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Just because you are your household, don't assume eating solo limits you to having pizza, pancakes, or meat loaf in restaurants; buying them already prepared; or having to file extra portions in the freezer or the dustbin. As Jane Doerfer proves in Going Solo in the Kitchen, with no more effort than when cooking for two or more, one person can eat well and dine beautifully.
Doerfer's main strategies are to use fresh ingredients and to make friends with supermarket staff who can accommodate her needs in the land of large families. She gives detailed advice on storing foods--cooked chicken, for example, tastes better and has better texture when stored in liquid (like a sauce or broth), while potato salads and other prepared dishes keep better longer when left unsalted until just before serving.
Solo cooks do have advantages: you can eat what you want, as often as you want it, and the cost of a steak or lobster dinner is only for one.
Doerfer offers variations for recycling in case of leftovers. Her description of how to cut up a whole chicken is graphically clear (see "Chicken Management") and will save you money.
The recipes and techniques Doerfer offers will brighten the lives of solitary diners who love variety, good food, and home cooking. She provides recipes for everything you might want, from Chicken Noodle Soup to elegant Halibut with Asparagus, Cream Scones, perfectly cooked rice, and fresh, hot berry pie, made in just the right way for one. --Dana Jacobi
Book Description
At last, a practical and persuasive cookbook for anyone living alone--with more than 350 delicious recipes for all occasions--filled with money-saving tips and shortcuts. Here is food that will lure the reluctant single back into the kitchen. Featured in Southern Living magazine.
Customer Reviews:
Lots of recipes...and ingredients.......2007-09-26
This is a good recipe book...if you're prepared to have a lot of random ingredients in your kitchen. If you like to cook, then get this. If you're a college student pressed for time and money, look somewhere else. A few of the recipes are college student friendly, but most are not.
Just Okay.......2007-08-28
Since I'm allergic to seafood, there's a whole chapter in here I can't cook...plus many recipes in the other sections have some type of seafood in it. However, the ones I CAN make are great!
Good right out of the box.......2007-08-17
Just received my copy. I started flipping through recipes when I got home from work. I thought I'd run out to the store once I decided on a recipe. Lo and behold, I came across Fettucine with Onion Sauce. The description began: "On days when your refrigerator is empty, if you have onions, dried pasta, and olive oil you can put together this dish." I'll be danged! My refrigerator was empty! I had onions, pasta and olive oil! And I made the dish - a little over a half hour later I was eating, and it was delicious.
This is a great resource, with great ideas for quick, good quality meals that are faster and better than take out. I'm sold already, and the book paid for itself this evening by keeping me from going out for dinner.
Not just for "solos!".......2007-08-03
My spouse and I are empty nesters and I have been having a very difficult time cooking a meal that serves less than four, which means lots of leftovers -- or worse, wasted food. We are also trying to watch our weight these days, and with the recipes in this "cooking for one" book, we have created some delicious meals that we can easily split and enjoy together!
Many Recipes have become personal favorites.......2007-07-20
I love this book. It really helped me get out of the "take-out" habit and into cooking. This book really does give practical advice, and makes it easy to make 1 or 2 servings worth of food.
Average customer rating:
- A Year in a Life
- Going Solo
- Going Solo Review
- Going Solo By Roald Dahl
- Unbelievable and Amazing Stories!
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Going Solo
Roald Dahl
Manufacturer: Puffin
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 0141303107 |
Book Description
The fascinating story of Roald Dahl's life continues in Going Solo, a marvelous evocation of the author's wartime exploits. As a pilot in World War II, Roald Dahl had some wonderfully exciting and frighteningly near-death experiences including encounters with the enemy, battles with deadly snakes, and incredible dogfights. Told with the same irresistible appeal that has made Dahl one of the world's best-loved writers, Going Solo brings you directly into the action and into the mind of this brilliant man.
Customer Reviews:
A Year in a Life.......2006-12-24
What an entertaining read this proves--not surprisingly--by the author of the children's classic, CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY. Continuing the autobiographical expose of British boarding schools as revealed in BOY, Dahl opens this meant-for-adults book with a delightfully wacky view of his fellow Englishmen en route to work in Africa. Scornful of the repeated falls from stoic grace by so many of his predecessors, this young Empire Builder is at first shocked by the sight of so many decent chaps who have Gone Native--a result of prolonged absence from the UK and intense heat exposure. Can an idealistic youth rise above heat, humidity and British bravado to maintain his unflappable equanimity, or will he too succumb to the national trend?
Most of this book, however, consists of Dahl's serious account of his contribution to the Allied air war in Africa's western desert, followed by a long recuperation from head trauma. Before he returns safely to England, he describes the deadly action in Greece where German planes far outnumbered the intrepid RAF pilots. Interspersed among the reports of the air war are his own b/w photos and letters (self-censored) to his beloved Norwegian mother in England. This account will easily capture the reader's interest as Dahl translates the global struggle by bringing it down to an intensely human level. With his treasured possessions--pilot's Log Book and his 2nd camera--we leave him when he is reunited safely with his mother. A fast read--well worth the effort even if you are not a war buff.
Going Solo.......2006-11-29
Going Solo (the sequel to Boy) is a collection of Roald Dahl's most interesting stories of his time in Africa. These include: meeting a man you gives himself dandruff, teaching an African boy to read and write, seeing a lion attack a cook, learning to fly without a teacher, crashing in the African desert, leading a unit of R.A.F. soldiers to stop a caravan of German people from leaving Dar es Salaam, becoming temporarily blind, meeting the girl of his dreams then falling out of love when he sees her and living on a Greek airfield soon before he was grounded. Roald Dahl's style of writing changes each time slightly changes to fit the story. Basically, you get the idea that you have known Roald for years and he is just telling you an amusing story. Going Solo was not as interesting as some of his other fiction stories. For some readers it may not be interesting enough to keep you in the book; but it is not boring, thrills and adventure are always happening. To compare this to Boy would be a little difficult because even though they are the same writer, Boy is about his childhood and is for younger readers. Going Solo is probably for older readers. Even it you do not like one of the chapters the next will bring you back in. So if you want a lot of good anecdotes to read then or if you really liked Boy, you should pick up Going Solo.
Going Solo Review.......2006-05-24
Going Solo is the great story that Roald Dahl adventured throughout his young life. Roald Dahl accomplished many things once he was able to do things on his own. Mainly the book is about himself traveling all over Europe and Africa just trying to experience as much as he could. He travels all over the bottom of Europe and works way down and around Africa staying at many non civilized villages and getting to know many natives. At the time he is working for the Shell Oil Company until he finally quits. In East Africa he also is endangered with a near fatal death with a Green Mamba , one of the most deadly snakes. Roald also has a passion for the air force, and ends up joining the RAF. Going Solo is one of the most adventurous books that I have ever read, with the nonstop climax's and so many near death experiences. This is a very descriptive book with so many heroic twist that can keep anyone's attention. Roald Dahl is very famous for most of his work such as Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, but this book is amazing because this all actually happened to writer in real life. The greatest part about the Roald Dahl in Going Solo is that he never gave up, even after a plane crash that he should not have been able to live after. He was told that he would be blind for the rest of his life, but about a month later he started to gain his sight back. I feel that this book is a miracle.
Going Solo By Roald Dahl.......2006-02-07
I read the fantastic book named Going Solo by Roald Dahl. This book was an autobiography of Roald Dahl's life prior to and during World War II. The book explained many of his encounters with the enemy as a pilot for the Royal Air Force in Roald Dahl's personal view. There are an uncountable number of fascinating events that occur when he is a pilot. Some of them include when he receives a life threatening injury, going into a hardcore battle with no experience at fighting enemies, and getting out of a long-lasting dogfight where he was outnumbered 200 to 12. The other half of the book explained his thrilling adventures prior to the war when he worked for the Shell Company. Some of his experiences while working for the Shell Company included chasing a lion, saving a man from a deadly Black Mamba, and sighting a deadly Green Mamba enter his friends house. Every page of the book was full of plot and adventure, and I could not put this book down.
In the beginning of the book Roald Dahl is on a ship, which was taking him from England to Africa for a job with the Shell Company. He ended up in a beautiful tropic town named Dar es Salaam, located in Tanzania, which is on the coast of Africa. Once there, he was given a personal `boy' named Mdisho, which back then was like an unpaid worker. Mdisho and Roald form a very close father-son relationship, Roald being the father and Mdisho being the son. Roald teaches Mdisho many things, while Mdisho goes out and works for him. After a while, Roald decides to join the army as a Pilot Officer. He began his journey in flight training for six months. Then, he was given directions to join up with the 80 Squadron, who were fighting in the middle of the Sahara desert. The directions were incorrect and he ended up crashing and getting a life-threatening injury. Once he recovered, he was to meet up with the 80 Squadron again, who were now located in Greece. He finds himself fighting in Greece with only 12 planes in the whole of Greece. The Germans had thousands of planes located in Greece, so they fought as best they could. Once it was getting too dangerous, the 80 Squadron left and went on to a place named Argos, which was another fifty miles along the coast. After that, they went along to Palestine and Syria, and fought off more Nazis. He then was experiencing major headaches when flying and had to be sent home. This is a brief overview of the book, and as you can see it's full of suspense.
This book was an awesome book, because I learned a lot about how life was during World War II through the eyes of a magnificent writer. It was so good that I read it the first day I started reading it. Roald Dahl draws out a scene for you each battle, so you can imagine like you are there with him, in his Hurricane airplane fighting off the Nazis. This book is for the sort of person that enjoys reading fast-paced books and loves to read about history. Also, if you like the author Roald Dahl, I would suggest reading it because it tells a lot about him, and his personal history. If this book sounds interesting to you then I definitely recommend it and suggest you check it out, or maybe you might want to check out the prequel to Going Solo titled Boy.
Unbelievable and Amazing Stories!.......2005-10-31
WOW! Going Solo, by Roald Dahl is an amazing and heart capturing book. Read this book if you love war stories. These stories are serious, funny, and keep you wanting more. I found the book almost impossible to believe during some points in the amazing novel.
Dahl's biography tells about his survival in the dated war planes without experience (while outnumbered 100 to 1) and on the ground as commander with no experience again. Dahl uses great language and thought to describe things and to progress the novel with amazing simplicity. To me, simplicity and straight-forwardness makes a book enjoyable (not school like), and pretty easy to read. It is not a "piece of cake" reading, but it isn't unbelievably hard. His survival in the air of Greece and Africa come down to one thing, instincts. I believe Going Solo shows how most humans would act during a war; very scared, rather excited, nervous, and filled with heart pumping adrenaline. As I read, my eyes read faster than my brain could keep up with. I felt I was flying right next Dahl, watching him struggle to survive the most horrid war of history, World War II. What I also love about Roald Dahl's story is that he has a perfect balance of humor and exploding action. There was never one seriously boring dead place.
This is one of the best books I have ever read. I love Going Solo because I always want to read more. Most of the time I do not wish to put it down. These are the types of books I love to read. Astonishingly, the novel feels like a movie. At the last second when all hope seems to be lost, Dahl shows his intelligence by giving you a story you will remember for a long time. That is why I recommend this book.
Do not read Going Solo if you hate adventurous, unbelievably true World War II stories. Trust me; read Going Solo if you want a great read with amazing plot.
The novel builds and builds with drama and action, then the unfathomable happens...read Going Solo to find a great ending with a great last word.
Book Description
The author's popular Home-Base Business series has shown thousands how to successfully operate mail order, catalog and newsletter businesses from hom. With Going Solo, he adds a timely new area to this series--home-based consulting. This comprehensive, step-by-step guide show you how to take your specialized knowledge--gathered from a job, career, education, or life experience--and turn it into a profitable, thriving home business. It takes you step-by-step through the entire process--from what you need in your home office, to how to target and reach your market, how to create proposals that sell, and how to turn a completed work assignment into additional business, and more. It's essential reading for anyone considering or preparing for a home-based consulting business. from
Customer Reviews:
A Good Read!.......2001-03-20
William J. Bond presents a guide for people who want to become home-based consultants. His manual covers every aspect of freelance consulting, from finding, landing, and keeping clients, to maintaining records and understanding the marketplace. This common-sense book is part narrative and part workbook, including questionnaires and fill-in list forms. It is detailed, but if you have any experience as a solo practitioner, the elementary basic business practices outlined may cover material you already know. We at getAbstract recommend this book as a primer for anyone who wants to become a consultant working from a home-office and to those who are already doing exactly that and would like a few more tips about how to make a better living at it.
Not too helpful.......2000-06-24
If you really are just starting out and have no clue what you're doing then this book might be helpful. Might. For me, most of the book was too vague to be useful. Comments to the effect of "choose the best possible system [or arrangement] for X" drove me crazy. What, in his opinion, is the best system, and why? Also, the sentences were so short and basic that I felt like I was in grammar school. This book might serve as a useful checklist for things to think about, but I didn't find many answers or very good advice. Skim it at the library.
Easy to read, wonderful planning guide.......1999-11-29
I just finished reading Going Solo, and by the time I was finished, I had a fairly complete business plan already completed. Not only did this book contain valuable information, it also stimulated pages of ideas and things to do. I definitely recommend reading this book with a pen and notebook handy.
Customer Reviews:
Okay, so it's not Steinbeck.......2007-01-09
I liked this book very much. No, it's not riveting, and it's not Steinbeck. If every author had to write like Steinbeck to be published we wouldn't have more than three or four books a year to read. I like books written by real people. It makes me feel like maybe I could do it too.
I enjoyed Barb's descriptions and impressions about the places she went and the people she met in her old Toyota Chinook with her dog. How so many people asked "Aren't you afraid"? Her answer: "Afraid of what"? I worried for her that her camper would breakdown and make her trip a disaster. I worried that her dog would be hit by a car.
I could relate as I often drive 700 miles each direction to the family cottage in Ontario, Canada with just my dog. I think nothing of traveling alone and am surprised when others look at me as though I must be a little bit crazy. For me, taking off like that by myself is pure joy! And I'm about the age Barb Thacker was when she made this trip.
I've ordered her next book and am looking forward to reading it. I hope others feel the same way.
Take it for what it is........2003-08-23
I can see why some readers may not find this book to their liking; my wife read it after me and would puff her cheeks every few pages at something 'Barb' had written. I loved it, though.
Barb ventures from her New Mexico home up to the Maritimes on the Eastern Canadian coast and back in one 4 month stint staying, more or less exclusively at campgrounds around the country. The book is in large part, a recounting of her trip in diary form, from the people she met and the places she visited to the antics of her loveable dog, Ink. Although Barb can get a little Mother Earth-y for me at times, I loved this book enough to purchase her follow-up.
How Can I Be Lost When I Don't Know Where I'm Going?.......2003-04-03
This book struck a veritable symphonies worth of chords inside the soul of this fastidious critic. It is quite refreshing to read the intimate first-person observations and perspectives of this brilliant author's travels. After reading this book, you will feel like you have just met an old dear friend. It will likewise have you listing the house with the realtor, purchasing that little camper and fulfilling that primal desire --- wanderlust. I thank Barb Thacker for such a brilliant book.
One of the best trips I ever took, without leaving!.......2003-04-03
Barbara's humor is the type you giggle yourself into a heap over then explode trying to repeat it to the next person you see. Nothing comes close to giving you a most real-life feel of seeing the scenery pass by. An ultimately necessary book for all gypsies, nomads, wanderers and every person in between.
Puhleeese!.......2003-02-14
This is a more or less verbatim rendering of her diary and a deadly boring read. All her visits to friends are detailed. This might be nice in a letter to mutual friends but the fact that the Grahams were moving from Ghost Ranch to Durango or that "Barbara and her husband were contemplating a divorce" is not of interest to me.
And then there are the teasers that turn out to be dead ends, for example, "I had never been to Crested Butte and just loved the name. Sure enough, the road was marked. We headed down a hill and past an interesting guest ranch. About three blocks later, the pavement ended. Nothing but gravel. I wasn't sure Tessie (the nickname of her vehicle) was ready for 20 miles of mountainous gravel road, nor did I feel I was ready to tackle it either. We turned around and went back to Route 133 which led us north through beautiful country. The weather was great..." ...
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Going Solo: Widows Tell Their Stories of Love, Loss, and Rediscovery
Ted Menten
Manufacturer: Running Pr
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General
| Death & Grief
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ASIN: 1561386111 |
Average customer rating:
- Fantastic
- Boy
- Boy
- A great read for any age
- Magical stories from childhood and beyond of a great author
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Boy / Going Solo
Roald Dahl , and
Quentin Blake
Manufacturer: Penguin Books Ltd
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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Customer Reviews:
Fantastic .......2006-02-28
I think this book was a very nice description of a man's life. There's always something happening, and that contributes to the fact that this book is never boring. That's why I like this book. Roald Dahl is right when he says that it's not an autobiography. I don't know what makes it different, but there is something, that's for sure.
The way he describes his family is very nice. You can almost sense the love between all of them. That's another positive thing about the book.
I also learned allot about how life was like in ` the old days `. Among many other things, I was quite surprised by the way the kids were treated at school.
I liked this book very much, and I would recommend it to others. Both kids and grown- ups.
Boy.......2006-02-21
Boy
Tales of Childhood
The book Boy is a biography that tells the childhood of Roald Dahl. He tells stories about his life in boarding school, his punishments, and his funniest moments as a kid. The book talks a lot about he's problems growing up and his experiences in boarding school. One of my favorite stories is about how everyone in the boarding school would get free Cadbury chocolates. The reason why everyone got chocolates was because the company wanted feedback on the chocolates so every kid would be very careful and try each chocolate and write whether they liked it or not. When Roald Dahl was younger he wanted to make the perfect filling for chocolates he had all these ideas about what a chocolate factory looked like. I liked this story because I think it is really cool to be able to test chocolates and I also like this because the story Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was based on the chocolates from boarding school. Roald Dahl wrote this book really well and I recommend it.
Boy.......2005-10-07
Boy
Roald Dahl
In writer Roald Dahl's memoir called Boy, he described his many school adventures during his childhood. I chose this book to review because I have always been interested in Dahl's work. I also chose it because I had heard that it was excellent and I had read a segment of it in class. Roald Dahl was an interesting boy who attended several different schools and had odd and upsetting experiences which taught him about life.
When Dahl was seven, his mom sent him to Llandaff Cathedral School. He and his friends would walk to school together every day always stopping at the candy shop which was run by an awful woman. To repay her for her unkindness, Dahl came up with the idea to put a mouse in the jar of gobstoppers. "`Why don't we', I said, `slip it into one of Mrs Pratchett`s jars of sweets (pg.36)?'" The cruel candy woman headed for the school and told the headmaster what Dahl and his friends had done, and the headmaster beat them all brutally with his cane. Dahl was very upset and knew he should never have been treated this way. His mom decided that Dahl would go to an English boarding school after the end of this distressing year.
Dahl was only nine when he attended his first day at St. Peter's Boarding School. Every boy wore the same outfit and carried a tuck box filled with all sorts of treats. Each Sunday, the students were required to write a letter home, and to make sure nothing horrid was said about the school, the headmaster would supervise the letter writing. During Dahl's first term, he was extremely homesick. He desperately wanted to leave school so he decided to fake an appendicitis attack. The doctor quickly realized Dahl wasn't ill but told him, "`I'll say you had a very severe infection of the stomach which I am curing with pills (pg.98).'" Dahl was extremely grateful that the doctor understood his pain and was willing to help him stay home from school for a few days. After that, Dahl managed to fight through his homesickness and continue at St. Peter's for three more years of peculiar adventures.
At age thirteen, Dahl attended a prestigious school called Repton. He had to wear odd clothing and travel by train to get to this school. For two of his years at Repton, Dahl was a Fag which meant that he was a servant for the studyholders. All they had to do was shout the word "Fag!", and "...every Fag in the place would have to drop what he was doing and run flat out to the source of the noise (pg.157)." One of the most humiliating experiences he had as a Fag was when he was forced to sit on a toilet seat to keep it warm for a studyholder all winter long. Dahl knew he would never want to be degraded like this again. His experiences at Repton, much like those at his other schools, were strange and disturbing.
Roald Dahl survived these three schools and learned many lessons from each of them. He realized that life was full of unusual and sometimes upsetting experiences. He learned to despise physical punishment, and he recognized that help could be found in very unlikely places. He came to the understanding that everyone should be treated like equals and be respected by others. Dahl was happy to leave school forever after his many weird and unhappy school adventures.
A great read for any age.......2005-08-03
This was the first Roald Dahl book I read. My now-husband gave me Boy for my 22nd birthday because it was one of his favorite books as a child. I loved it and read it and Going Solo as quickly as I could. I recommend it to anyone of any age and will definitely read it to my children. Dahl had an eventful childhood which he narrates with the compassionate and mischievous tone of his other books. Boy is perfect for parents and children alike because Dahl remembers how life feels from the child's point of view whilst, a parent himself, appreciating the difficulties of parenthood and adulthood. Few books better help children and their parents to see eye-to-eye. Also admirable are the strength and acceptance that allows him to overcome childhood hardships without a trace of bitterness or melodrama. More than anything, it is a beautiful, interesting and down-right amusing look at a world not so far away in distance or time.
Magical stories from childhood and beyond of a great author.......2003-08-04
This is a wonderful combination of Roald Dahl's childhood and schooling, followed by stories from his life in east Africa and experiences as a pilot in the war. It is written in the same eloquent style as his children's books with seemingly amazing stories about home surgery, the village sweet shop and trips to Norway. You can see the beginnings of a number of his books in his experiences. I can thoroughly recommend as a great read.
Average customer rating:
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Going Solo
Ronald Dahl
Manufacturer: Farrar Straus Giroux
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
ASIN: B000O3HSBM |
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