2012 James Beard Foundation Award for Best Single Subject Cookbook.
2012 International Association of Culinary Professionals (IACP) Award for Best Single Subject Cookbook AND Best General Cookbook
Number 2 on the Washington Post list of Top 10 Cookbooks for 2011
Book Description
Successful restaurateurs have always known that adding “roasted” to a dish guarantees immediate appeal. Molly Stevens brings her trademark thoroughness and eye for detail to the technique of roasting. She breaks down when to use high heat, moderate heat, or low heat to produce juicy, well-seared meats, caramelized drippings, and concentrated flavors. Her 150 recipes feature the full range of dishes from beef, lamb, pork, and poultry to seafood and vegetables. 150 full-color illustrations.
“Any meat-lover — and fish- and vegetable-lover — will learn from ALL ABOUT ROASTING: A New Approach to a Classic Art (Norton, $35) because the author, Molly Stevens, is such a careful teacher, as fans of her previous book, “All About Braising,” already know. So she has new discoveries……..She’s also an imaginative cook and puts in homely touches, like using the roasting juices from ginger chicken as a sauce for elbow macaroni with tomatoes.” By Corby Kummer. Published: December 2, 2011 New York Times Book Review.
Links to find it on Amazon or from an independent book seller
More reviews for All About Roasting
“Is there anything more comforting than roasting? In All About Roasting the indefatigable Molly Stevens brings finesse to an age-old art form. And, yes, in these pages it is an art. From hamburgers to grapes, oysters to pineapples, Stevens explains, illuminates, and refines roasting with all the grace and expertise of a master. You’ll be happy you signed on as apprentice.” —Dan Barber, Blue Hill
“For any cook who aspires to roast the perfect chicken, roast beef, or roast pork, All About Roasting is your guide. The information on how to choose the right cut to produce succulent and juicy results that we all aspire to achieve is invaluable.”—Bruce Aidells, coauthor of The Complete Meat Cookbook and host of “Good Cookin’ with Bruce Aidells”
“A comprehensive and worthy successor to the author’s 2004 award-winning cookbook, All About Braising.” Washington Post list of Top 10 Cookbooks for 2011. “If a book could be a sous chef, this would be the one to enlist for a hearty winter meal. ‘This book is perfect for the holidays,’ says Mark Rotella, senior editor at Publishers Weekly. ‘Molly Stevens is a solid author, with such a wonderful approach.’ She covers the gamut of roasting knowledge — from carving a goose to shopping for chateaubriand to slow-roasting wild salmon. Plus, the recipes are good enough to make carnivores (and even herbivores) swoon: Cuban-style slow-roasted picnic pork shoulder, crispy roast chicken, even roasted sugar snap peas.” By Natalie Ermann Russell, special for USA Today, 11/22/2011 .
“I’m delighted to see that Molly Stevens has come out with a book that’s far ahead of the pack on the subject of roasting. The book is detailed yet succinct, complex yet simply explained and a must-have for any cook’s library. Brava.”—James Peterson, seven-time James Beard award winner, most recently for Meat: A Kitchen Education
“Whether you are someone who takes visceral pleasure from the crackling sounds and intoxicating smells of a kitchen in which something is being roasted or a culinary scientist who just wants to know how it’s done—you need to have this cookbook.”—Danny Meyer, author of Setting the Table, The Transforming Power of Hospitality in Business
More reviews for All About Braising
“…Assuming we’re settling in for a long, spiritually challenging winter, comforting and fragrant food seems the thing to be cooking. You’ll find just that in Molly Stevens’s ALL ABOUT BRAISING: The Art of Uncomplicated Cooking (Norton, $35). Stevens is a beautifully clear writer who likes to teach; I wasn’t surprised to learn that she was once on the staff of La Varenne, Willan’s cooking school in Burgundy. Some of her tempting recipes are very easy (sweet braised whole scallions with lemon and tarragon), some more elaborate (salmon fillets braised in pinot noir with bacon and mushrooms). All are transformative…” New York Times Sunday Book Review Food, Corby Kummer, December 5, 2004
“Every year we review dozens of good cookbooks to find the great ones. Here’s a preview of our picks for the next edition of F&W’s ‘Best of the Best.’… …Slow cooking may seem out of step with our fast-paced world, but it doesn’t have to be. Braising won’t produce dinner in 30 minutes, but once the ingredients are in the pot, as Molly Stevens points out, they require remarkably little attention from the cook. The recipes—both traditional braises, such as the delicious Short Ribs Braised in Porter Ale with Maple Rosemary Glaze, and unexpected ones, like Braised Whole Chicken with Bread Stuffing & Bacon promise superb home cooking.” Food & Wine Magazine, The Very Best Cookbooks of 2004, Kate Heddings, December 2004
“The Best of 2004: Food Books Reviewed….Another meaty American book is All About Braising by Molly Stevens (Norton, £25): a surprisisng topic for a large monograph. Stevens ranges from creamy braised Brussels sprouts to Vietnamese braised scallops, but her concern is mainly carnivorous. Excellent on technicalities, she elucidates 150 examples of one-pot cooking…” London Independent, Christopher Hirst, December 2004
“Molly Stevens has rescued the underappreciated cooking technique with a book that extols its homey, flavorful virtues.” In Praise of Braising, Timothy Q. Cebula, Boston Globe Correspondent, November 10, 2004
“Molly Stevens, you have now joined Marcella Hazan and Mark Bittman in my nascent cookbook collection.” Emily Weinstein, New York Times Diners Journal Blog, December 2008
“Stevens’ recipes range from the familiar (Yankee pot roast) to the exotic (squid roulades braised with white wine and tomatoes), and the strength of the book is that she approaches each recipe with the same calm, clear, straightforward voice of the teacher she was and – through her writing – still is.” Vermont Sunday Magazine, Marialisa Calta, August 2, 2005