Essential Pépin: More Than 700 All-Time Favorites from My Life in Food

by Jacques Pépin

500 to 700 recipes revised and updated from out of print books and new recipes created for this book, plus 300 line illustrations by the author.

  • Format: eBook
  • ISBN-13/ EAN: 9780547607382
  • ISBN-10: 0547607385
  • Pages: 704
  • Publication Date: 10/18/2011
  • Carton Quantity: 1
About the Book
About the Author
Excerpts
Reviews
  • About the Book
    For the first time ever, the legendary chef collects and updates the best recipes from his six-decade career. Featuring DVD clips demonstrating every technique a cook will ever need. 

     

    In his more than sixty years as a chef, Jacques Pépin has earned a reputation as a champion of simplicity. His recipes are classics. They find the shortest, surest route to flavor, avoiding complicated techniques. 

     

    Now, in a book that celebrates his life in food, the world’s most famous cooking teacher winnows his favorite recipes from the thousands he has created, streamlining them even further. They include Onion Soup Lyonnaise-Style, which Jacques enjoyed as a young chef while bar-crawling in Paris; Linguine with Clam Sauce and Vegetables, a frequent dinner chez Jacques; Grilled Chicken with Tarragon Butter, which he makes indoors in winter and outdoors in summer; Five-Peppercorn Steak, his spin on a bistro classic; Mémé’s Apple Tart, which his mother made every day in her Lyon restaurant; and Warm Chocolate Fondue Soufflé, part cake, part pudding, part soufflé, and pure bliss. 

     

    Essential Pépin spans the many styles of Jacques’s cooking: homey country French, haute cuisine, fast food Jacques-style, and fresh contemporary American dishes. Many of the recipes are globally inspired, from Mexico, across Europe, or the Far East. 

     

    In the DVD clips included in the ebook, Jacques shines as a teacher, as he demonstrates all the techniques a cook needs to know. This truly is the essential Pépin.

     
     
     

     

  • About the Author
  • Excerpts

    Tomato Chowder
    with Mollet Eggs and Croutons
    Serves 4

    A French favorite, mollet (moll-ay) eggs are similar to poached eggs in texture, with runny yolks and soft whites. The eggs are cooked in their shells in barely boiling water for about 6 minutes, then thoroughly cooled and carefully shelled. This basic tomato soup, topped with the eggs and large croutons made from country-style bread, can be made vegetarian by replacing the chicken stock with vegetable stock or water.

     2  tablespoons olive oil
     1  medium onion, coarsely chopped
    (1 1/4 cups)
     6  scallions, trimmed (leaving some green) and chopped (3/4 cup)
     1  carrot, peeled and coarsely chopped
    (1/2 cup)
     3  garlic cloves, crushed and chopped
     2  tablespoons all-purpose flour
     3  cups homemade chicken stock
    (page 612) or low-salt canned
    chicken broth
     12  ounces cherry tomatoes
     1  teaspoon salt, or to taste
     1/2  teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
     1  teaspoon dried thyme
     1/4  teaspoon dried sage
     1  28-ounce can plum tomatoes
    GARNISHES
     4   slices country-style bread, preferably stale, for croutons
     2  teaspoons olive oil
     1  small garlic clove
     4  large eggs
     1/4   cup grated Gruyère or Emmenthaler cheese

     Heat the olive oil in a large stainless steel saucepan. When the oil is hot but not smoking, add the onion, scallions, carrot, and garlic and cook over high heat, stirring constantly, for 4 to 5 minutes. Sprinkle the flour on top of the mixture, stir thoroughly, and cook for 1 minute longer, stirring. Mix in the stock.
     Add the cherry tomatoes to the soup, along with the salt, pepper, thyme, and sage. Process the can of plum tomatoes for 5 seconds, and add to the soup. Bring to a boil, stirring occasionally, then cover, reduce the heat to low, and cook for 20 minutes.
     Using a hand blender, blend the soup for 15 to 20 seconds (or process in a food processor and return to the pan).
     
    MEANWHILE, PREPARE THE GARNISHES: Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.
     Brush the bread slices with the olive oil and arrange them in a single layer on a cookie sheet. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes, or until nicely browned. Rub one side of the croutons with the garlic clove, and set them aside.
     Using a thumbtack or pushpin, make a hole in the rounded end of each egg. Gently lower the eggs into a pan containing enough boiling water to cover them and cook for about 6 minutes in barely boiling water. Drain the hot water from the pan and shake the pan to crack the shells of the eggs on all sides. Fill the pan with ice and water and set the eggs aside to cool completely.
     When the eggs are cool, peel them carefully (so as not to damage the yolks, which are still runny) under cool running water. Keep the eggs in cold water until just before serving. (The eggs can be cooked up to a few hours ahead and refrigerated in the cold water.)
     At serving time, drain the cold water from the eggs and replace it with hot tap water. Let stand for 5 minutes, so the eggs are lukewarm inside.
     Bring the soup to a strong boil, and ladle it into four bowls. Place an egg in the center of each bowl, and wait for a couple of minutes for the eggs to warm in the center. Place a crouton in each bowl and serve, sprinkled with the cheese.

    Grilled Veal Chops
    with Caper and Sage Sauce
    Serves 4

    This is a good summer recipe. I sear the chops briefly on a very hot grill and then transfer them to a warm oven, where they continue to cook slowly in their own residual heat. The sauce, a simple mixture of onion, capers, lemon juice, and olive oil, is made separately and the chops are coated with it before they are served.
     Be sure you don’t overcook the chops. Although veal is not served rare, as beef is, it should be slightly pink inside and juicy throughout.
     Chicken or even a piece of fish also goes well with the caper and sage sauce.

     4  veal rib chops trimmed of excess fat (about 10 ounces each), and 1 inch thick
     1  teaspoon canola oil
     1/4  teaspoon salt
     1/4  teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

    SAUCE
     1/2  cup diced (1/4-inch) red onion
     2  tablespoons drained capers
     1  tablespoon minced fresh sage
     2  teaspoons julienned lemon zest
     1  tablespoon fresh lemon juice
     2  tablespoons olive oil
     2  tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
     1/4  teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
     1/4  teaspoon salt, or to taste
     2  tablespoons homemade chicken
    stock (page 612) or low-salt canned chicken broth

     Heat a grill until it is very hot. Preheat the oven to 150 degrees.
     Rub the chops with the oil and sprinkle them with the salt and pepper. Put the chops on the clean grill rack and cook for about 2 1/2 minutes on each side. Transfer them to the oven and let them rest and finish cooking for at least 10 minutes (the chops can be kept in the oven for up to 30 minutes).
     
    MEANWHILE FOR THE SAUCE: Mix all the ingredients in a bowl.
     At serving time, place a chop on each of four plates and coat with the sauce.


    Iced Grand Marnier Soufflé
    Serves 6 to 8

    Iced soufflés are not real soufflés that cook and inflate in the oven, but look-alike frozen desserts. A collar of aluminum foil or parchment paper 3 to 4 inches higher than the rim of the soufflé dish is attached to the dish, so the mixture can be molded higher than the sides. When the collar is removed, the soufflé looks as though it has just emerged from the oven. It’s a perfect dessert for a party, and it must be made ahead. After the soufflé is prepared and its collar secured, wrap it tightly in plastic wrap and then aluminum foil so it doesn’t pick up tastes from the freezer.

     1  cup sugar
     1/3  cup water
     1  tablespoon grated orange rind
     6  large egg yolks
     1/2  cup Grand Marnier or Cointreau
     2 1/2  cups heavy cream
     6-8  ladyfingers or the same amount of sliced génoise or pound cake
     1  tablespoon unsweetened cocoa powder

     Combine the sugar, water, and orange rind in a saucepan, bring to a boil, and boil for 3 to 4 minutes, until it turns into a light syrup.
     Meanwhile, put the yolks in the bowl of an electric mixer.
     While beating at high speed, pour the hot syrup in a steady stream over the yolks and continue beating for 12 to 15 minutes. The mixture should be thick, smooth, and pale yellow. Add 1/4 cup of the Grand Marnier or Cointreau and beat for another 30 seconds on high speed.
     Whip the cream in a large bowl to a soft peak. With a rubber spatula, fold the whipped cream into the soufflé mixture. Cover the bottom of a 1-quart soufflé dish with a thick layer of the mixture (about 2 inches thick). Arrange the ladyfingers or cake slices on top. Sprinkle with the remaining 1/4 cup Grand Marnier. Fill the mold right to the top with the cream mixture; refrigerate the remainder.
     Using a doubled long sheet of aluminum foil or parchment paper, make a collar around the mold, extending 2 to 3 inches above the rim, and tie securely with a string. Place the mold in the freezer for 1 hour, or until it is firm.
     When the frozen soufflé mixture is firm, add the remainder of the mixture, which should bring the soufflé to at least 2...

  • Reviews
    "A must-have for any cookbook fan."
    --Edward Ash Millby for USA Today

    "...simple without being dumbed down; approachable yet still adventurous... Whether he's explaining how to make Escoffier quenelles with mushroom sauce, black sea bass gravlax...or tarte tatin, [Pepin] makes it seem doable and shares tidbits of wisdom to boost confidence and kitchen knowledge... For serious cooks and beginners alike, this is an instant classic that would enhance almost any collection."
    -Publishers Weekly, starred

    "Jacques Pépin has been a constant inspiration to me. This book is a distillation of the very best of his creations, showing both the remarkable breadth of his cooking and the beautiful continuity of his dishes over the past sixty years. He makes food the way it should be made: Simple, seasonally ripe, pure, and impossible to resist."
    —Alice Waters

    "Jacques Pepin is The Master. The undisputed authority on . . . well, just about everything relating to food. If Jacques Pepin tells you this is the way to make an omelet — or to roast a chicken, then for me, the matter is settled. As with all his works, this is a vital, essential volume that should live in your kitchen forever. Nobody knows more or does it better."
    —Anthony Bourdain

    "If there's a 'best of the best' in cookbooks, this is it--a lifetime of greatest hits from our favorite ambassador of French cuisine. These recipes are more than just mouthwatering; they are as lively, unpretentious, and appealing as the man behind them, reminding us (as if we needed reminding) why we fell in love with French food, and with Jacques Pépin, in the first place. An essential collection from an essential chef."
    —Dan Barber

    "Jacques Pepin is a true artist and a masterful one at that. His commitment to excellence and dedication to quality education are evident throughout his storied career. Essential Pepin reflects his incredible body of work in what feels like an important literary achievement, and we, his pupils, are ever so fortunate to benefit from the breadth of knowledge within its pages. I often find that with Jacques Pepin, whether in print or on television, I walk away from my time with him having learned a little something more, and I feel a bit richer for that."
    —Lidia Bastianich
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