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Sweet Talk

Check Out Photos from the Molly Moon’s Cookbook

Another feather in the cap for the local ice cream scooper.

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Photo courtesy mollymoonicream.com.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Photo courtesy mollymoonicream.com.

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Photo: Kathryn Barnard

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Photo: Kathryn Barnard

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Photo: Kathryn Barnard

Twas many months ago we first brought word of the Molly Moon’s cookbook, a 65-recipe manual Ms. Neitzel and her pastry chef, Christina Spittler, were planning to pen. Today we get our first look at the tome, put out by local publishing house Sasquatch Books. Click through the slideshow to see several yummy photos courtesy shutterbug Kathryn Barnard.

Molly Moon’s Homemade Ice Cream is slated for a May 2012 arrival but you can preorder the book now.

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Tags: Cookbooks, Ice Cream, Molly Moon's, Molly Moon Neitzel

Video

Watch the Klebeck Brothers Discuss the History of Top Pot

The video is a promo for forthcoming cookbook Hand-Forged Doughnuts.

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Mark Klebeck is no stranger to flashing pearly whites for the camera. Here his joins his brother and Top Pot co-founder Mike in plugging Hand-Forged Doughnuts, their first publication due out September 21. Also present is Seattle Met recipe extraordinaire Jess Thomson; she helped write the tome. Also: doughnut porn, lots of it.


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Tags: Cookbooks, Top Pot, Doughnuts

Home Cooking

Check Out the Cover of Dani Cone’s Cutie Pies

The very bright book will hit shelves in September.

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Look for Dani Cone’s Cutie Pies in September.

That Dani Cone cookbook Nosh told you about in December is almost ready for release. The collection of recipes for sweet-and-savory pies of all kinds—hand pies, mini pies, deep-dish pies, nine-inch pies—is due out September 5; the official on sale date is the 27th. (FYI: Top Pot’s tome also is slated for that month.)

Though Cone has authored another book (it’s on coffee culture), she’s said she never thought she’d compile a cookbook—Cone once admitted to Nosh “I am generally totally inept in the kitchen” (some would agree, some wouldn’t).

Publisher Andrews McMeel is releasing Cutie Pies, and Bellevue-based becker&mayer! is producing it. Local photographer Clare Barboza provides the pie porn, and High 5 Pie baker Cat Wilcox helped to pen the pub.

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Tags: Cookbooks, High 5 Pie

Blog to Blog

Seattle Food Blog Chain: Becky Selengut

A something-for-everyone site dishing out tips and wit.

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“I love every kind of food,” says Becky Selengut. “I even love garlic, but it hates me.”

Photo Courtesy: Clare Barboza

Here’s the deal with the Seattle Food Blog Chain: Nosh Pit spotlights a Seattle food blogger, and then asks that blogger to point us in the direction of another food blogger. Last week we talked to snarky Baketard Marc Schermerhorn, he passed us on to local chef and sustainable seafood advocate Becky Selengut. (Schermerhorn on Selengut: “She’s one of my best friends but my nemesis on Twitter. She’s extremely talented.”)

About the blogger Becky Selengut is a chef who’s allergic to garlic. She’s worked in restaurants for more than ten years, including the The Herbfarm and La Medusa, and was less than compassionate for those who made alterations to the menu crying food allergy. “Someone would say they’re allergic to dairy and make a big stink, and then they’re stuffing their pie hole with cheese. Ya right, it’s an allergy,” she says. “But now that I’m on the other side, I really want the cook to take it seriously.”

Garlic notwithstanding, Selengut will eat just about anything. “Food is how I think of the world. My brain is hardwired to see if I can eat that thing. I’m like my Labrador: ‘can I eat that?’ all the time” she says. “I don’t know how food has inspired me; it just is me.”

Mini-review of the blog Tips, tricks, and narratives round out Chef Reinvented. Selengut is a private chef, a cookbook writer, and a cooking class instructor—all of which are reflected in the blog. “It’s about how we all reinvent ourselves all the time to do new things. I want it to be a food/humor blog,” she says. Posts include challenging cooking techniques, there’s a whole sous vide series with a familiar British face, sustainable food lessons, travel narratives complete with hilarious photo captions (check out her trip to Paris), and even event listings.

Level of commitment One hour each week. “I like to think that I go for the quality and not quantity model of blogging,” she says.

Randomly selected quote “The French are skinny and French pigeons are kind of chunky. Americans are kind of chunky (that’s an understatement) and our pigeons are lean. Parisians walk an awful lot and they walk to their favorite boulangeries to pick up their favorite baguettes. They are loyal patrons. They walk all over Paris eating their croissant and baguette, flaky bits of bread cascading from their lips into the mouths of waiting pigeons who fatten themselves on the buttery flakes (not good for a bird’s tender heart) and then croak from heart disease right at my feet.”

Bookmark if Your food interests are more comprehensive than specific. Or, you’re an older gentleman. “Mostly dads [read my blog]. Like my dad,” says Selengut. “It’s my family, my friends, and maybe twenty fans. Or people who like stories and humor.”

What you don’t know At the age of eight, Selengut attempted a sophisticated meal that she saw on TV: mushrooms on toast points. “We didn’t have any mushrooms that were fresh, so I found the canned mushrooms. I dump the mushrooms in the pan with the water. We didn’t have any good bread since it’s like 1978, so I took wonder bread, didn’t toast it, and poured the soggy canned mushrooms over it. It sat for like an hour, then my dad got home from work and I presented the dish.”

Advice for aspiring food bloggers “I’m not a model blogger,” she admits referring to the infrequency with which she posts. “But people do come to expect a certain thing from you. My thing with my blog is inconsistency, so I keep that consistent.”

Next week: a food dork who is also rather dashing. Does it get any better than that?

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Tags: DIY cooking, Cookbooks, Cooking, Food Community, Seattle Food Bloggers, Seattle Food Blog Chain

Local Authors

Gwyneth Goops Local Author Amy Pennington

(Again!)

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Paltrow loves Pennington

Everyone loves Amy Pennington, the Seattle-based author of the new book Apartment Gardening (Sasquatch). Even her Gwynethness!

Paltrow’s extremely popular lifestyle newsletter GOOP featured Pennington’s book this week.

Here’s what GP had to say about Apartment Gardening:

“A favorite cookbook author, Amy Pennington has written an incredibly handy manual full of information on how to grow plants in small spaces. The book is full of wonderful tips, recipes and information on all the best things to grow in your home.”

Paltrow previously sprinkled stardust on Pennington’s first book, Urban Pantry, published by Skipstone.

You can both buy both, or either, on Amazon.com.

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Tags: Cookbooks, Seattle Authors, Gwyneth Paltrow

Home Cookin'

Check Out the Cover of the Top Pot Cookbook

It’s due out this fall.

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Top Pot puts down the pin, takes up the pen.

Lots of chatter for Top Pot these past few days—co-founder Mark Klebeck appears on Sunday evening’s Food Network Challenge. You’ll have to wait until 8pm EST/PST to learn how he fares in (and with) the ring(s), but in the meantime here’s some eye candy.

Chronicle Books is publishing the tome of “secrets and recipes for the home baker,” the first publication for the Pot. Mark and Michael Klebeck are the co-authors, but check it out! There in the byline is frequent Seattle Met contributor Jess Thomson.

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Tags: Cookbooks, Top Pot, Doughnuts

Home Coookin'

The Molly Moon’s Cookbook: Look For It In Spring of 2012

Seattle’s ice cream queen partners with Sasquatch.

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Molly Moon Neitzel will release a cookbook under Sasquatch Books. Photo courtesy Chase Jarvis.

You’ll have to wait til next week to learn where Molly Moon’s #3 will open (as well as an additional “micro-shop,” I hear), but in the meantime here’s another MM’s morsel.

Molly Moon Neitzel has inked a deal with local publishing house Sasquatch Books to author a cookbook slated for spring of 2012. Currently the title is Molly Moon’s Homemade Ice Cream Cook Book. Said purveyor is collaborating with the company’s pastry chef, Christina Spittler, to pen the 65-recipe manual, which will highlight the shop’s most popular flavors and seasonal offerings.

Expect lots of photos alongside “little stories from Molly about making the flavors,” says flack Jennifer Carroll, and “life stories from around Seattle” that have proved formative to Neitzel’s business. When Sasquatch approached Neitzel about the cookbook, she jumped at the opportunity, adds Carroll. “So many people want to share our ice cream with people outside of Seattle, and now they can send them the book.” And, she points out, customers will have the how-tos to churn “more interesting flavors” at home.

That said, no more whining when having to wait in line for your balsamic strawberry fix.

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Tags: Cookbooks, Food News, Ice Cream, Molly Moon Neitzel

High 5 Pie’s Dani Cone Is Coming Out With a Cookbook

Look for Cutie Pies in late spring/early summer of 2011.

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High 5’s cranberry nut pie. Photo by Kat Wertzler.

Drifts in the sweets world are signaling a pie moment, and here in Seattle Fuel Coffee ’s Dani Cone is doing her part to usher in the crusted heyday. On the horizon is a Capitol Hill retail space for her High 5 Pies. And, Cone tells Nosh Pit, a cookbook.

Cutie Pies is slated for a late spring/early summer 2011 release under publisher Andrews McMeel; Bellevue-based becker&mayer! is producing the tome. In it you’ll find 40 sweet-and-savory recipes for pies of all stripes: pies baked in muffin tins, pies baked in mason jars, hand pies, mini pies, deep-dish pies, nine-inch pies—even pie lollipops.

Though Cone penned the pie pub, she collabed with High 5 baker Cat Wilcox to craft the recipes—“And ate ridiculous amounts of pie in the process. And will be joining a gym.”—while local photographer Clare Barboza snapped the photos.

This is Cone’s second book, and like 2008 release Tall Skinny Bitter: Notes from the Center of Coffee Culture, this one materialized thanks to Fuel: “A couple of the great folks at becker&mayer! happen to be regular Fuel customers and have seen and enjoyed the High 5 Pies at the Fuel shops. As they are always looking for new ideas for books, and as the cookbook/foodie market is absolutely exploding, they contacted me to see if I had any interest in working with them to pitch a cookbook idea.”

Cone claims she’s “totally inept in the kitchen” (the folks at Bon Appétit may suggest otherwise) and lacks any formal training, ergo she never imagined she’d be putting her name on a cookbook.

Short on narrative but long on instruction, Cutie Pies nonetheless includes an anecdotal intro from her 92-year-old grandmother, Molly, a local author herself and source of High 5’s all-butter crust recipe. That’s Cone’s favorite part of the book.

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Tags: Celebrity Chefs, Cookbooks, Locavore News, Food News, High 5 Pie, Pie

Cookbooks

What You Missed When You Missed Last Night’s Cookbook Author Roundtable

Aphrodisiacs, doughnuts, and the saddest oyster tale ever.

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Non-chef Raymond Carver

An event that takes its name from a short story in which a fatal car crash sends a steering wheel into the sternum of a drunk teenager sets the drama bar pretty high. Based on premise alone, though, the bi-annual Kim Ricketts Book Events panel discussion with local cookbook authors, “What We Talk About When We Talk About Food,” doesn’t seem likely to plunge any deeper than a nick from a potato peeler.

Not so. Last spring’s iteration had nearly the entire audience salting its chardonnay with tears after an author read a tribute to her ailing father. Time before that, the crowd went fetal laughing at a writer’s description of a bodily fluid that, as a man, I didn’t even know existed.

The events have something else in common with Raymond Carver’s gorgeous, gin-soaked story “What We Talk About When We Talk About Love:” People sitting around a table, drinking and recounting tales.

Last night, the impossible-not-to-like Amy Pennington (author of Urban Pantry) led a discussion with five cookbook scribes: Shauna Ahern (co-author of Gluten Free Girl and the Chef), chef/author Ethan Stowell (Ethan Stowell’s New Italian Kitchen), Greg Atkinson (Northwest Essentials), Kim O’Donnel (The Meatlover’s Meatless Cookbook), and Lara Ferroni ( Doughnuts ).

The highlights: Stowell’s secret seduction recipe (it involves a sea urchin); the origin of Ferroni’s lifelong love affair with doughnuts (family road trip, cramped VW Karmann Ghia, Dunkin Donuts pit stop, bliss); Ahern’s burnt-garlic-as-metaphor; the O’Donnel clan’s flirt with fate via high cholesterol and steak.

But it was the author of Northwest Essentials—which first hit shelves a decade ago and has re-emerged for a new audience to devour—who lifted the evening to literary heights worthy of the event’s name. In a chapter ostensibly about oysters, Greg Atkinson recounted the moment he learned that his brother had died. The prose sent the audience on Atkinson’s grief-stricken walk along a Bainbridge Island beach and back to a table where tears and oysters and memory melted into one.

And that, after the panel disassembled and disappeared into the mingling crowd—and we all shouldered out onto the sidewalk and pointed our cars home—is what we talked about.

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Tags: Cookbooks, Review, Food Events and Festivals, Ethan Stowell, Kim Ricketts

Reserve oily

Taste Restaurant Holds Olive Oil Event

Including dinner, with olive oil cocktails.

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Taste at the Seattle Art Museum is holding a cool event to promote California olive oil.

Fran Gage, San Francisco author of The New American Olive Oil: Profiles of Artisan Producers and 75 Recipes, will lead a seminar on olive oil-making techniques and discuss food and olive oil pairings.

Then her dishes will be featured in a 4-course meal prepared by exec Craig Hetherington and ace pastry chef Lucy Damkoehler.

Dinner will be paired with an olive oil cocktail created by Taste mixologist, Duncan Chase.

The whole thing happens Saturday, Oct 2, starting at 3pm, with dinner at 6pm. Seminar plus tasting is $45; dinner $85. To reserve, call 206-903-5291.

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Tags: Cookbooks, Culinary Events, Taste Restaurant, Olive Oil

Hometown Pride

See Which Local Scribes Landed on Eater National’s Most Anticipated Cookbook List

Familiar names crop up in the blog’s must-buy roundup.

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Kim O’Donnel’s Meat Lover’s Meatless Cookbook comes out September 14.

Last week the editors at Eater National, a five-city-aggregate monster of a food blog, churned out a catalog of hot-ticket cookbooks soon to hit the shelves. The list runs 11 categories deep, each led by one (or in some cases, a couple) pubs the site’s “particularly excited about,” then several more honorable mentions. Yay for us, called out are several homegrown gastronomes:

Kim O’Donnel’s Meat Lover’s Meatless Cookbook is the first of the tomes you’ll see this fall. The September 14 release gets a mention in the “single subject” subhead for its vindication of vegetables and other animal-free meals. O’Donnel, a Canning Across America wonk, serves up 52 such menus in the book.

More flattery for Ethan Stowell: he lands on the “chefs, restaurants, and other famous food folk” list for his New Italian Kitchen, due out September 21. Stowell penned the ode to the Boot along with Leslie Miller.

Taking the top spot in the “professional and reference” category is the mammoth Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking, authored in part by Food Lovers’ fave Chris Young. He and Nathan Myhrvold and Maxime Bilet are compiling the insanely ambitious anthology (it’s 2,200 pages—zoiks!), which Young has described as “part cookbook, part reference work, part textbook, part philosophical statement.” Look for it in early December.

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Tags: Celebrity Chefs, Cookbooks

Twitter Files

Coming Soon to a Bookshelf Near You: Meat Lover’s Meatless Cookbook

Kim O’Donnel’s tome releases in mid-September.

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Local scribe Kim O’Donnel tweeted the news her Meat Lover’s Meatless Cookbook is due out September 14, just a few days before she heads east to tout the instructional tome. In it, find 52 menus supplanting veggie viands for meat.

So far O’Donnel, the Canning Across America pioneer, has plans to hit the Seattle circuit in late October.

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Tags: Cookbooks

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