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TM
The International Breakfast Book
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HERE TO ORDER
Coffee and toast. Cereal and milk. Lacking in taste, texture, color,
and variety, breakfast hardly seems worth getting up for. Forced to down
rubbery, unadorned scrambled eggs before leaving for school each morning
as a child; that's exactly what food writer and chef Martha Hollis thought--until
she tasted her first authentic New York bagel with cream cheese, accompanied
by a fragrant, steaming cup of perfect coffee. Fueled by her new breakfast
consciousness, Hollis began to travel the world, waking up raring to eat
and stopping strangers to ask, "What did you have for breakfast?" The result
is THE INTERNATIONAL BREAKFAST BOOK
(Macmillan USA; December 1997), an enticing slice of morning life for cooks
eager to start off each day with a taste of adventure.
A self-proclaimed morning globetrotter, Hollis shares the distinctive
fare on the breakfast menu in select places on every continent--including
China, Japan, Malaysia; Australia and New Zealand; Austria, France, Italy,
Spain, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom: Israel; Turkey, Persia and
India; Morocco and Ethiopia; the Caribbean and Mexico; Brazil and Venezuela;
the South Pole; and the United States, from New Mexico to Virginia. Whether
visiting a traditional teahouse in Hong Kong, whole grain bread bakeries
in Amsterdam, or peppercorn farmers in the jungles of Borneo; whether indulging
in a leisurely meal at an upscale hotel or hanging out with busy breakfasters
on the street, Hollis found ample food for thought--as well as to eat.
"There is one rule for breakfasting--eat whatever is available and eat
whatever you want," the author emphasizes. "If you skip breakfast, you
are missing a joyous way to begin every day."
Rich in anecdotes revealing a bounty of breakfast rituals and traditions,
THE INTERNATIONAL BREAKFAST BOOK entertains
and enlightens as it tempts the palate. Each chapter is conveniently organized
by ingredient--whether it's eggs, bread, cake, cereal, potatoes, beans,
fruit, fish, meat or a wet, wild, and wonderful beverage. With stops at
open air markets, street carts, farms, gourmet shops, and five-star restaurants
around the globe, Hollis serves up recipes and culinary adventures to perk
up any morning. The author shows how to create such unexpected dishes as
Greek Tomato and Feta Scrambled Eggs, Mexican Chicken Chilaquiles, Jamaican
Escoveitch Snapper, Indian Dosai with Curried Potatoes, Cape Breton Gaelic
Oatcakes, Swedish Sunflower-Carrot Rye Bread, Viennese Marzipan Breakfast
Cake with Chocolate Chips and Ginger, and Queensland Fresh Pineapple Fritters--as
well as how to brew the ultimate cup of English Tea. But the surprises
go beyond the kitchen. Readers will discover:
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How one culture's dinner may be another's breakfast (or vice versa)--for
example, the Japanese count on a hot bowl of miso soup with fish, seaweed,
and rice in the morning; Egyptians start the day with falafel; and the
Dutch and Hungarians enjoy pancakes for dessert.
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Why the traditional English breakfast is regularly eaten in Singapore and
parts of Africa.
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The truth about whether Italians drink cappuccino and eat pizza in the
morning.
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How Danishes got their name--and the staggering array of Danishes available
in Denmark.
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Breakfast staples that satisfy the "grab and go" crowd around the world--for
instance, the busy in Bangkok eat noodles in broth from a plastic bag,
while harried Malaysians wolf down the huge thin rotis of Indian origin
soused with eye-watering chilies.
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The controversies, cults, and conventions surrounding coffee and tea--plus
other favorite morning refreshers, from the cool, yogurt-based Indian Lassi
to the spicy Liberian Ginger Beer.
Additional features include sample breakfast menus from different countries
to inspire entertaining; a helpful glossary of common cooking terms; and
a list of mail order sources for unusual ingredients. Waking up world of
possibilities beyond frozen waffles and fast-food sandwiches, THE INTERNATIONAL
BREAKFAST BOOK brings a little-known truth to light: the most important
meal of the day can also be the most entertaining.
Sample Recipe and Travel
Vignette:
MOUSSE-IN-A-CUP: FIT FOR
A QUEEN
Cacao beans were brought back to Europe by the new world traders. In
short time they enhanced the product with sugar starting the world's passionate
love affair with chocolate. Adding milk created a beverage enjoyed today
by both children and adults.
In the Hotel le Crillon, one of the truly luxurious venues of Paris,
Les Ambassadeurs, the two-star Michelin rated restaurant, Chef Christian
Constant's cadre of chefs prepares a beverage much closer to chocolate
mousse than the thin hot cocoa of my childhood snow days (back when the
only stars I knew were either in the sky or in movies).
The Parisian waiter at the Hotel le Crillon immaculately attired in
jet black suit and stiffly starched white shirt politely queried "cafe,
tea, ou chocolate, Madame?" Being so close to the site of infamous Marie
Antoinette's finish, I opted for her favorite late 1700's breakfast beverage--chocolate.
The Crillon, elegantly sits in the Place de Concorde where the guillotine
operated during the French revolution. The Place de la Concorde (meaning
harmony) today has a 3300 year old obelisk from the Temple of Luxor in
Egypt which replaced the original statue of Louis XV.
The hot chocolate is a beverage so rich, creamy and heavenly that one's
natural inclination is to look upward towards the Crillon's ceiling, perhaps
to a divine source of inspiration. Here the painter, using naked young
boys depicts every trade of importance in the rebuilding of France's major
edifices. Surrounding the paintings are marbles faces, five different varieties,
with gold gilded decorations. The ceiling itself is in gentle colors of
pink and turquoise in a cloud-like setting.
The breakfast meat selection is quite extraordinary with ox tongue,
sliced veal, rare roast beef, Parisian ham, chicken, smoked salmon. A bevy
of fresh juices including squeezed plum juice. In addition to aged Gouda
and other hard cheeses are a number of soft, beautiful breakfast cheeses
an yogurt. Bowls of cereal and freshly sliced fruits provide a closer touch
to the morning fare of the nonroyals.
The staff of forty chefs works in one of the most beautifully sumptuous
kitchens in the world--a decor quite unlike the usual commercial, somber
stainless steel. The sides of the cook tops are all in marble surrounded
with brass. The work tables are surrounded with brass rails, all requiring
and receiving daily hand polishing.
To match this mousse-in-a cup, amongst this regal splendor, Marie Antoinette's
quip "let them eat cake," came to mind. The pastry chef from the Alsacian
region of France had already anticipated this. On a multilevel silver tier
server with chocolate cake and other pastries sat a kuglehoff studded with
sultanas (raisins) and a golden brioche, the rich buttery bread with a
thick crust and an incredible delicate interior.
Chilling in a silver bowl were bottles of mineral waters including Perrier
and a bottle of Tattinger champagne. The Tattinger family's holding including
the Crillon as part of the Concorde Hotel group, Baccarat crystal, Haviland
China, and Antal Gouillant perfumes, along with other distinctive lines.
The Baccarat collection is particularly evident right up to and including
the chandeliers. Entering the lounge and tea area to the restaurant are
two six-foot tall candelabras by Baccarat. In the center of the room, carefully
protected in a glass case, is the show stopper:a crystal elephant carrying
a golden basket with decanters for liquor--an incredible stunning mastery
of the art of crystal.
The potent, rich chocolate from the Isle of Guanaja, sugar and cream
are cooked to create the "starting elixir." In the morning a magic portion
of this is mixed with heavy cream and heated. Immediately it is placed
in the silver service pot and presented in royal tyle. Hot milk is passed
for anyone not quite fanatic enough to handle this mousse-in-a-cup.
4 ounces dark, bittersweet chocolate
1 cup sugar
2 cups heavy cream
hot milk, to taste
In a heavy pan or double boiler melt chocolate, sugar and 1/2 cup of
cream. Stir until completely mixed and creamy for about 5 minutes. Just
before service time add remaining cream and heat. Pass hot milk separately
for individual blending. Serves 4 Note: The ancient Mayans would often rise before dawn and have hot chocolate
or a hot corn drink, atole with tortillas or tamales. Usually their chocolate
was unsweetened, had no dairy products and was served with spices.
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