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Food trucks : expéditions et recettes des meilleures cuisines sur roues - BON
5,37 $US
Environ7,25 $C
État :
Bon
Un livre qui a été lu, mais qui est en bon état. La couverture présente des dommages infimes, par exemple des éraflures, mais aucun trou ni aucune déchirure. Dans le cas des livres à reliure, la jaquette peut ne pas être incluse. La reliure présente des traces d'usure minimes. La plupart des pages ne sont pas endommagées et les plis, les déchirures, les passages soulignés ou surlignés et les inscriptions en marge sont minimes. Il n'y a aucune page manquante.
6 disponibles11 vendus
Expédition :
Sans frais USPS Media MailTM.
Lieu : Montgomery, Illinois, États-Unis
Livraison :
Livraison prévue entre le sam. 28 sept. et le jeu. 3 oct. à 43230
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Numéro de l'objet eBay :265555245054
Dernière mise à jour : sept. 18, 2024 02:22:58 HAEAfficher toutes les modificationsAfficher toutes les modifications
Caractéristiques de l'objet
- État
- Brand
- Unbranded
- MPN
- Does not apply
- ISBN
- 9781580083515
- Book Title
- Food Trucks : Dispatches and Recipes from the Best Kitchens on Wheels
- Publisher
- Potter/Ten SPEED/Harmony/Rodale
- Item Length
- 8.9 in
- Publication Year
- 2011
- Format
- Trade Paperback
- Language
- English
- Illustrator
- Yes
- Item Height
- 0.5 in
- Genre
- Travel, Cooking, Business & Economics
- Topic
- Regional & Ethnic / General, Food, Lodging & Transportation / Restaurants, Regional & Ethnic / American / General, General, Industries / Food Industry, United States / General
- Item Weight
- 21.7 Oz
- Item Width
- 7.5 in
- Number of Pages
- 208 Pages
À propos de ce produit
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Potter/Ten SPEED/Harmony/Rodale
ISBN-10
158008351X
ISBN-13
9781580083515
eBay Product ID (ePID)
16038385929
Product Key Features
Book Title
Food Trucks : Dispatches and Recipes from the Best Kitchens on Wheels
Number of Pages
208 Pages
Language
English
Topic
Regional & Ethnic / General, Food, Lodging & Transportation / Restaurants, Regional & Ethnic / American / General, General, Industries / Food Industry, United States / General
Publication Year
2011
Illustrator
Yes
Genre
Travel, Cooking, Business & Economics
Format
Trade Paperback
Dimensions
Item Height
0.5 in
Item Weight
21.7 Oz
Item Length
8.9 in
Item Width
7.5 in
Additional Product Features
Intended Audience
Trade
LCCN
2011-280275
Dewey Edition
22
Reviews
"A fun romp -- a guide to 'the kitchens on wheels' that serve up meals on urban street corners." --Final Word, USA Today, 5/24/11 "In this excellent cookbook on roving foods, Shouse, the food and drink editor for Time Out Chicago, interviews 50 proprietors of various taco carts, ice cream trucks, crepe trailers, and kebob-mobiles across 18 major U.S. cities (cooking in a truck is still illegal in the Windy City). Along the way, she creates a fascinating landscape of cultural diversity--folks from all walks of life who have dedicated themselves to cranking out quick, cheap, nomadic snacks. In New York, there is the classically trained bassoonist who has become a local hero with his Big Gay Ice Cream Truck. In Seattle, a woman who is part Korean and part Hawaiian teams with a Chinese-Filipino to serve up Spam sliders. And in New Orleans, a Katrina victim who attended culinary schools in London and Sydney makes brisket in a refrigerator that has been turned into a giant smoker. Along the way, Shouse provides recipes for crowd favorites like the buttermilk fried chicken found in Oahu, and a Sloppy Jose in Miami. Some ingredients, it turns out, travel more intriguingly than others. Bacon, for instance, shows up as a mac & cheese garnish in New Hampshire, arrives as a doughnut topping in Austin, Tex., and beds down in an ice cream sandwich in Manhattan. (Apr.)" --Publishers Weekly, Starred Review, 3/21/11, "A fun romp - a guide to 'the kitchens on wheels' that serve up meals on urban street corners." -Final Word, USA Today, 5/24/11 "In this excellent cookbook on roving foods, Shouse, the food and drink editor for Time Out Chicago, interviews 50 proprietors of various taco carts, ice cream trucks, crepe trailers, and kebob-mobiles across 18 major U.S. cities (cooking in a truck is still illegal in the Windy City). Along the way, she creates a fascinating landscape of cultural diversity--folks from all walks of life who have dedicated themselves to cranking out quick, cheap, nomadic snacks. In New York, there is the classically trained bassoonist who has become a local hero with his Big Gay Ice Cream Truck. In Seattle, a woman who is part Korean and part Hawaiian teams with a Chinese-Filipino to serve up Spam sliders. And in New Orleans, a Katrina victim who attended culinary schools in London and Sydney makes brisket in a refrigerator that has been turned into a giant smoker. Along the way, Shouse provides recipes for crowd favorites like the buttermilk fried chicken found in Oahu, and a Sloppy Jose in Miami. Some ingredients, it turns out, travel more intriguingly than others. Bacon, for instance, shows up as a mac & cheese garnish in New Hampshire, arrives as a doughnut topping in Austin, Tex., and beds down in an ice cream sandwich in Manhattan. (Apr.)" -Publishers Weekly, Starred Review, 3/21/11, "A fun romp -- a guide to 'the kitchens on wheels' that serve up meals on urban street corners." --Final Word, USA Today, 5/24/11 "In this excellent cookbook on roving foods, Shouse, the food and drink editor for Time Out Chicago, interviews 50 proprietors of various taco carts, ice cream trucks, crepe trailers, and kebob-mobiles across 18 major U.S. cities (cooking in a truck is still illegal in the Windy City). Along the way, she creates a fascinating landscape of cultural diversity--folks from all walks of life who have dedicated themselves to cranking out quick, cheap, nomadic snacks. In New York, there is the classically trained bassoonist who has become a local hero with his Big Gay Ice Cream Truck. In Seattle, a woman who is part Korean and part Hawaiian teams with a Chinese-Filipino to serve up Spam sliders. And in New Orleans, a Katrina victim who attended culinary schools in London and Sydney makes brisket in a refrigerator that has been turned into a giant smoker. Along the way, Shouse provides recipes for crowd favorites like the buttermilk fried chicken found in Oahu, and a Sloppy Jose in Miami. Some ingredients, it turns out, travel more intriguingly than others. Bacon, for instance, shows up as a mac & cheese garnish in New Hampshire, arrives as a doughnut topping in Austin, Tex., and beds down in an ice cream sandwich in Manhattan. (Apr.)" --Publishers Weekly, Starred Review, 3/21/11
Dewey Decimal
647.9573
Synopsis
With food-truck fever sweeping the nation, intrepid journalist Heather Shouse launched a coast-to-coast exploration of street food. In Food Trucks , she gives readers a page-by-page compass for finding the best movable feasts in America. From decades-old pushcarts manned by tradition-towing immigrants to massive, gleaming mobile kitchens run by culinary prodigies, she identifies more than 100 chowhound pit-stops that are the very best of the best. Serving up everything from slow-smoked barbecue ribs to escargot puffs, with virtually every corner of the globe represented in brilliant detail for authentic eats, Food Trucks presents portable and affordable detour-worthy dishes and puts to rest the notion that memorable meals can only be experienced in lofty towers of haute cuisine. The secrets behind the vibrant flavors found in Vietnamese banh mi sandwiches , Hungarian paprikash , lacy French crepes , and global mash-ups like Mex-Korean kimchi quesadillas are delivered via more than 45 recipes, contributed by the truck chefs themselves. Behind-the-scenes profiles paint a deeper portrait of the talent behind the trend, offering insight into just what spawned the current mobile-food concept and just what kind of cook chooses the taco-truck life over the traditional brick-and-mortar restauranteur route. Vivid photography delivers tantalizing vignettes of street food life, as it ebbs and flows with the changing demographics from city to city. Organized geographically, Food Trucks doubles as a road trip must-have, a travel companion for discovering memorable meals on minimal budgets and a snapshot of a culinary craze just waiting to be devoured.
LC Classification Number
TX945