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Mastering Knife Skills: The Essential Guide to the Most Important Tools in Your Kitchen (with DVD)

Mastering Knife Skills: The Essential Guide to the Most Important Tools in Your Kitchen (with DVD)Author: Norman Weinstein
Creator: Mark Thomas
Publisher: Stewart, Tabori & Chang
Category: Book

List Price: $35.00
Buy New: $18.69
as of 9/9/2010 22:27 EDT details
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New (27) from $18.69

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Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 19 reviews
Sales Rank: 25886

Media: Hardcover
Edition: Har/DVD
Pages: 224
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.3
Dimensions (in): 10.3 x 9.1 x 0.9

ISBN: 1584796677
Dewey Decimal Number: 643.3
EAN: 9781584796671
ASIN: 1584796677

Publication Date: May 1, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
As the number of gourmet home kitchens burgeons, so does the number of home cooks who want to become proficient users of the professional-caliber equipment they own. And of all kitchen skills, perhaps the most critical are those involving the proper use of knives.

Norman Weinstein has been teaching his knife skills workshop at New York City’s Institute of Culinary Education for more than a decade—and his classes always sell out. That’s because Weinstein focuses so squarely on the needs of the nonprofessional cook, providing basic instruction in knife techniques that maximize efficiency while placing the least possible stress on the user’s arm. Now, Mastering Knife Skills brings Weinstein’s well-honed knowledge to home cooks everywhere.

Whether you want to dice an onion with the speed and dexterity of a TV chef, carve a roast like an expert, bone a chicken quickly and neatly, or just learn how to hold a knife in the right way, Mastering Knife Skills will be your go-to manual. Each cutting, slicing, and chopping method is thoroughly explained—and illustrated with clear, step-by-step photographs. Extras include information on knife construction, knife makers and types, knife maintenance and safety, and cutting boards, as well as a 30-minute instructional DVD featuring Weinstein’s most important techniques.



Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 19



5 out of 5 stars Great Book!   August 21, 2010
johanna v satama
I'm a novice knife-wielder and this book and it's accompanying cd have been a go to source for me. I did a darn good job when I followed it to debone a chicken!


5 out of 5 stars Excellent book- how much we didnt know   July 17, 2010
J. Kim
If you enjoy cooking as much as I do then I think you will be happy with the skills and techniques that you can learn in this book. But after I tried his techniques using a chef's knife I agreed with his point. But regardless of what knife you choose the techniques are very useful and easy to follow. I especially liked how each vegetable is given it's own section and instructions. The section on choosing the best suited knife was also very detailed and helpful. . I spent a fair amount of time deciding which knife book to get, but I'm very happy with my choice. The book is incredibly detailed and has many useful photos. I highly recommend this book


5 out of 5 stars My wife seems to love it!   June 27, 2010
Dennis Swanson (Aurora, IL)
The book has lots of great illustrations on how to use your "good knives" if you have a set. My wife has always wanted a set of good knives and after looking at this book, she seems very excited to get learning with her new set. There are lots of neat lessons on creating fancy food presentations with simple to follow instructions. We haven't watched the DVD yet, but will soon. Seems to be a cut above the rest in knife skills instructional books.


5 out of 5 stars GREAT for the beginner   June 9, 2010
Michael Sean Kelly (Doniphan, MO USA)
Being a new home chef I found this book to be outstanding with all the discussions and pictures to back up the demostrations. I also found the DVD to be very useful. Its nice to see what you have read about on the DVD. I highly recommend this book for any beginning chefs who need the basics to knife skills.


5 out of 5 stars Outstanding for home chef's   April 25, 2010
K. ONEILL (Gastonia, NC)
I highly recommend this book. I also purchased "Japanese Kitchen Knives: Essential Techniques and Recipes" in the hopes I would learn more on technique. Although "Japanese Kitchen Knives" was interesting it was short on technique and long on recipes and, being a vegetarian, it was not anywhere near as helpful as "Mastering Knife Skills".
Chef Weinstein selects several vegetables to illustrate "knife skills" and these are just what I was interested in. I bought several handmade Japanese knives due to their really sharp edges. My first knife was a gift, a Kyocera Santoku ceramica which I fell in love with until it became dull and the only option was to send it off to be sharpened. My next two knives were Shun's, a Kershaw Shun Usuba, which I still love and use a lot and even with the admonition that it was "extremely sharp and use due care" I cut myself three times before I developed any skill (it's really, really, really sickeningly sharp and the handmade knives are even sharper). My third knife was a Chroma Damascus Santoku which I paid too much for, there being many Santoku's on the market in the same price range that are much better.
That said, I wish I would have had Chef Weinsteins book in hand before I purchased ANYTHING. I shied away from a 10" Chef's knife as I thought it was too big and too heavy. I have to admit that after purchasing the Shun Usuba($120), a Seikon Dojo Usuba(handmade, $244), an Asai PM Damascus 7 1/8" Gyuto ($356) and a 6" Petit Kazuyki Tanaka handmade ($320, god I love this knife, beautiful and cuts anything like butter), for just over a thousand dollars (ok, I really like them all, I mean really) I still wish I would have bought this book before I bought my first knife. Well, after I purchased this book I bought a Messermiester Meridian Elite 9" Chef's knife (a mere $120) and was astounded by how often I use this knife and how easy it is to use. Just a point here, I'm very careful now with my knives after my experiences with the Japanese knives and while showing this knife to my wife, you guessed it (see honey...ooops), I sliced an extremely thin piece of flesh off my right thumb, so thin it did not draw blood nor was it painful either when I cut it or later. I bought the 9" because I was still under the misconception that 10" was too big and after finding how easy the 9" was to handle I'm thinking the 10" would be even better. Oh, by the way, I'm 5'7" with what you might call fairly small hands and I'm in love with the Messermeister's. Chef Weinstein likes the J.A. Henckel knives but since he stated that he wished all manufacturers polished the spine like the Messermeister's that's what I bought.
Chef Weinstein, admittedly biased against Japanese knives, has made this home Chef a believer in German and French Chef's knives, not that I don't love my Japanese cooking razorblades, I do, but I'm now convinced I could have purchased the ultimate Knife wardrobe for the kind of money I spent on just three good Japanese knives. Oh, I also forked over mucho dinero on the right stones for sharpening the Japanese knives, something I do not regret at all, consequently all of my knives can be used to shave with and I have to agree with Chef Weinstein that slicing correctly adds to the flavor of vegetables. I think this is a must for your first knife book and I haven't even watched the video yet!
Great book, you'll just love it. For vegetarians it's a must first book...


Showing reviews 1-5 of 19


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