Queezle_Sister's Profile

From: Salt Lake City, UT USA

Joined: March 29th, 2010

About me: I enjoy cooking, and my favorite internet COOKING community is the one here at cookbooker. If you want to connect about my other non-academic passion, you can find me as QueezleWeaver on Ravelry, and mostly Warped Weavers. But I've miss you cookbooker, and so here I am again, and happy to contribute.

Favorite cookbook: Savory Way

Favorite recipe: roasted anything (most recently grapes)


Latest review:

August 23rd, 2019

Stuffed Zucchini with spiced beef or lamb from Zaitoun

When it is zucchini time, it can be difficult to find something interesting. But this was both different and a total delight! Zucchini are scraped out and roasted. The "meat" from within the zucchini... read more >


recipe reviews (1403)
book reviews (39)
useful review votes (961)

Queezle_Sister's Reviews


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41 recipe(s) reviewed. Showing 1 to 41Sort by: Title | Date | Rating

How to Cook Everything Vegetarian: Simple Meatless Recipes for Great Food

By Mark Bittman, Alan Witschonke
Wiley - 2007

2nd February 2011

Anything-Scented Peas : page 333

This versatile recipe calls for peas, gives brief technical advice (a bit of butter or EVOO), and a menu of fragrant additions from which you can select. I chose orange zest, and then spotted my bottle of dried shallots, so gave it a dash of that, as well. When it first started cooking, I was afraid it was a bad combination, but in the end it was pretty good.
I imagine that this recipe could be better - by using different additions, or paying better attention to cooking time (my woops). I highly recommend this as a simple way to cook peas, and a method that offers great flexibility.

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2nd July 2012

Balsamic Strawberries with Arugula : page 42

Great balance of flavors - sweet strawberries, bitter greens, and sour vinegar. I have been shy about using arugula. Its assertive flavor, though, was perfect in this combination.

Note we also made the variation, with goat cheese. Beautiful visually (with or without goat cheese) and this is something I could eat regularly.

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22nd May 2011 (edited: 26th May 2011)

banana bread : page 691

This recipe includes coconut - and that banana coconut combination is a winner. However, it was difficult to get this cooked all the way through, and the instructions (to allow some crumb on the toothpick) was too vague.

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12th September 2011

Beets Baked in Foil : page 267

More of a set of guidelines, this "recipe" considers several approaches to cooking whole beets. In the typical Bittman style, the pros and cons of the different approaches were given. Because I was roasting beets so I could marinade them for a salad (reviewed here, instead of wrapping with foil, I roasted them together in a pyrex pan.

The time range for my different beet sizes was very close, and by baking them together, I could easily test and remove individuals as they became soft to a knife.

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Surprisingly good flavor for a relatively quick dish!

A sauce prepared from a can of diced tomatoes and a couple onions (well chopped in the food processor) is spiced with Garam Marsala, salt and pepper. Tofu and peas are added, then coconut milk.

We served this over brown rice. The peas gave a bright sweet note in a nice slightly spicy tomato sauce.

Took me about 40 minutes - not too bad for a week night.

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4th September 2011 (edited: 4th September 2011)

Broiled Cherry Tomatoes with Herbs : page 374

Concentrated tomato flavor - and really easy!

The end result of this recipe is very similar to the roasted cherry tomatoes I reviewed last week. However, it is much quicker. These took about 8 minutes, in contrast to the 2 hours last week. Spread over fresh bread - its amazing. They should also be great frozen, to bring a bit of summer when we are waist deep in snow.

Note also that this recipe offers many variations, including using different herbs, larger tomatoes (which are slice), and a version with Parmesan cheese.

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4th February 2012

Bulgur Pilaf with Cabbage, Lebanese style : page 557

A simple, rustic, dish that made a light and satisfying meal. This dish takes relatively little hand-on time, and it had a nice flavor, especially with extra black pepper.

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30th May 2013

Bulgur Pilaf with Vermicelli : page 556

I had fine bulgur on hand, and this was one of the only recipes (other than kibbeh) that calls for fine. Its interesting in that you add vermicelli to the mix. The flavor is largely governed by the flavor of your onions and your broth. Mine was OK, but I thought it needed additional seasoning.

The real plus, though, is that this dish is almost entirely hands off. After sauteing the onion, you let it simmer (bulgur vermicelli and broth added), and then let it sit. That gives the cook time to attend to the other parts of the meal that require last-minute attention.

useful (1)  


16th July 2011

Carmelized Onions : page 329

Simple, sweet, dark, and delicious!

This is the recipe that taught me how to make perfect, deep dark and sweet caramelized onions.

The key here is to be patient (it takes an hour), and to start off with just onion, and let the heat drive much of the water off of them. Only later do you add olive oil and salt.

Caramelized onions are great on so many dishes - sandwiches, burgers, but in my family, we love these on pizza, paired with goat cheese.

Don't hesitate to follow thie recipe - I don't see how it could possibly be improved.

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13th October 2014

Cherry Tomato Salad with Soy Sauce : page 57

This was a nice change of pace, but it didn't do anything to enhance our perfectly ripe tomatoes. In the notes above the recipe, Mark Bittman says this is a good way to prepare winter grape tomatoes. I recommend saving this recipe for those (relatively tasteless morsels) and save your seasonal peak tomatoes for something better.

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25th December 2011

Cinnamon Buns : page 716

Cinnamon rolls were requested for Christmas by 13 daughter. Because we had a party the night before, we didn't get started until morning. Nevertheless, 3 1/2 hours later, we were chowing down on some delicious, light flaky buns with rich cinnamon flavor.

This recipe is a variation that uses Bittman's Rich Golden Bread. The bread is rich, with butter, eggs, and whole milk. It came together easily in the food processor. The dough is rolled into a rectangle, a sugar-cinnamon mixture is sprinkled on top, and moistened with water. I think other versions I've made used a layer of butter on the dough, but this worked just fine.

Waiting for the cut rolls to rise was close to torture, but the wait was well rewarded. DH and I found the unfrosted rolls to be perfect, but a bit of white frosting elevated this for the kids. I would not hesitate to make this recipe again.

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6th April 2011

Citrus Tapioca Pudding : page 885

I love custardy comfort food, and instant tapioca (recipe on the box) is one of my standbys. This recipe also uses instant tapioca, but oh - it is so much more! A good dose of lemon zest, an additional egg, and the extra step of beating the whites elevates this to the stratosphere.

The recipe calls for a mixture of lemon, orange, and lime zest - and I'm sure that would make it even better. But with just the humble lemon zest is still awesome.

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19th September 2011 (edited: 19th September 2011)

Coconut Cake : page 853

Excellent coconut flavor.

This recipe is a variation on the Olive Oil Cake (p. 852). The cook is instructed to replace the olive oil with coconut oil, and to replace the orange juice with a coconut milk + coconut mixture. Otherwise, proceed as written.

This leads to a problem, because the coconut oil is a solid at room temperature (in contrast to the liquid olive oil), and the coconut milk is also more viscous than orange juice. You are instructed make a batter with the oil, coconut milk, egg yolks, sugar, flour, baking powder, and fold in beaten egg whites. However, as written, the batter turns out to be the consistency of very thick library paste --- way too thick to fold in the egg whites.

I added about another 1/2 C of coconut milk. It was still very thick, but I did manage to fold in the whites (not without difficulty).

Nevertheless, the cake turned out well! Surprisingly light and moist. Watch the time carefully, for us, it was done before the top was browned.

This cake is sweet enough to not need a frosting, but I am going to keep my eyes out for a coconut milk-based glaze.

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13th February 2012

Cucumber Salad with Sour Cream or Yogurt : page 48

English cucumbers, peeled, sliced, and seeded, enrobed in a sour cream-lemon juice-paprika sauce. These tasted fine, but they were really ugly - imagine a red-pink sour cream sauce - over cuke chunks. Yes, chunks. Not pretty. It did have a nice flavor and crunch, through.

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22nd May 2011

Eggplant Gnocchi : page 487

This produced a fairly light gnocchi, and very bland. I couldn't really taste the eggplant, which seemed a shame. Most were boiled, but we also oven roasted some. The roasted ones had better flavor, but of course also extra fat calories.

Probably not worth making a second time.

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17th August 2011

Everyday Buttermilk Waffles : page 203

A decent waffle recipe, accompanied by many variations.

We used yogurt thinned with milk in place of the buttermilk (suggested by Bittman), and we were out of all purpose flour, so I substituted whole wheat pastry flour.

These were OK, the flour choice made them heavier than we prefer.

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16th August 2011

Everyday Pancakes : page 200

A very decent pancake. Like many recipes in this cookbook, it is accompanied by a large number of possible variations. We varied the recipe slightly by substituting yogurt for some of the milk. They were light (without separating eggs), and cooked very nicely.

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15th January 2011

French Toast : page 177

I can never remember the right egg/milk ratio for french toast. This recipe uses 2 eggs and 1 C milk. I prepared it with the addition of vanilla (but not cinnamon or sugar)) and used older peasant-style bread. It turned out perfect, crispy outside, etc.

What I especially like about this recipe (and most recipes in this cookbook) is that several interesting variations are suggested at the end. I just made the standard recipe, but am intrigued by the offered variations.

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28th April 2011 (edited: 28th April 2011)

hard-cooked eggs : page 166

A perfect hard-cooked egg peels easily and has a perfect yellow yolk. Unfortunately, this recipe only scored on one of these - the yolk looked fine but the shell takes huge chunks of egg white with it.

This recipe has you put eggs into cool water, bring them to a boil, turn off the heat, cover the pan, and time (9 minutes). We then followed Bittman's advice, and plunged the eggs into an ice water bath.

Why did this fail us? For one thing, its not that clear cut when to turn the water off - when it starts boiling, or when it comes to a roiling boil? Alternatively, its failure could be related to our altitude. We live at close to 6000 ft, and boiling water is 6˚C lower than at sea level.

Next easter, I'll try an alternative method.

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23rd January 2011 (edited: 23rd January 2011)

Light and Fluffy Pancakes : page 201

This recipe involves beating egg whites separately, and then folding them into the yolk-flour-etc batter. The recipe states that the product is a cross between a pancake and a soufflé, and Mark Bittman was right. We learned that we didn't really care for a soufflé-like pancake. The instructions specify incomplete mixing in of the egg whites. Our first couple pans full had big streaks of egg whites, and this was not popular. We did a better job of folding them in for the rest of the batch. These were not so fluffy, and were considered either on par with, or only slightly better, than our usual Krusteaz Buttermilk Pancake Mix.

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19th March 2011

mashed potatoes with pesto : page 342

Like most Bittman recipes, this mashed potato recipe includes the basic technique, advise about potato varieties, mashing or ricing, and then it offers a range of variations. I thawed a bag of last summer's pesto, used red-skinned new potatoes (unpeeled), nonfat milk, and a lot of pesto. This resulted in a wonderfully flavored slightly green (with bits of red skin) potato.

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6th October 2010 (edited: 6th October 2010)

Muffins, Infinite Ways : page 692

I prepared this recipe, using the suggestion of adding blueberries and corn meal. It was amazing. The cornmeal gave an indescribable crunchy counterpoint to the sweet juiciness of the blueberry.

The other good thing is that the recipe is fairly low fat, and its quick baking. Try it!

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5th November 2011

Oven-Braised Celery : page 284

Celery very simply prepared - started on the stove top and then moved to the oven with some liquid. Bittman suggests making sure the celery is very tender - and the very tenderest of the pieces I tasted had a distinct sweet flavor. Be generous with the pepper!

I only gave this a 3 because, well, its celery. Nothing awe-inspiring, but it is a very decent cooked vegetable, and one I will certainly make again.

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9th November 2011 (edited: 9th November 2011)

Parmesan Breadsticks : page 711

Crunchy breadsticks with a good Parmesan flavor.

As a bonus, these were also easy to make. Early in the morning the dough came together in the food processor just as described. A quick 1 hour rise, and then the dough went into the refrigerator for the work day. Ten hours later, I let it warm up for about an hour, rolled it out, and baked it. A few tips - its easy to slice into thin breadsticks with a pizza cutter, and easier to brush with olive oil and sprinkle salt before slicing.

If you are looking for thick bready bread sticks, this is not your recipe. But if you want a good crunch, these are delectable. 13 daughter says "these are really satisfying - with a good bread, cheese, and salt flavor." They are addictive - the pile of 70 breadsticks were reduced to almost nothing.

In standard Bittman style, there are many variations -- one to suit about any taste.

I prepared these to go with a blended squash soup.

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20th February 2011

Quick cooked Bok Choy : page 269

This is a very nice reminder of how to saute bok choy. What I liked was Bittman's advice to cook the stem segments long enough to allow them to soften. Too often I find myself doing such a quick sauté that the vegetables are way under-cooked.

This basic recipe is followed by some variation that look delicious, and it is amenable to endless variation.

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Beautiful crunchy salad - and it tasted great.

Lovely small beets from my CSA, cabbage from the CSA, and shallots from my garden!

This salad has you shred your beets and shallots in the food processor, mix in a mustard-vinegar-olive oil dressing, and to that, finely chopped cabbage and orange is added.

The beets really carry the day here, they are the predominant color and flavor. But I liked the small bits of sweetness from the orange.

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14th September 2011

Raw Beet Salad with Carrot and Ginger : page 50

Not sure how to rate this, as the beets from my garden tasted more like radishes (too much summer heat?), and I disliked the resulting sharp flavor.

I think the concept - beets plus carrots and ginger - is a good one. Next fresh sweet beets I get, I'm giving this recipe another go.

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7th October 2010 (edited: 7th October 2010)

Rice with Chickpeas : page 509

This was a good enough mid-week dinner. Both kids and SO liked it. It had pretty good flavor, and was filling and felt healthy.

I prepared this as directed, except I added a step of slightly burning the sauted onions. In this recipe, you saute vegetables, add a liquid, uncooked rice, and cooked chickpeas. I didn't think that there was sufficient liquid for the rice, and I almost added more. I'm glad I didn't, though, because it came out perfect. Start to finish I probably spent 45 minutes.

I will make this again, but probably following one of the several variations.

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10th February 2011

Roasted Brussels Sprouts with Garlic : page 273

Wonderfully roasted Brussels sprouts! This recipe is a bit fussy - you first have to brown the halved Brussels Sprouts in a frying pan - then transfer to the oven to finish roasting. This extra effort, though, yields very nicely colored vegetables that are really cooked through. A delightful finishing touch is a bit of balsamic vinegar. The balsamic is not shown in my photograph, but it really added something. I'll definitely be making this again.

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This is a pretty good roasted cauliflower recipe. My kids don't like raisins, though. Therefore, the family prefers roasted cauliflower with just oil, vinegar, salt and pepper. However, I like this recipe very much.

But the most important thing - roasted cauliflower is out of this world. It is nothing like steamed cauliflower (which I also love). Roasting firms up the cauliflower texture. I cannot make enough roasted cauliflower - each time I make it, it ALL gets eaten.

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19th May 2011

Rose Tapioca Pudding : page 885

Exotic! This is another variation on Mark Bittman's tapioca pudding recipe - with rose water instead of lemon zest. I was a bit skeptical, and almost returned to my beloved Citrus Tapioca on the same page. This was interesting, delicious, and an unusual taste.

I wouldn't go out and buy rosewater just for this recipe. But if you, like me, have a bottle languishing in the back of your cupboard, then this is a good reason to dust it off and use a bit.

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23rd January 2011

Saffron Olive Oil Cookies : page 842

This recipe is very easy to prepare, and so is a great recipe for kids. We are also blessed with a healthy amount of saffron, so using this expensive ingredient is not a detraction. We've made these cookies many times. They produce a warm pink-orange colored cookie that smells wonderful, but looks only so-so. Their flavor is good, but their texture is nothing to write home about. Nevertheless, when we make these, they disappear very quickly.

One way I think this recipe could be improved is to do less beating of the saffron. You are instructed to beat them first with the oil, and again after you add eggs. For me, this results in the threads being broken apart. An improvement is to use only a small amount of saffron in the beginning, and add more at the end. If you do this, you can occasionally see the dark red threads, which turns a dull-appearing cookie into something with a more interesting or mysterious look.

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12th October 2011

Simplest Fried Rice with Peppers : page 519

So very easy - sautéed onions and peppers, add cooked rice (cook to brown), then soy sauce and sesame oil. Yes, it is really that simple.

Kids LOVED it. I wish I'd thought to add fresh ginger.

Of course this recipe is followed by more complicated and more more interesting sounding recipes.

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8th February 2011

Spinach Salad with Feta and Nutmeg : page 41

This recipe involves crumbling feta into sherry vinegar or lemon juice, mixing in spices and olive oil. This breaks the feta into small pieces, and as Mark Bittman points out, it allows it to coat the spinach leaves very well.

We didn't have any sherry vinegar, so used the recommended alternative - lemon juice. Unfortunately, the salad was so sour, 3/4 of us could not eat it.

I like the conceptual approach, but this recipe requires some serious tweaking.

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15th October 2011

Sweet Green Tomato Upside-Down Cake : page 854

Great concept, but a flawed recipe.

The tomatoes were still crunchy at the end, and the cake's top was over-done while the middle not cooked through.

The first problem (crunchy fruit) could easily be corrected by cooking the tomatoes in the butter and brown sugar for 10 or 15 minutes before adding the cake batter. And I think if there was less batter, it might cook more evenly.

This recipe was one of several upside-down cake variations - and these others might work out better than this tomato variation.

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10th April 2011

Sweet Potato Biscuits : page 695

This recipe is produced beautiful orange-flecked biscuits. They didn't have much sweet potato flavor, but they were very tender. In general, though, they were less flaky than the standard biscuits. They were good, but not outstanding.

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27th December 2011

The World of Rice Salads : page 79

A good dish to take to a pot luck! We prepared this for a Hanukkah party. I cooked brown short-grain rice in my pressure cooker, and then followed the basic instructions - I used extra red bell pepper, added an English cucumber, but skipped the fresh parsley (didn't have any). I prepared a vinaigrette with shallots and sherry vinegar, which worked well.

In the standard Bittman style, there are not only 2 additional recipe variations described right after this recipe, but also a two page table with 12 more variations on the next two pages. I love rice salads, and I bet all the recipes are great.

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11th September 2011

Tomato Cobbler with Cheesy Topping : page 376

Tomato flavor, cornmeal-containing cobbler topping, and melted sharp cheddar on top. So flavorful!

This might be the best of the variations we've tried. Look at the links tab to see the reviews of some of the other versions.

The joy of this recipe is that preparation is easy, and the flavor just knocks my socks off.

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5th September 2011 (edited: 5th September 2011)

Tomato Cobbler with Extra Corny Topping : page 377

Amazing flavor - the taste of summer on your fork - and better than any sweet cobbler I've ever tasted. And it turns out to be one of Mark Bittman's favorite recipes, too.

It didn't hurt that we have a great tomato crop, and could use peak ripeness tomatoes (mostly romas, some other heirloom varieties thrown in for fun). The tomatoes are quartered, and tossed with some corn starch, salt, and pepper. Larger tomatoes were cut into smaller pieces. I used a healthy dose of pepper, and am glad. I also was worried that it might be bland, and so added about 1/4 C fresh basil. It probably would have been just as good without.

The topping was easily prepared in a food processor. Flour, corn meal, butter, baking powder, b. soda, salt, an egg, and buttermilk. The instructions say it should come together as a ball, and if it doesn't, to add more flour. Ours didn't, we added another 1T flour, and it was still in a wet mess on the bottom of the food processor. We just went ahead, and it turned out great.

Like most recipes in this cookbook, there are many variations. Because we had fresh sweetcorn, I made the variation where you mix fresh corn with the cornmeal. It amped up the corn is a very good way.

I would gladly eat this most every day of tomato season.

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11th September 2011

Tomato Cobbler with Herb Topping : page 376

Great tomato flavor, and a decent topping.

This is a variation on a recipe I previously reviewed and loved. This one was almost as good. We added about 1/2 C fresh basil to the cobbler topping. We didn't like it quite as well as the version with corn, and the version with cheese.

A great thing about these recipes - no need to peel the tomatoes, and I didn't even seed them. Such excellent tomato flavor.

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29th January 2011

Vegannaise : page 772

This recipe is very tasty. I loved this recipe. I only got to taste it once before I added it to a sandwich. it was tremendously good. It was easy and I think that I will be making this again every time that I want mayonnaise. I never liked mayo before I tried this but this recipe called for mayo so I made this.

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