Reddit Reddit reviews Smoke and Pickles: Recipes and Stories from a New Southern Kitchen

We found 7 Reddit comments about Smoke and Pickles: Recipes and Stories from a New Southern Kitchen. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Cookbooks, Food & Wine
Books
Regional & International Cooking & Wine
U.S. Regional Cooking, Food & Wine
Soul Food Cooking, Food & Wine
Smoke and Pickles: Recipes and Stories from a New Southern Kitchen
Artisan
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7 Reddit comments about Smoke and Pickles: Recipes and Stories from a New Southern Kitchen:

u/retailguypdx · 4 pointsr/Chefit

I'm a bit of a cookbook junkie, so I have a bunch to recommend. I'm interpreting this as "good cookbooks from cuisines in Asia" so there are some that are native and others that are from specific restaurants in the US, but I would consider these legit both in terms of the food and the recipes/techniques. Here are a few of my favorites:


Pan-Asian

u/LAST_NIGHT_WAS_WEIRD · 3 pointsr/Cooking

There’s a really good bourbon brown sugar carrot recipe in this cookbook. On mobile now but will try to find the recipe later.

u/acn09 · 2 pointsr/Canning

The bourbon jalapenos and caraway pickles were both from Edward Lee's Smoke and Pickles book. I found a lot of inspiration in it.

u/Under_the_Volcano · 2 pointsr/books

I'll be honest, this is sort of off the wall, but I read Edward Lee's Smoke & Pickles a couple of weeks ago and I thought it was outstanding. It's a combination Southern cookbook and memoir about the child of Korean immigrants who grew up in the Bronx, was briefly an annoying Brooklyn hipster, but ended up being a chef in Kentucky. It's basically a cookbook (and not one for entry-level cooks either), but each section starts with a long, thoughtful, engaging essay about how his life journey ended up with him being a good old boy who works buttermilk and bourbon into every dish and occasionally hangs out at slaughterhouses or goes pheasant hunting. I dunno, it's just cool and really, really well-written.

u/BarbarianGeek · 2 pointsr/Cooking

Any of the Thomas Keller books, French Laundry, Ad Hoc at Home, Bouchon, and Bouchon Bakery. The only one you'd probably want to avoid is Under Pressure.

Also, Heston at Home and In Search of Perfection are great books.

If you're into southern food, check out Sean Brock's Heritage and Ed Lee's Smoke & Pickles.

Finally, I'd suggest Modernist Cuisine at Home if you're up for splurging.

u/C02PP5 · 1 pointr/Louisville

You said Southern Style but I really like Ed Lee's collards + kimchi served at MilkWood which is technically Korean-Southern fusion. I love it so much so that I quit using my grandmother's recipe and adopted his. Recipe here: http://www.pbs.org/food/recipes/collards-kimchi/ basically the entire restaurants menu is in this cookbook https://www.amazon.com/Smoke-Pickles-Recipes-Stories-Southern/dp/1579654924