Going Solo in the Kitchen: A Practical and Persuasive Cookbook for Anyone Living Alone-with More Than 350 Easy, Delicious Recipes and Strategies for Food Shopping, Storing, and Recycling
At last, a supremely practical cookbook designed expressly for single people!
With more than 350 superb yet simple recipes for all occasions—and loaded with time-and-money-saving strategies for buying, storing, and recycling food in quantities that won’t get wasted— Going Solo in the Kitchen is for solo cooks who don’t want to spend a lot of time in the kitchen but who are tired of take-out, and who want to eat food that’s delicious, nutritious, and inexpensive.
Whether it’s a quick one-dish meal of Sautéed Beef with Mushrooms, a satisfying soup supper such as Vegetable Bean Soup with crusty bread, a summer night’s dinner of Avocado, Papaya, and Shrimp Salad, or a Sunday splurge of Chicken Breast Baked with Garlic (with enough leftovers for a sandwich at work the next day and a cold chicken salad later in the week), here is food that will lure beginners and seasoned cooks alike into the kitchen, putting a variety of flavors and a wealth of taste into every meal.
Get this cookbook, not for the recipes, but for the significant portion of the book spent on how to organize your kitchen and conduct your shopping and cooking to work best in a solo household. Many of these tips also are great for the 2-person home.
My favorite part of this book is a way of using the freezer as short-term storage that was completely new to me.
I got this book for my father after my mother died and he started cooking. He wasn't interested in new recipes so I inherited it and loved it. I found so many GREAT ideas and tips in the book that I used for single recipes and adapted for use in other recipes.
I found 8 recipes to try out and hopefully add to my repertoire. Having ingredients broken down for cooking for one is helpful. This book was great for listing several variations for nearly every recipe.
I really enjoyed looking through this book. Lots of fresh ideas for throwing together quality, quick meals for one. Also includes many handy tips on using leftovers to create a new meal for those of you who quickly get sick of eating the same thing more than a time or two. The night I picked this book up, I ended up making made-from-scratch pancakes for the first time. They were a bit rubbery (probably because I used soy milk) but yummy and a wonderful late night snack all the same.
A worthwhile book for anyone who is tired of spending money on prepared food or sick of pasta but not sure where to start with cooking real meals for oneself. Lots of tips for shopping, storage and using up leftovers so food doesn't go to waste. I didn't actually make any of the recipes, but for the most part they're straightforward and not complicated. Not a keeper for me since I'm already cooking for myself pretty successfully.
Tends to be faster (and more successful) to double a recipe which serves one than to reduce recipes that serve 4-6, so I occasionally pick up a book like this one to supplement our large library of "cooking for two" books.
I wouldn't normally comment on a cookbook, but this one is exceptional. I'll be returning my copy to the library once its replacement (58 cents on Amazon) arrives. Useful advice and inspiration on every page.
The best book I've found so far for the single cook. The book also includes lots of tips and tricks for singles.. As well as a nice baking/dessert section with smaller portion sizes.
Definitely good for cooking by yourself. There weren't too many funky ingredients (except that the author seems to really love anchovies), and most recipes looked manageable.