Eat This Now: A Home-Cooked Meal
As fall settles in, a new cookbook from a local chef calls us to the hearth
Turn to Philadelphia chef Aliza Green’s newest cookbook, Starting with Ingredients, for guidance. Green’s approach to home cooking is downright old-fashioned: These recipes don’t look to a celebrity chef for inspiration, but rather to the ingredients themselves. (Celery root was the muse for the autumnal dish of
Turn to Philadelphia chef Aliza Green’s newest cookbook, Starting with Ingredients, for guidance. Green’s approach to home cooking is downright old-fashioned: These recipes don’t look to a celebrity chef for inspiration, but rather to the ingredients themselves. (Celery root was the muse for the autumnal dish of roast chicken and apples that's pictured.) The tome is an exhaustive, if far from comprehensive, collection of more than 550 recipes inspired by 100 common ingredients. Each of these could be, and probably has been, the subject of an entire book, and Green’s attempt to have the final say on the subject—through historical essays, trivia, useful tips—can make this cookbook hard to navigate. But the recipes, many with Mediterranean and Middle Eastern flavors, have the approachable, satisfying feel of dishes straight from the author’s kitchen—when the author is a restaurant and cookbook vet who has shared a stove with the likes of Georges Perrier and Guillermo Pernot.