- Shopping Bag ( 0 items )
From Barnes & Noble
For a cookbook author and gourmand like Peter Kaminsky, learning that he was becoming dangerously obese must have seemed like a double-edged death sentence. Continuing to pursue his taste preferences could kill him; wriggling into a low-calorie, low-fat regimen threatened him to an unending future of blandness. Instead of despairing, the former New York Times columnist tackled his occupational hazard with enviable aplomb. He began raising his eating IQ to adjust to these new realities. His Culinary Intelligence records the results of his self-education and is thus not a conventional diet book or motivational prep. Instead, it is one true food lover's guide to eating well—and healthy.
Overview
For many of us the idea of healthy eating equals bland food, calorie counting, and general joylessness. Or we see the task of great cooking for ourselves as a complicated and expensive luxury beyond our means or ability. Now Peter Kaminsky—who has written cookbooks with four-star chefs (for example, Daniel Boulud) and no-star chefs (such as football legend John Madden)—shows us that anyone can learn to eat food that is absolutely delicious and doesn’t give you a permanently ...