Home Action Figures Baby Toys Bikes, Scooters & More Building Sets & Blocks Dolls  
  What are you shopping for?  


 

On the Line

On the Line
MSRP: $35.00
Your Price: $23.10
Savings: $ 11.90 ( 34% )
Shipping: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Artisan
Buy On the Line

Prices subject to change. Please verify price during checkout.
 

On the Line Features

ISBN13: 9781579653699
Condition: NEW
Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
 

Related On the Line Products

Line the On
the Line On
Line On the
Line the On
On Line the
 

Additional On the Line Information

Take one top New York restaurant, add danger, drama, and dialogue, toss in their best recipes, and you have a cooking classic.

How does a 4-star restaurant stay on top for more than two decades? In On the Line, chef Eric Ripert takes readers behind the scenes at Le Bernardin, one of just three New York City restaurants to earn three Michelin stars. Any fan of gourmet dining who ever stole a peek behind a restaurant kitchen's swinging doors will love this unique insider's account, with its interviews, inventory checklists, and fly-on-the-wall dialogue that bring the business of haute cuisine to life.

From the sudden death of Le Bernardin's founding chef, Gilbert Le Coze, to Ripert's stressful but triumphant takeover of the kitchen at age 29, the story has plenty of drama. But as Chef Ripert and writer Christine Muhlke reveal, every day is an adventure in a perfectionistic restaurant kitchen. Foodies will love reading about the inner workings of a top restaurant, from how a kitchen is organized to the real cost of the food and the fierce discipline and organization it takes to achieve culinary perfection on the plate almost 150,000 times a year.

Meanwhile, Le Bernardin's modern French cuisine, with its emphasis on seafood, comes to life in sophisticated recipes, including Striped Bass with Sweet Corn Puree, Grilled Shishito Peppers, Shaved Smoked Bonito, and Mole Sauce, and Pan-Roasted Cod with Chorizo, Snow Peas, Piquillo Peppers, and Soy-Lime Butter Sauce.

 

What Customers Say About On the Line:

A very different and fun "cook book", you don't have to be cooking anything out of this book to be able to appreciate it.As a professional chef I find many things in it very informative, and if you are a fish guy like me then it doesn't get much better than a book from one of the most outstanding fish restaurants in the country in the last twenty years.Even if you like to have a small collection of chef's or cook books this one should be in it.

You have the beautifully illustrated "food porn" as Bourdain likes to call it. This is a fine book. Finally there is the memoir type of book (see the aforementioned Bourdain). Typically I find food/kitchen books will fall into one of three categories. There is the recipe reference type. I find it difficult to pigeon hole this book as any one of these genres. Ripert and Muhlke have crafted an excellent snapshot of a day in the life of Le Bernadin.

In an effort to make some of them stand out, certain very well regarded chefs are producing books that are more a mix of cookbook and diary. No. "On The Line" features recipes from both.But the book is more interested in providing a chronicle, a day in the life of Le Bernadin. I want to use these recipes to provide enjoyment for my family and friends. And a stellar example at that.Ripert, chef of Le Bernadin, in New York, is one of the most well regarded chefs in the world. His restaurant is frequently regarded as one of the world's best and he has made many guest appearances on cooking shows, everything from "Top Chef" to "East Meets West with Ming Tsai".Le Bernadin is well known for two things; Ripert's recipes and the emphasis on fish and pastry chef Michael Laiskonis' unique desert creations. "On the Line", the new cookbook by Eric Ripert, chef of "Le Bernadin" is perhaps an example of the next, inevitable mutation of cookbooks.With the Food Network creating stars out of normal people, and other cable channels broadcasting shows featuring chefs and scrambling to create the next "Top Chef", both our airwaves and bookshelves are becoming crowded with cookbooks. I want to try to recreate some of their recipes at home.

It is interesting to learn as much as possible about the inner-workings of a restaurant regarded by many to be one of the best in the world.Another aspect about these new 'behind the scenes" cookbooks that rubs me the wrong way is that they often seem to be vanity projects. When I buy a cookbook, I buy it because I am interested in the years of experience that particular chef has. "We are an acknowledged great restaurant and here is why." But Ripert's book doesn't have that feeling. But I think it definitely serves a purpose. Eric Ripert's "On The Line" is such an example. When so much of the book is about the day-to-day routine of running the restaurant, there is just naturally less I can do with that as a home cook.But I also read through cookbooks like a novel, placing post-its on recipes that I want to try.

"On The Line" seems to chronicle, maybe exhaustively, every position at the restaurant, what they do, what they are responsible for, what happens at 7:03 am, who is responsible for that, when various personnel arrives, what time the ice cream is made and who is responsible for that, etc.Granted, this book is not for everyone. A lot of budding chefs could gain some inspiration from Ripert (his food is supposed to be brilliant) and by reading this book, they are likely to learn a lot about he runs his kitchen, perhaps providing the reader with even greater inspiration.Do I want this type of cookbook to replace the more traditional. Reading through "On The Line" was not difficult and was, in fact, very interesting. Perhaps it is because he is so humble and self-effacing whenever I see him on television that I just don't believe he has this in him."On The Line" is informative, interesting and would make a great gift to a new Culinary Student.

An incredible journey through the operation of a restaurant. One the Line thoroughly takes you through the entire restaurant operation, both front of the house and back. It really sets the bar for those in the business. Either as an owner, manager, team member or patron, much knowledge to be gained from within the pages.

With years in fine dining myself, I can honestly say this book has taken the place of "The French Laundry Cookbook" as my most influential book of all time. Ripert, La Coze and the entire staff of "Le Bernardin" are of a caliber that stands alone as the ultimate hosts of grace, etiquette and respect. They are wholly committed, and as a result, this books shines as a beacon that all culinarians should aspire to in their careers.

Buy On the Line
© 2008 - 2010 APlusToys.com - Childrens Toys : Privacy Policy