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Tuesday, February 21, 2012

The Splendid Grain


The Splendid Grain


My mother bought The Splendid Grain from my mother websits very happy because it has to ship the product back at home in quick time. After all, we carved The Splendid Grain out of the box. We have found that aspects of it are beautiful. And very
modern. It is not in use. But after we read the beauty of The Splendid Grain. Find out the details in the field of very little use. And the use of simple and not confusing. My mother is very old and it can be used without problems. The Splendid Grain
makes our family has enjoyed using it very much. I would recommend The Splendid Grain if you look at the applications close. I would recommend it to you, but what is good. If you still hesitate to say that when you see the price of
it, you hardly feel The Splendid Grain. It is appropriate to the property itself.The Splendid Grain






The Splendid Grain Overview


With 250 luscious recipes, along with eight pages of color photographs, The Splendid Grain dramatizes how you can incorporate extraordinarily healthful grains into your life without changing your lifestyle.

Grains can transform taste and texture in unsurpassed ways like these:

  • Nutty, sweet oats form the delicious crust of fried chicken

  • Piquant quinoa heightens and absorbs the savory juices of gingered lamb

  • Hearty buckwheat becomes a sweet, delicate, Parisian-inspired crepe

  • Thai black sticky rice flavored with coconut makes unforgettable exotic banana dumplings.

The natural and native history of each grain is also explored along with its health benefits.



The Splendid Grain Specifications


Rebecca Wood grew up on a family farm near Ogden, Utah. As a college graduate in the '60s, she landed in San Francisco and studied cooking with macrobiotic masters Michio and Aveline Kushi. The Splendid Grain proves that Wood's continuing holistic passion for being on intimate terms with what we eat has appeal for mainstream cooks. Philosophical, eclectic, homey, hokey, stuffed with old-fashioned values, and strewn with appealing new ideas, this is a lovingly written, thoroughly researched work. An enchanting storyteller, Wood sweeps you through interesting cultural anthropology and agricultural history, then presents an inspired collection of whole grain dishes. Recipes range from simple variations on the familiar oat pilaf, risotto, and tabouleh to tempting and imaginative barley-stuffed meatless dolmadakia. (The book is not vegetarian; meat, poultry and seafood dishes are included.)