A must-have for serious home bakers.
And by "serious" I mean "skewing a wee bit fancy." Beranbaum, who has written more than 10 cookbooks deciphering the mysteries of great baked goods at home, produces here a volume for folks who aspire to genoise, rugelach, homemade lekvar, and slightly-more-high-maintenance than usual pastries, garnishes, and fillings (there's a recipe here for savory cream puffs with faux fois gras, so you know she's not fucking around).
Although the results are fancy, and the steps take a bit longer, the processes themselves are clearly explained in great detail, and beautifully illustrated so that you know what the end result should look like. All sorts of tricks and tips are slipped into each recipe, so even though you should be reading them carefully anyway, read the recipes extra carefully! And more than once. The bias here is toward sweet goods, with chapters on cakes, pies/tarts, cookies/candy, and bread/yeast pastries, some requiring special pans/equipment, which ends up making the book a bit spendy to use, but at least the ingredients are easily available (no need to run off looking for quince jam or whatever).
You really should have all the Beranbaum books in your collection, unless your library is so tiny you can't. This one would be a good pick for small libraries that can only afford one or two of these thick-as-a-brick guides. But really, budget for them all, at some point, as they would make a good reference shelf at home, too. I know I'll be purchasing this one for myself, and not just because I had no idea how easy it was to make lekvar (that shit is expensive by the bottle, comparatively, so seriously, look into that). Recommended for all library collections.