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The Sweet Spot

Asian-Inspired Desserts

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

When it comes to Asian desserts, most Americans think of fortune cookies. But, in fact, the Far East is home to a dazzling array of sweets rich with tropical fruits, crunchy nuts, aromatic spices, and, yes, even chocolate.

In The Sweet Spot, renowned pastry chef Pichet Ong presents a collection of one hundred recipes for cakes, cookies, pies, tarts, puddings, ice creams, candies, and more. There are traditional Asian desserts with innovative twists, such as Sesame Balls, Mango Sticky Rice, and Almond Tofu, and classic American favorites, like Spiced Coconut Brownies, Banana Cream Pie, and Cream Puffs, livened up with Asian ingredients and cooking techniques.

Eschewing the heavy use of butter and sugar, Ong instead highlights the vibrant flavors of Asia—jasmine, lychee, orange blossom water, passion fruit, yuzu, mangosteen, and sesame, to name just a few. And despite the complexity of flavors and textures, all of the recipes are easy enough to make in home kitchens, requiring minimal effort for maximum results. Dazzle dinner-party guests with elegant showstoppers—Thai Tea White Chocolate Tart, Coconut Cream Pie with Toasted Jasmine Rice Crust—or delight the family with simple weeknight treats—Pomegranate Sherbet, Ginger Oatmeal Raisin Cookies.

The Sweet Spot includes lush color photographs of almost all of the finished dishes, and a foreword from legendary restaurateur and chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten. Savory Asian cuisine has been popular in America for years. Now it's time to embrace the enticing range of exotic desserts.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 19, 2007
      Finding a compilation of Asian-inspired desserts isn't always an easy task, as baking sections tend to be chockfull of Italian and French influenced titles. The good news is Ong (owner of NYC's P*ong) presents more than 100 accessible, top-notch recipes inspired from such countries as Japan (Honey Castella, or kasutera
      ), China (Peanut Turnovers) and India (Pistachio Rose Thumbprint Cookies). Popular desserts from New York's famed Spice Market (where Ong has consulted)— Chocolate and Vietnamese Coffee Tart and Jasmine Rice Pudding—lend themselves to frequent repetition. Twists on American favorites such as the Cracker Jack–like Spiced Caramel Popcorn made with mukawa
      (Indian candied fennel seed) and Coconut "Twinkie" Cupcakes with Lemon Filling are presented alongside adaptations of recipes from renowned pastry chefs and include Dragon Devil's Food Cupcakes (Elizabeth Falkner) and Chocolate-Mango Cheesecake Parfait with Macadamia Cookie Crumbs (Vicki Wells). Those unfamiliar with Asian ingredients can read up on everything from mochi flour to mangosteens in the Sweet Asian Pantry chapter. Recipe steps are numbered, and each selection includes a chef's tip—where to find ingredients, technique advice, cultural notes. A sleek design with color photos makes this a visual treat as well as a culinary one.

    • Library Journal

      May 15, 2007
      Pastry chef Ong will be getting a lot of publicity this year with his first book and his first restaurant, P*ong, which opened in the Greenwich Village area of New York City in April. The author's mentor, Jean-Georges Vongerichten, wrote the foreword to this cookbook of over 100 recipes for puddings, pies, cookies, cakes, candy, frozen treats, and drinks. The standard cookies and cakes (Carrot Cake, Dragon Devil's Food Cupcakes, Coconut Chocolate Chip Cookies) are comfort food; Avocado Milk Shake and Sake-Sauteed Plums with Ginger and Star Anise may excite, and Chocolate Cakes with Matcha Truffle Centers certainly will indulge chocoholics. The majority of the desserts are not for the calorie conscious. Heavy cream and condensed and evaporated milk are main ingredients along with ginger, chocolate, and coconut. The recipes, some of which are not for the novice, are clear, and most do not require a great amount of preparation. The author has succeeded in walking "the fine line between novel and comfortable" in a unique cookbook that bridges East and West. Recommended for libraries with adventurous cooks.Christine Bulson, SUNY at Oneonta Lib.

      Copyright 2007 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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