SCHMALTZ (Yiddish): 1) melted chicken fat. 2) Excessive sentimentality; overly emotional behavior. From one of Toronto’s most magnetic chefs and restaurateurs comes a long-awaited cookbook that has just the right amount of schmaltz. Whether you know him as Toronto’s King of Comfort Food, the Don of Dupont, or the Sultan of Smoked Meat, a conversation
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Added on: July 29, 2019 - More: Comments & Reviews
SCHMALTZ (Yiddish): 1) melted chicken fat. 2) Excessive sentimentality; overly emotional behavior. From one of Toronto’s most magnetic chefs and restaurateurs comes a long-awaited cookbook that has just the right amount of schmaltz.
Whether you know him as Toronto’s King of Comfort Food, the Don of Dupont, or the Sultan of Smoked Meat, a conversation about the food and restaurant scene in Toronto isn’t complete without mention of Anthony Rose. From his famous Fat Pasha Cauliflower (which may or may not have caused the Great Cauliflower Shortage of 2016) and Rose and Sons Patty Melt to his Pork Belly Fried Rice and Nutella Babka Bread Pudding, Anthony’s dishes have consistently made waves in the culinary community. Now, in his first cookbook, Anthony has teamed up with internationally-renowned food and travel writer Chris Johns to share his most famous recipes and stories.
Be amazed by the reactions Anthony received when he ingeniously invented a dish called the “All-Day Breakfast.” Thrill at the wonder Anthony felt when, as a young Jewish kid, he tasted the illicit lusciousness of bacon for the first time. Or discover the secret ingredient to the perfect shore lunch on a camping trip (hint: it’s foie gras).
Often funny, sometimes ridiculous, but always delicious, The Last Schmaltz is a peek into the mind of a much-loved chef at the top of his culinary game.
Not a kosher cookbook This is more of a notice than a full review. There are recipes for pork, lobster and shellfish in this book, so be aware if you think this is a kosher book. I didn’t take off a star for that. I took off a star, because I found what appears to be at least one mistake during a cursory examination. The recipe for gefilte fish states in the introduction that the author adds smoked whitefish to add texture and taste; however, there is no mention of smoked whitefish in the ingredient list or the…
Save your money What a disappointment. Perhaps the restaurant these chefs own has fabulous food but this cookbook is a total waste. Many pages of less than stellar photography. I guess using typewriter print is supposed to be artsy but its unattractive and difficult to read. Seems like they were trying to fill lots of pages with not a wealth of original or interesting recipes. Layout is not useful. Obviously how the recipes would be used was not taken into consideration. The book looks like it…
Great Great