 2008 3 out of 9 found this review helpful
At breakfast, Michael Jordan ate only half of his pancakes. I asked him why. "If you want to fly," he said, "you have to eat like a bird."
Clear conclusion: Control portion size.
Now comes Michael Pollan, with even more explicit advice: "Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants."
Clear conclusion: Meat, once the centerpiece of the dinner plate, is now to be regarded --- at least by eaters who want to live long and well --- as an accent. A condiment. A flavoring.
This is a much more challenging decree. It's one thing to say, as smart diet books have said for a decade, that your nightly serving of protein should be no larger than your fist. It's another to reduce that hunk of animal flesh to a mere afterthought. This is America, a meat-and-potatoes country. Salads are for women and dieters. A man's gotta eat. (And so, if truth be told, do women.)
And yet...Pollan's right. For health reasons. Ecological reasons (growing and processing 2.2 pounds of beef generates as much carbon dioxide as the average European car emits every 155 miles). And then there's the reason that will get everyone's attention: economics.
You've seen the headlines about contaminated beef, and you're dimly aware that this Administration wouldn't weep if it downsized every government meat inspector, but it's the economic argument that really hits home. More and more, corn that once fed farm animals (a bad idea) is being diverted to create ethanol (another bad idea). That drives corn prices up. And higher corn prices, in turn, drive up the price of hamburger at your local market.
At a certain point, beef will become a luxury item.
But what are you going to do --- live on junk food?
My solution: Chinese cooking.
Forget that nonsense about feeling hungry an hour after a Chinese dinner. Good Chinese cooking is as satisfying as it is healthful. It's ecologically correct: heavy on vegetables and proteins like tofu, skimpy on meat and fish. And, in those proportions, it's as kind to your wallet as it is to your heart and gut.
The thing is, we don't know how to cook it.
Three cheers, then, to Michael Tong, whose Shun Lee restaurants have delighted New Yorkers and the city's visitors for three decades. In his cookbook, he hasn't exactly reproduced the recipes he uses in his restaurants. He's done something more useful --- in modifying his recipes for home cooks, he's explained the basic principles of Chinese cooking. Because, as it turns out, Chinese cooking isn't just tossing ingredients into a hot wok and stir-frying.
In fact, as I read through Tong's cookbook, I realized that the biggest hurdle you face in becoming a decent Chinese home cook is... shopping. There are a dozen ingredients you need, and you're not likely to find them in your neighborhood megamarket. But once you stock your larder, you're set --- all you need for a given dish are the fresh ingredients.
So buy that wok and season it. Lay in sesame oil and tree ear. Make sure you always have ginger and tofu on hand. And then, for less money than a meal at Shun Lee, open a branch of that much-loved restaurant in your own home.
A must if you love Chinese food--rarely available recipes August 16, 2007 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
This beautifully illustrated and graciously written cookbook is a rarity. Inspiring, tantalizing pictures and easy-to-follow recipes of cuisines I adore (from Sichuan, Hunan and Shanghai)but for which I rarely find recipes. Get it and I assure you, your life will be more delicious...even if you don't cook, you'll drool over the photos.
AMAZING, AUTHENTIC CHINESE RECIPES, EASY TO PREPARE May 11, 2007 16 out of 16 found this review helpful
I bought the Shun Lee cookbook when it first came out, since I was familiar with the quality and deliciousness of the food at the restaurant in New York, and have always wanted to learn how to make such amazing chinese food at home.
I am something of a novice chef, especially when it comes to chinese cuisine, and all of the recipies I have prepared have come out amazingly. I made the dry sauteed green beans, lemon chicken, and scallion pancakes for a dinner party of 5, and got rave reviews all around...people couldn't believe I had made the dishes myself! Everyone asked me for the recipes, and a couple of people went out and bought the book. Several of my friends have since tried the recipes at home with similarly fantastic results.
I've also made the dumplings in big batches and kept them in my fridge and prepared them in different ways for dinner all week long (same goes for the cold sesame noodles).
I would highly recommend this book to anyone who ever wanted to be able to make fantastic chinese at home (or pass themselves off as a gourmand to all of their friends).
This cookbook is my go-to for dinner parties and quick, simple, delicious meals during the week.
terrible food April 9, 2007 9 out of 33 found this review helpful
I saw the cookbook in Barnes and Nobel and was intrigued, because many of the dishes sound nice but quite foreign to me, a Chinese growing up in China. Anyhow, I decided to check it out at the Shun Lee restaurant at the Lincoln center.
It was horrible. China-one-buffet type food served in fashionably decorated restaurant. The honey spare rib is simply rib roasted in honey, and is borderline acceptable; but the braised duck is a joke, and the twice cooked pork is plain disgusting.
I can accept that they are not genuine Chinese food even though they are claimed to be; but such poor quality is entirely unacceptable.
If this is the best you can get out of the recipes, I certainly wouldn't touch the cook book.
It's about time! February 9, 2007 14 out of 14 found this review helpful
Every true New Yorker we know has been dining here for ages and many even have the restaurant's phone numbers saved on speed dial for deliveries! Shun Lee has withstood the test of time and serious food gourmands of this city. It has been a gem to so many who really understand fine dining and know what to look for: quality ingredients, freshness, attentative service, presentation, environment and authenticity. Now with this new cookbook, anyone can try these recipes in the comforts of their own home! It's about time!
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