In the Hands of a Chef: Cooking with Jody Adams of Rialto Restaurant

In the Hands of a Chef: Cooking with Jody Adams of Rialto Restaurant

In the Hands of a Chef: Cooking with Jody Adams of Rialto Restaurant

In the Hands of a Chef: Cooking with Jody Adams of Rialto Restaurant

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Overview

The acclaimed Boston chef teaches how to be a better home cook with this collection of Italian- and Mediterranean-inspired dishes.

How do great chefs make their food taste better? Is it the ingredients they use? Their cooking techniques and equipment? That’s part of the answer. But the real secret is that truly great chefs follow their instincts—the kitchens in their heads. Now, in her first cookbook, Jody Adams, the award–winning chef/co-owner of Boston’s Rialto, teaches you how to follow your own instincts and make the transition from passionate eater to passionate cook.

In the Hands of a Chef shares Jody’s favorite dishes, those she prepares for family and friends in her home kitchen. By teaching the basics of artisanal cooking, or making good food from scratch, she gives cooks a solid foundation for cooking like a chef. She tells readers what to look for when buying ingredients, what equipment is essential, and how a dish should look and taste while being prepared.

Above all, Jody encourages readers to trust their instincts and follow them to create a cooking style that feels right, using recipes as the building blocks for their own creations.

From starters, seasonal soups, salads, and main courses to desserts, Jody reinvents Mediterranean foods using unconventional ingredients, many from New England. For a boost of summer flavor, grilled tomatoes add depth to gazpacho. To vary the flavor of simple salads—from a Minted Romaine Salad with Grapes, Ricotta Salata, and Toasted Almonds to Arugula and Portobella Mushroom Salad—one or two seasonal ingredients are added to the usual recipes. Drawing inspiration from Italian tradition, Jody offers up innovative pasta and grains dishes. Ravioli, pappardelle, gnocchi, and linguine are served up with Mediterranean flavors and ingredients—tomatoes, olives, figs, chestnuts, fresh greens, wild mushrooms, Parmesan cheese—for home-style meals any time of the year. Yet much of Jody’s cooking is pure American in flavor. Dessert classics are reinvented with new twists, such as Super-Creamy Rice Pudding with Passion Fruit Sauce and Heather’s Cranberry Chocolate Pecan Tart. Here, too, are Jody’s signature dishes, including Roasted Marinated Long Island Duck with Green Olive and Balsamic Vinegar Sauce and Soupe de Poisson, which Jacques Pépin calls the best version outside of France.

Intended to make you wish you had more time to spend in the kitchen, this book is an inspiration as well as an essential resource for every cook. Why be just a good cook when you can be a great one? Put yourself in the hands of Jody Adams with In the Hands of a Chef.

“The recipes are clearly written and certainly delectable.” —Publishers Weekly

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780062039590
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 12/15/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 384
Sales rank: 926,812
File size: 11 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Jody Adams is the co-owner and chef of Rialto in Boston, Massachusetts. In the Hands of a Chef is her first cookbook. Jody's Boston culinary career began in 1983 at Seasons restaurant under chef Lydia Shire. Three years later, at Hammersley's Bistro, she became Gordon Hammersley's sous chef. She moved to Michela's in 1990 and served as executive chef there until 1994, In September 1994, Adams opened Rialto with restaurateurs and partners Michele Larson and Karen Haskell. Four months after Rialto's opening, the Boston Globe awarded the restaurant four stars, the newspaper's highest rating. Jody opened her latest venture, Red Clay, in May of last year. Jody lives in Somerville, Massachusetts, with her husband, Ken Rivard, and their two children.


Ken Rivard is a freelance writer of short stories and articles. He has contributed to books on food, wine, psychology, and men's health. He also holds down the fort in Somerville.

Read an Excerpt

Fresh Tomato Soup with Seared Eggplant Sandwiches

This dish shows how even old standbys can sometimes be reworked so they become vivid and fresh again. Tomato soup and old-fashioned eggplant Parmesan are too predictable. But an open-faced sandwich of eggplant slices with pesto and mozzarella — that would get me to sit up and pay attention. And what if we serve it in a rich tomato broth jazzed up with some garlic and onions? The soup tastes wonderful and the black stripe of eggplant against the brilliant red soup attracts the eye. Where did this dish come from? Not any one place, but bits and pieces of the puzzle are assembled from all over Italy.

About 1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
2 medium onions, chopped into 1/4-inch dice
4 garlic cloves, finely chopped
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
4 pounds ripe plum tomatoes, coarsely chopped
1 teaspoon sugar
1 beautiful eggplant (about 10 ounces), sliced 1/2 inch thick into 8 slices2 cups water
1/2 cup chopped fresh basil, plus 4 leaves for garnish
1/4 cup Pesto (page 44)
Four 1/4-inch-thick slices fresh mozzarella (about 2 ounces)
Four 1/2-inch-thick slices rustic bread, about the same size as the eggplant slices

1. Heat 2 tablespoons of the olive oil in a large soup pot over medium heat. Add the onions and garlic, season with salt and pepper, and cook until tender, 7 to 8 minutes. Add the tomatoes and sugar, lower the heat, and cook for 25 minutes.

2. While the tomatoes are cooking, season 8 eggplant slices with salt and pepper. (If youhave more than 8 slices, set the remainder aside for another use or discard.) Heat 2 tablespoons of the olive oil in a large sauté pan over medium-high heat. Add the eggplant slices and sear on each side until golden brown and cooked through. Remove from the heat and let cool.

3. Add the water to the tomatoes and bring to a boil, then lower the heat to a simmer and cook for 5 minutes. Purée in a blender and strain through a fine sieve. Return the tomato soup to the pot, add the chopped basil, and simmer for 5 minutes.

4. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.

5. Spread the eggplant slices with the pesto. Put a slice of mozzarella on 4 of the slices. Top with the remaining 4 eggplant slices, pesto side down, to make "sandwiches."

6. Brush the bread with about 2 tablespoons of the olive oil and place on a small baking sheet. Toast in the oven until golden brown. Top each slice with an eggplant sandwich and continue heating until the cheese begins to melt.

7. While the sandwiches are heating, reheat the tomato broth.

8. Place an eggplant sandwich in the bottom of each warm bowl. Pour the tomato broth around the sandwiches. Drizzle with olive oil, garnish with the basil leaves, and serve immediately.

Makes 4 servings


Salmon with Walnuts and Dried Cranberries

Dried cranberries and walnuts are a pair of obvious New England ingredients for an easy variation on seared salmon, and both go well with spinach. Red cranberries, orange salmon, green spinach, and a golden sauce make a seafood entr&3233;e that looks festive, tastes great, and is easy and quick to prepare.

The dish is easily doubled, especially if you grill the salmon instead of sautéing it. Any leftovers translate into an instant lunch. The spinach is delicious cold, and the salmon can be sliced thin and drizzled with fresh lemon juice or given a completely different spin with a flavored mayonnaise (pages 13-14).

8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted buffer
1 shallot, minced
1/2 cup dry white wine
2 tablespoons dried cranberries, soaked in 1/2 cup freshly squeezed orange juice
2 tablespoons grated fresh horseradish, or
2 tablespoons bottled horseradish, drained
1 1/2 teaspoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
Four 6-ounce salmon fillets, skin on
1 pound flat-leaf spinach, trimmed of thick stems, washed, and dried
2 tablespoons chopped toasted walnuts

1. Heat 1 tablespoon of the butter with the shallots in a saucepan over medium heat and cook until the shallots are tender, 3 to 4 minutes. Add the white wine and reduce to 2 tablespoons. Pour the orange juice from the cranberries into the saucepan (set the cranberries aside). Reduce the orange juice to just 1/4 cup. Off the heat, whisk in the remaining 7 tablespoons butter, a tablespoon at a time. Add the horseradish and lemon juice, then season with salt and pepper. Cover and keep in a warm spot, away from the direct heat — or the sauce will break.

2. Heat 1 tablespoon of the olive oil in a large sauté pan (nonstick if possible) over high heat. (Use two pans if all the fish won't fit comfortably in a single pan.) Sprinkle the salmon liberally with salt and pepper. When the oil is hot, almost smoking, add the salmon fillets, skin side up, and sear until golden brown, about 3 minutes. Do not try to move the fillets until they've gotten a good sear, or they'll stick to the pan. Flip and cook on the other side. A 2-inch-thick fillet will take 3 to 4 minutes per side for medium.

3. While the salmon is cooking, heat the remaining 1 tablespoon oil in a large sauté pan over high heat. Add the spinach, season with salt and pepper, and cook, tossing, until the spinach has just wilted, a minute or so. Add the walnuts and cranberries and cook for another 30 seconds to heat everything through.

4. Place a quarter of the spinach and cranberries in the center of each of four warm plates. Set the salmon skin side up over the spinach. Spoon the sauce around the plates. Serve immediately.

Makes 4 entrée servings

In the Hands of A Chef. Copyright © by Jody Adams. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsix
Introduction1
Starters and Small Bites7
Stocks and Soups30
Salads60
Four Vegetable Starters, 23 Sides, and a Few Things for the Pantry77
Pizza, Tarts, and Crostatas121
Mostly Pasta, with a Taste of Gnocchi, Polenta, and Risotto141
Seafood177
Poultry222
Beef, Veal, Pork, Lamb, and Game252
A Mile in a Chef's Shoes297
Desserts332
Sources358
Index359
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