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Modernist Cuisine at Home Hardcover – Large Print, October 8, 2012

4.7 out of 5 stars 834 ratings

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Change the way you think about food: Modernist Cuisine at Home opens up a new world of culinary possibility and innovation for passionate and curious home cooks. In this award-winning, vibrantly illustrated 456-page volume you’ll learn how to stock a modern kitchen, master Modernist techniques, and make hundreds of stunning new recipes, including pressure-cooked caramelized carrot soup, silky smooth mac and cheese, and sous vide–braised short ribs. You’ll also learn about the science behind your favorite dishes like oven-roasted chicken, how to utilize sous vide cooking techniques, and why pressure cookers are perfect for making soup.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Modernist Cuisine at Home is destined to change the way we cook—and the way we use recipes. For all of us who cook regularly, this book opens up a whole new world of possibilities. It is full of insights that encourage us to try something new, and that teach us something on every single page. --Martha Stewart

Modernist Cuisine at Home offers useful techniques and solutions that expand our abilities, and it provides us with a practiced and thorough understanding of why things happen the way they do. Most importantly, it ignites a curiosity within and compels us to ask ourselves not "What should we make for dinner?"; but rather, "What can we make for dinner?" --Thomas Keller

...Nathan Myhrvold and his team, responsible last year for the food-publishing triumph of the decade, the six-volume Modernist Cuisine, have now scaled down and domesticated many of the advanced techniques... Of these, sous vide cooking is the most likely to find a place in the home kitchen, as it has in mine, and Modernist Cuisine at Home treats the subject in glorious detail. --Jeffrey Steingarten, Vogue

About the Author

Nathan Myhrvold is founder of The Cooking Lab and lead author of Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking, Modernist Cuisine at Home, The Photography of Modernist Cuisine, Modernist Bread, and the forthcoming book Modernist Pizza. He routinely pushes the boundaries of culinary science as a chef, scientist, photographer, and writer. He has had a passion for food and photography since he was a boy. At a young age he consumed cooking books and invested in new cameras and lenses—even while doing postdoctoral cosmology work with Stephen Hawking. While working as the chief technology officer of Microsoft, he took a leave of absence to earn his culinary diploma from École de Cuisine La Varenne in France. Nathan retired from Microsoft in 1999 to found Intellectual Ventures and pursue several interests, including his lifelong passion for photography, cooking, and food science. Inspired by the void in literature about culinary science and the cutting-edge techniques used in the world’s best restaurants, Myhrvold assembled the Modernist Cuisine team to share the art and science of cooking with others. Myhrvold opened Modernist Cuisine Gallery in 2017 after receiving continued requests to buy the photography found in his books. With locations in Las Vegas, New Orleans, Seattle, and La Jolla, the gallery features large-scale, limited-edition prints of Myhrvold’s art and is the first gallery in the world to focus solely on food photography by a single artist.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ The Cooking Lab
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ October 8, 2012
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ Pck Slp Sp
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 456 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0982761015
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0982761014
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 11.24 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 16.5 x 11.5 x 2.9 inches
  • Part of series ‏ : ‎ MODERNIST CUISINE
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.7 out of 5 stars 834 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
834 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the cookbook detailed and informative, with wonderful photographs and waterproof pages, making it a great gift for food lovers. The book is fun to read and customers consider it worth the price, though some find it very pricey. While some customers say it works brilliantly, others find it not practical for an average household.

129 customers mention "Information quality"124 positive5 negative

Customers find the book informative and detailed, describing it as an amazing reference that provides great explanations and serves as a study guide.

"...the first book that features sous vide in a way that the home cook can learn and excel at, while also creating dishes that will blow the guests away...." Read more

"...-Flaky pastry crust (regular version): Method was good, but baking time seemed a bit off. Will try again tonight and see if I get better results...." Read more

"...review: The Modernist Cuisine at Home does one more thing which is VERY helpful and which I wish would become the standard for cookbooks from now on..." Read more

"...Garlic Confit: Easy, handy. If you put them in the fridge the oil solidifies. Has anyone tried the melty cheese yet?..." Read more

54 customers mention "Photography"54 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the photographs in the book, with one noting that every picture is suitable for framing, and another highlighting how the methods are illustrated with amazing pictures.

"...Stunning photography, and great step-by-step images for most of the recipes -..." Read more

"...Highlights: photography is insane, I almost wish they'd release a "making of" that shows how they created the photos...." Read more

"...the subtlest hint of humor, and I have never seen such a wonderful use of photography...." Read more

"...Thermocouples are highly recommended. The book has stunning photography, much of which is used to explain the basic mechanics of various kitchen..." Read more

23 customers mention "Readability"23 positive0 negative

Customers find the cookbook enjoyable to read, describing it as fun and interesting, with one customer mentioning it's great for late night reading.

"...This book is a pleasure to read and the pictures are mesmerizing. What more could you ask for?..." Read more

"This book is a toss up. The recipes are creative, interesting, and well-researched...." Read more

"...Without a doubt it's expensive. But considering the entertainment, education, art, and great meals it offers, I think it's well worth the purchase...." Read more

"This series is fun but even the home version is not practical for an average household...." Read more

19 customers mention "Gift value"19 positive0 negative

Customers find the book to be a great gift, particularly for food lovers, with one customer noting it's very heavy.

"...love to experiment, or know someone who is like that, this makes a perfect gift...." Read more

"...Great gift, very interesting, treat as a beautiful text book collection, not a cook book." Read more

"...Great gift for the cooks you know :)" Read more

"...to the home enthusiast -- but moreover, it makes a great gift to inspire friends to explore without committing to reading the larger tome!..." Read more

12 customers mention "Water resistance"10 positive2 negative

Customers appreciate the book's waterproof pages, with one customer noting that all recipes are printed on them.

"...Comes with a separate water-resistant "kitchen manual" with every recipe inside so you can keep the gorgeous main-book away from the..." Read more

"...Includes a sprial bound project (recepie) book with water resistant pages of a size for the kitchen...." Read more

"...The water and food resistant companion book that comes with it ensures that gift remains in perfect condition for years to come." Read more

"...Comes with a condensed spiral companion book without pictures. Pages are waterproof, great for keeping in the kitchen for quick reference...." Read more

51 customers mention "Value for money"31 positive20 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's value for money, with some finding it worth the price and considering it a great buy, while others find it very pricey.

"...a consolidated set of kitchen tools and gadgets that the home chef can reasonably afford...." Read more

"...After you begin paging through it, you will realize that it is grossly UNDER-priced...." Read more

"...This is an excellent compromise. Everything about the book is what I wanted, and the few typos are not that big of a deal...." Read more

"...The price of the book is worth it just for the directions for pressure cooking stock -- veggie, meat & poultry!..." Read more

20 customers mention "Practicalness"12 positive8 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's practicality, with some saying it works brilliantly while others find it not super practical.

"...Well, by cooking sous vide, you don't have to do that and the results are amazing...." Read more

"...Now I have something that can be best described as a brick. It's useless. Update:..." Read more

"...Fairly easy too and works great with hot dogs...." Read more

"This series is fun but even the home version is not practical for an average household...." Read more

14 customers mention "Weight"6 positive8 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's weight, with several noting it is very heavy, while one customer appreciates the precise measurements by weight for ingredients.

"...There are no calorie counts on these recipes, and in some cases if there were, it would take scientific notation to fit on the page...." Read more

"...Yeah! Weighing is much easier and more efficient. The scaling method is very useful when wanting to make a recipe for 2 or for 12 or even 20...." Read more

"...A little hyperbole on my part, sure. But this thing really IS unwieldy...." Read more

"...Precise measurement by weight. The kitchen scale ( most things) & the pocket scale ( spices) are easly available and inexpensive...." Read more

The Holy Grail of the Foodie-at-Home-Chef
5 out of 5 stars
The Holy Grail of the Foodie-at-Home-Chef
For those of you that don't want to read the silly-long review I wrote, scroll down to "BOTTOM LINE" for the important stuff. I'll start with a disclaimer: Do not buy this book until you are familiar with the original "Modernist Cuisine." By that I do not mean you need to own that set first (quite the opposite, this is the stepping stone to the full set), but you should understand that it encompasses a style of cooking that can be crudely summarized as "cooking for scientists" or "how to make dinner in a laboratory." Once you know what you're getting into, decide if it's worth around $140 of your hard-earned cash. Now, on to the good stuff. For those of you who salivated for a year, wishing you could justify buying "Modernist Cuisine" but knowing you wouldn't be able to use it to it's full potential (like me), your prayers have been answered! "Modernist Cuisine" made headlines (in the Food and Travel section) for: 1. Deconstructing the science of cooking rather than just listing recipes 2. Focusing on modern methods of preparing foods using tools such as combi ovens, sous vide setups, emulsifiers, etc 3. Including some rather stunning photography of the equipment and ingredients within I am happy to say that all three are present in the "at Home" version. First, "Modernist Cuisine at Home" (MCAH hereafter) introduces a consolidated set of kitchen tools and gadgets that the home chef can reasonably afford. Don't have the funds for the laboratory-grade centrifuge featured in "Modernist Cuisine?" No problem. Not only does MCAH omit the prohibitively expensive tools from its recipes, but many of them are the same recipes found in the original, redone for the home cook. MCAH even goes as far as offering several options at varying price ranges for the equipment used within. The same goes for the ingredients. MCAH mostly does away with the laundry list of exotic spices and chemicals featured in many "modernist" cookbooks and instead relies on ingredients you can find either at the local grocery store, or in reasonable quantities online. For the ingredients you are probably less familiar with (malic acid? agar agar?) there is a two-page spread detailing what each does, where it comes from, and what it costs. In many cases, the recipes will list alternatives if you choose not to add their recommendations to your shopping list. Much like Modernist Cuisine, MCAH explains some of the science behind the various cooking techniques, but at a beginner's level. Each recipe includes a blurb about what's going on inside the pot (so to speak), and almost all of them include multiple variations at the end, allowing for a wide variety of options. This is especially useful for people new to the idea of sous vide cooking, as MCAH does a great job explaining exactly how it works, and how to make it work for you. How has it taken me this long to get to the photography? Stunning, just as in "Modernist Cuisine". I don't know how they did it, but every picture is suitable for framing. Equipment has been dissected to yield amazing looking cross-sections used in explaining how the various tools function. And get this: included in the back are four prints from MCAH you can frame. I had no idea until they fell out while I was reading, but they are every bit as beautiful as the photos inside, and I dare say will look better on the walls of a kitchen than the usual crap paintings of grapes or farms or cows that people seem obligated to put up these days. If it seem like I'm gushing, it's because I am. Any home cook who has jumped into sous vide cooking has probably experienced the frustration I have with cookbooks dedicated to the style. You have Douglas Baldwin's "Sous Vide for the Home Chef," which, while great for it's temperature charts (and the fact it came out before anything else was available) is too simple for anyone looking to expand their horizons into restaurant-quality preparations (French Laundry, anyone?). And on the other end of the spectrum is Thomas Keller's "Under Pressure," which, while exquisite in creativity and detail, is geared completely towards the restaurant chef (which he warns in the forward), both in scale and complexity. Even the original "Modernist Cuisine", while featuring more accessible recipes than "Under Pressure", still excluded the home cook from about half of it's contents due to equipment or ingredient limitations. MCAH is the first book that features sous vide in a way that the home cook can learn and excel at, while also creating dishes that will blow the guests away. Seriously, the stuff you can make from this book looks like it belongs on the set of Iron Chef. BOTTOM LINE: This is a "modern" (or Modernist) cookbook, so the recipes inside are going to be closer to what you'd find in a restaurant that uses an obscure adjective for it's title rather than what you'd see in your grandmother's kitchen. If the idea of cooking a beautiful cut of salmon in a Ziploc bag seems blasphemous, or using a digital scale instead of an elephant-shaped measuring cup is akin to high treason, you may not be ready to make the jump. But if you want to learn how modern cooking styles can produce amazing taste and presentation in your kitchen (while removing much of the uncertainty and variation that traditional high-heat methods entail), this is the book for you. PROS: - Currently the best book available for home sous vide setups - Delicious recipes using accessible ingredients for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and dessert. Meat, Poultry, Fish and Veggies. Even has a few vegan options inside. - Teaches the "why" of cooking, not just the "how" - Stunning photography, and great step-by-step images for most of the recipes - Comes with a separate water-resistant "kitchen manual" with every recipe inside so you can keep the gorgeous main-book away from the messiness of the kitchen. - Comes with 4 prints you can frame in your home. Or not. - Even though the recipes are designed using ingredient weights, approximate volume measurements are included - Well constructed. You could easily beat an intruder to death with this book if you caught him stealing your sous vide setup - Even has the bookmark ribbon you see in bibles, which fits, since this has become my new kitchen bible. CONS: - Though it says "at Home" in the title, your average kitchen will most likely lack some of the basic tools used in many of the recipes. At a minimum, you will need a digital scale, Sous Vide setup, a pressure cooker, and a whipped cream siphon. MCAH will help you in your quest to acquire those tools, but you should commit to expanding your kitchen arsenal if you plan to use this book to it's full potential. - There are no calorie counts on these recipes, and in some cases if there were, it would take scientific notation to fit on the page. This is not a diet book, this is a book dedicated purely to creating the most delicious food possible at home. When you get to the page about deep-frying a hamburger, you'll understand what I mean. - $140 (or whatever they charge now) isn't chump change, and for most people the new equipment will add to the cost. - The sandwich on the cover does not actually levitate when you make it at home. - Does not mow the lawn while you aren't using it. Feel free to ask any questions in the comments. I am in no way affiliated with the producers of this book, though I would consider trading my first-born for a chance to work in their kitchen. Your Mileage May Vary. EDIT - 6 Oct 2015: Three years later and I still love this book. I not own the full-fledged Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking, but I'm always going back to this one. Take the leap!
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2012
    For those of you that don't want to read the silly-long review I wrote, scroll down to "BOTTOM LINE" for the important stuff.

    I'll start with a disclaimer: Do not buy this book until you are familiar with the original "Modernist Cuisine." By that I do not mean you need to own that set first (quite the opposite, this is the stepping stone to the full set), but you should understand that it encompasses a style of cooking that can be crudely summarized as "cooking for scientists" or "how to make dinner in a laboratory." Once you know what you're getting into, decide if it's worth around $140 of your hard-earned cash.

    Now, on to the good stuff. For those of you who salivated for a year, wishing you could justify buying "Modernist Cuisine" but knowing you wouldn't be able to use it to it's full potential (like me), your prayers have been answered! "Modernist Cuisine" made headlines (in the Food and Travel section) for:
    1. Deconstructing the science of cooking rather than just listing recipes
    2. Focusing on modern methods of preparing foods using tools such as combi ovens, sous vide setups, emulsifiers, etc
    3. Including some rather stunning photography of the equipment and ingredients within

    I am happy to say that all three are present in the "at Home" version. First, "Modernist Cuisine at Home" (MCAH hereafter) introduces a consolidated set of kitchen tools and gadgets that the home chef can reasonably afford. Don't have the funds for the laboratory-grade centrifuge featured in "Modernist Cuisine?" No problem. Not only does MCAH omit the prohibitively expensive tools from its recipes, but many of them are the same recipes found in the original, redone for the home cook. MCAH even goes as far as offering several options at varying price ranges for the equipment used within.

    The same goes for the ingredients. MCAH mostly does away with the laundry list of exotic spices and chemicals featured in many "modernist" cookbooks and instead relies on ingredients you can find either at the local grocery store, or in reasonable quantities online. For the ingredients you are probably less familiar with (malic acid? agar agar?) there is a two-page spread detailing what each does, where it comes from, and what it costs. In many cases, the recipes will list alternatives if you choose not to add their recommendations to your shopping list.

    Much like Modernist Cuisine, MCAH explains some of the science behind the various cooking techniques, but at a beginner's level. Each recipe includes a blurb about what's going on inside the pot (so to speak), and almost all of them include multiple variations at the end, allowing for a wide variety of options. This is especially useful for people new to the idea of sous vide cooking, as MCAH does a great job explaining exactly how it works, and how to make it work for you.

    How has it taken me this long to get to the photography? Stunning, just as in "Modernist Cuisine". I don't know how they did it, but every picture is suitable for framing. Equipment has been dissected to yield amazing looking cross-sections used in explaining how the various tools function. And get this: included in the back are four prints from MCAH you can frame. I had no idea until they fell out while I was reading, but they are every bit as beautiful as the photos inside, and I dare say will look better on the walls of a kitchen than the usual crap paintings of grapes or farms or cows that people seem obligated to put up these days.

    If it seem like I'm gushing, it's because I am. Any home cook who has jumped into sous vide cooking has probably experienced the frustration I have with cookbooks dedicated to the style. You have Douglas Baldwin's "Sous Vide for the Home Chef," which, while great for it's temperature charts (and the fact it came out before anything else was available) is too simple for anyone looking to expand their horizons into restaurant-quality preparations (French Laundry, anyone?). And on the other end of the spectrum is Thomas Keller's "Under Pressure," which, while exquisite in creativity and detail, is geared completely towards the restaurant chef (which he warns in the forward), both in scale and complexity. Even the original "Modernist Cuisine", while featuring more accessible recipes than "Under Pressure", still excluded the home cook from about half of it's contents due to equipment or ingredient limitations. MCAH is the first book that features sous vide in a way that the home cook can learn and excel at, while also creating dishes that will blow the guests away. Seriously, the stuff you can make from this book looks like it belongs on the set of Iron Chef.

    BOTTOM LINE:

    This is a "modern" (or Modernist) cookbook, so the recipes inside are going to be closer to what you'd find in a restaurant that uses an obscure adjective for it's title rather than what you'd see in your grandmother's kitchen. If the idea of cooking a beautiful cut of salmon in a Ziploc bag seems blasphemous, or using a digital scale instead of an elephant-shaped measuring cup is akin to high treason, you may not be ready to make the jump. But if you want to learn how modern cooking styles can produce amazing taste and presentation in your kitchen (while removing much of the uncertainty and variation that traditional high-heat methods entail), this is the book for you.

    PROS:

    - Currently the best book available for home sous vide setups
    - Delicious recipes using accessible ingredients for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and dessert. Meat, Poultry, Fish and Veggies. Even has a few vegan options inside.
    - Teaches the "why" of cooking, not just the "how"
    - Stunning photography, and great step-by-step images for most of the recipes
    - Comes with a separate water-resistant "kitchen manual" with every recipe inside so you can keep the gorgeous main-book away from the messiness of the kitchen.
    - Comes with 4 prints you can frame in your home. Or not.
    - Even though the recipes are designed using ingredient weights, approximate volume measurements are included
    - Well constructed. You could easily beat an intruder to death with this book if you caught him stealing your sous vide setup
    - Even has the bookmark ribbon you see in bibles, which fits, since this has become my new kitchen bible.

    CONS:

    - Though it says "at Home" in the title, your average kitchen will most likely lack some of the basic tools used in many of the recipes. At a minimum, you will need a digital scale, Sous Vide setup, a pressure cooker, and a whipped cream siphon. MCAH will help you in your quest to acquire those tools, but you should commit to expanding your kitchen arsenal if you plan to use this book to it's full potential.
    - There are no calorie counts on these recipes, and in some cases if there were, it would take scientific notation to fit on the page. This is not a diet book, this is a book dedicated purely to creating the most delicious food possible at home. When you get to the page about deep-frying a hamburger, you'll understand what I mean.
    - $140 (or whatever they charge now) isn't chump change, and for most people the new equipment will add to the cost.
    - The sandwich on the cover does not actually levitate when you make it at home.
    - Does not mow the lawn while you aren't using it.

    Feel free to ask any questions in the comments. I am in no way affiliated with the producers of this book, though I would consider trading my first-born for a chance to work in their kitchen. Your Mileage May Vary.

    EDIT - 6 Oct 2015: Three years later and I still love this book. I not own the full-fledged Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking, but I'm always going back to this one. Take the leap!
    Customer image
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    The Holy Grail of the Foodie-at-Home-Chef

    Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2012
    For those of you that don't want to read the silly-long review I wrote, scroll down to "BOTTOM LINE" for the important stuff.

    I'll start with a disclaimer: Do not buy this book until you are familiar with the original "Modernist Cuisine." By that I do not mean you need to own that set first (quite the opposite, this is the stepping stone to the full set), but you should understand that it encompasses a style of cooking that can be crudely summarized as "cooking for scientists" or "how to make dinner in a laboratory." Once you know what you're getting into, decide if it's worth around $140 of your hard-earned cash.

    Now, on to the good stuff. For those of you who salivated for a year, wishing you could justify buying "Modernist Cuisine" but knowing you wouldn't be able to use it to it's full potential (like me), your prayers have been answered! "Modernist Cuisine" made headlines (in the Food and Travel section) for:
    1. Deconstructing the science of cooking rather than just listing recipes
    2. Focusing on modern methods of preparing foods using tools such as combi ovens, sous vide setups, emulsifiers, etc
    3. Including some rather stunning photography of the equipment and ingredients within

    I am happy to say that all three are present in the "at Home" version. First, "Modernist Cuisine at Home" (MCAH hereafter) introduces a consolidated set of kitchen tools and gadgets that the home chef can reasonably afford. Don't have the funds for the laboratory-grade centrifuge featured in "Modernist Cuisine?" No problem. Not only does MCAH omit the prohibitively expensive tools from its recipes, but many of them are the same recipes found in the original, redone for the home cook. MCAH even goes as far as offering several options at varying price ranges for the equipment used within.

    The same goes for the ingredients. MCAH mostly does away with the laundry list of exotic spices and chemicals featured in many "modernist" cookbooks and instead relies on ingredients you can find either at the local grocery store, or in reasonable quantities online. For the ingredients you are probably less familiar with (malic acid? agar agar?) there is a two-page spread detailing what each does, where it comes from, and what it costs. In many cases, the recipes will list alternatives if you choose not to add their recommendations to your shopping list.

    Much like Modernist Cuisine, MCAH explains some of the science behind the various cooking techniques, but at a beginner's level. Each recipe includes a blurb about what's going on inside the pot (so to speak), and almost all of them include multiple variations at the end, allowing for a wide variety of options. This is especially useful for people new to the idea of sous vide cooking, as MCAH does a great job explaining exactly how it works, and how to make it work for you.

    How has it taken me this long to get to the photography? Stunning, just as in "Modernist Cuisine". I don't know how they did it, but every picture is suitable for framing. Equipment has been dissected to yield amazing looking cross-sections used in explaining how the various tools function. And get this: included in the back are four prints from MCAH you can frame. I had no idea until they fell out while I was reading, but they are every bit as beautiful as the photos inside, and I dare say will look better on the walls of a kitchen than the usual crap paintings of grapes or farms or cows that people seem obligated to put up these days.

    If it seem like I'm gushing, it's because I am. Any home cook who has jumped into sous vide cooking has probably experienced the frustration I have with cookbooks dedicated to the style. You have Douglas Baldwin's "Sous Vide for the Home Chef," which, while great for it's temperature charts (and the fact it came out before anything else was available) is too simple for anyone looking to expand their horizons into restaurant-quality preparations (French Laundry, anyone?). And on the other end of the spectrum is Thomas Keller's "Under Pressure," which, while exquisite in creativity and detail, is geared completely towards the restaurant chef (which he warns in the forward), both in scale and complexity. Even the original "Modernist Cuisine", while featuring more accessible recipes than "Under Pressure", still excluded the home cook from about half of it's contents due to equipment or ingredient limitations. MCAH is the first book that features sous vide in a way that the home cook can learn and excel at, while also creating dishes that will blow the guests away. Seriously, the stuff you can make from this book looks like it belongs on the set of Iron Chef.

    BOTTOM LINE:

    This is a "modern" (or Modernist) cookbook, so the recipes inside are going to be closer to what you'd find in a restaurant that uses an obscure adjective for it's title rather than what you'd see in your grandmother's kitchen. If the idea of cooking a beautiful cut of salmon in a Ziploc bag seems blasphemous, or using a digital scale instead of an elephant-shaped measuring cup is akin to high treason, you may not be ready to make the jump. But if you want to learn how modern cooking styles can produce amazing taste and presentation in your kitchen (while removing much of the uncertainty and variation that traditional high-heat methods entail), this is the book for you.

    PROS:

    - Currently the best book available for home sous vide setups
    - Delicious recipes using accessible ingredients for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and dessert. Meat, Poultry, Fish and Veggies. Even has a few vegan options inside.
    - Teaches the "why" of cooking, not just the "how"
    - Stunning photography, and great step-by-step images for most of the recipes
    - Comes with a separate water-resistant "kitchen manual" with every recipe inside so you can keep the gorgeous main-book away from the messiness of the kitchen.
    - Comes with 4 prints you can frame in your home. Or not.
    - Even though the recipes are designed using ingredient weights, approximate volume measurements are included
    - Well constructed. You could easily beat an intruder to death with this book if you caught him stealing your sous vide setup
    - Even has the bookmark ribbon you see in bibles, which fits, since this has become my new kitchen bible.

    CONS:

    - Though it says "at Home" in the title, your average kitchen will most likely lack some of the basic tools used in many of the recipes. At a minimum, you will need a digital scale, Sous Vide setup, a pressure cooker, and a whipped cream siphon. MCAH will help you in your quest to acquire those tools, but you should commit to expanding your kitchen arsenal if you plan to use this book to it's full potential.
    - There are no calorie counts on these recipes, and in some cases if there were, it would take scientific notation to fit on the page. This is not a diet book, this is a book dedicated purely to creating the most delicious food possible at home. When you get to the page about deep-frying a hamburger, you'll understand what I mean.
    - $140 (or whatever they charge now) isn't chump change, and for most people the new equipment will add to the cost.
    - The sandwich on the cover does not actually levitate when you make it at home.
    - Does not mow the lawn while you aren't using it.

    Feel free to ask any questions in the comments. I am in no way affiliated with the producers of this book, though I would consider trading my first-born for a chance to work in their kitchen. Your Mileage May Vary.

    EDIT - 6 Oct 2015: Three years later and I still love this book. I not own the full-fledged Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking, but I'm always going back to this one. Take the leap!
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 19, 2014
    Modernist Cuisine at Home is a cookbook. As such, it shouldn't be read end-to-end, but should be reviewed for the recipes it contains. However, it's more than a cookbook, since it's also an advocate for a different approach towards cooking, which is ideally suited for engineers and other folks (mostly men) who have little patience for acquiring skills associated with traditional cooking. I am just such a person, so the Modernist approach does have great appeal to me.

    As far as I can see, modernist cooking has a few principles:

    Use of modern technology. This includes pressure cookers, sous vide machines, and blow torches
    Accurate temperature control. This could mean water baths, or simply an oven safe probe stuck into the thickest part of the meat.
    An emphasis on time efficiency. Minimum prep time, and "fire and forget" formulas.
    I, on the other hand, was looking for the following:
    Minimum skill required, as well as prep effort. I can barely flip an egg over to make eggs over-easy. Anything more is just too much.
    Precise prescriptions. "A dash of baking soda" means nothing to me. I'd rather hear, "10g of baking soda."
    To my mind, Modernist Cuisine at Home meets a lot of this criteria. Much has been made about sous vide, but I didn't have a sous vide set up, so I first tried the other recipes that were easy:
    Slow Baked Chicken with Onions (page 242). The first time I did this the results were amazing. The prep work is weird, using brine injectors and slicing onions thinly, but my wife (who usually hates chicken) liked it a lot so I tried again. The second time was a disaster. I had to throw it away. The inconsistency of the oven made me willing to buy a Sous Vide setup.
    Pressure Cooked Lamb Shank (page 234). The first time I did it the results were good, but marred by my pressure cooker being not up to spec. I splurged, upgrading to a $30 Presto pressure cooker, and the second time I made it it was nothing short of incredible. The meat just peeled off the bone when I lifted the bone up, and the resulting lamb curry tasted great. In fact, the store-bought sauce did not do the meat justice.
    Carrot Soup (page 178). Since my visits to Rosenlaui began, I've admired their soups. Since I had a pressure cooker now, I could use their recipe to see if I could emulate the creamy soups that Rosenlaui did. The resulting texture is nothing short of amazing. It's quite a bit of work, since you have to pressure cook the carrots, then blend them, and then add carrot juice. This is eliminating the final step. But the soup is incredibly smooth and generally good stuff. I liked it a lot, but Xiaoqin is in general not a fan of Western style soups, so I guess I won't be making this again.
    All this convinced me that I should experiment with sous vide for a more consistent experience. It took a bit to figure out what to buy, so I'll list it here, in case you want to try it yourself:
    Sous Vide Supreme Demi. You don't need anything bigger, so don't waste your time with the other stuff. I didn't opt for a circulating bath heater, because the resulting decor would not please my wife. If you're single and cheap, try a manual rice cooker or crockpot and the DorkFood temperature controller.
    Iwatani Torch Burner. It burns butane cartridges you can easily get at Ranch 99. Easy on, easy off, and it doesn't look like industrial equipment.
    Seal-a-Meal Vacuum Sealer. If all you do is short recipes you can use zip-loc bags. You can also buy a package including the Sous Vide Supreme sealer, but the difference between reviews of this unit and reviews of the Sous Vide Supreme unit is huge, so I recommend buying this one.
    With this, I experimented with the following receipes:
    Sous Vide Salmon (page 276). OMG. This is melt-in-your-mouth type salmon. I couldn't believe how good this was. Xiaoqin doesn't like cooked Salmon, but she found this acceptable. I'm going to have to try cod one of these days.
    Sous Vide Chicken (page 244). You know how baked chicken always tastes dry? The reason the Slow Baked chicken receipe works is because you inject the chicken with enough brine so it doesn't dry out. Well, by cooking sous vide, you don't have to do that and the results are amazing. Xiaoqin doesn't usually like chicken, but she liked this one so much she complained I didn't eat enough. Bowen doesn't usually eat meat, and he ate a third of a piece of chicken thigh by himself. This blew my mind.
    Sous Vide Prime Rib (page 194). This was relatively disappointing. Not because the result was bad, but because we'd had high hopes after the last two sous vide dishes. I didn't follow the instructions enough, and left the meat in the machine for 3+ hours instead of the recommended 50 minutes, because I read some other instructions on the internet. On the one hand, it was my loss, but on the other hand, it demonstrates the value of the book: the book's recipes so far out perform the internet, which is unusual.
    Sous Vide Duck Confit (pages 245-246). This was the most ambitious recipe that I tried from the book. It took about 18 hours of brining the duck legs in the refrigerator, and then about 27 hours in the Sous Vide machine. But it was excellent and better than some duck confit I've had in France! If you'd told me a year ago that I'd be able to make duck confit this good, I wouldn't have believed you.
    I'm not much of a foodie, and have eaten at Michelin 2-star restaurants that I considered terrible compared to say, Kabab & Curry's. I've also eaten at Google's cafetaria during the good years (2005-2007), and could taste the difference when I returned to Mountain View in 2008 after a stint in Europe. I would say that this book has revolutionized my approach and expectations for home cooking, and I cannot imagine not using the sous vide approach for meats cooked home if I can help it. I justified my purchase of my above set up based on the idea that I could easily return it to Amazon if I didn't like it. Well, I'm not going to return those machines. Furthermore, when I first heard about the 72 hour short-rib sous vide recipes, I thought, "3 days to cook dinner? That's ridiculous." I will now admit that my thoughts about the matter now are: "how could I do without my sous vide machine for 3 days?!!"

    I will now pay this book the greatest compliment I can: before I return this book to the library, I will either buy my own copy of Modernist Cuisine at Home, or the entire $530 6-volume set of Modernist Cuisine. Highly recommended. If you haven't tried it out, try it. If you're local and want to try it, talk to me and we'll work something out. And if you're an engineer who hates cooking and can't do anything right in the kitchen, you need this book.
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  • CanuckGirl
    5.0 out of 5 stars Perfection!
    Reviewed in Canada on August 12, 2018
    I can't say enough about how cool this book is. I've only tried a couple recipes, but i love that they are written for maximum reproducibility. I already had most of the tools needed for many of the recipes (pressure cooker, hand blender, sous vide setup) and really enjoyed the gorgeous photos. I also loved that the companion "cookbook" with just the recipes has waterproof pages, totally designed for being in the kitchen with you. There's so much great information in this book, it's definitely become a new favorite.
  • Njål Andersen
    5.0 out of 5 stars THE book for the home cook seeking to get the most out of equipment and ingredients.
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 22, 2012
    Modernist Cusine at home is a fantastic book demonstrating how to use the science in a home environment. It is a practical guide to "how to get it done"; whereas the original Modernist Cuisine goes in details on why and takes no short cuts and makes no compromises. In short, it is the volume which pulls the first set together for those without an extensive professional kitchen and unlimited access to ingredients and equipment.

    The focus of the book is on techniques and use of equipment which are new or recently had a renaissance. Favorite equipment includes pressure cooker, water bath / CVAP oven and vacuum sealer. As many do not have a water bath and vacuum sealer, makeshift alternative solutions are given. Common to the equipment is that their best use can often be explained by science, thus taking the guesswork out of the equation.

    The sections focus on common dishes, such as pizza, burgers, steaks, roast chicken, salmon, vegetables and pies. Many of the recipes offer alternative variations, encouraging the cook to use the fundamental technique while creating their own dishes. By using the on common dishes, it becomes more clear how the techniques can then be applied to many other tried, tested and true recipes.

    The book is not meant as an entry level cook book for someone who needs to learn some tricks to keep themselves fed. It is geared towards those who want to learn how to make the most out of available tools and characteristics of various foods, and raise the flavor to a new level. Although in no way necessary, it is my belief this book will inspire more to buy the first set, so as to gain a deeper understanding.

    The book keeps the extremely high standard for food photography, a pure delight to look at, also making it a great book for the coffee table!
  • Federico Cacciani
    5.0 out of 5 stars la bibbia...
    Reviewed in Italy on October 28, 2014
    Il titolo rende l'idea... passare dalla cucina casareccia approssimativa (dove non si sa mai come sarà il risultato) all'approccio ingegneristico dove la cucina diventa una scienza esatta e replicabile se fatta debita attenzione.
    Purtroppo non economicissimo ma pure bello come oggetto.
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  • Marcelo C
    5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing!! Thanks Modernist Cuisine
    Reviewed in Brazil on October 9, 2019
    That’s a bible for cookers and enthusiasts! An obligatory reading on techniques and modern processes of cooking.
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    Marcelo C
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Amazing!! Thanks Modernist Cuisine

    Reviewed in Brazil on October 9, 2019
    That’s a bible for cookers and enthusiasts! An obligatory reading on techniques and modern processes of cooking.
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  • Joao Cravinho
    5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
    Reviewed in India on April 22, 2015
    Wonderful book, delivered impeccably.