I enjoy watching both the CI and ATK shows on WTTW on Saturday afternoons, even though I find a lot of the information dubious and the recipes geared toward the LCD. But every once in a while a recipe looks promising. So, I decided to plunk down ~$23 for the
Kindle version of The Complete America's Test Kitchen TV Show Cookbook 2001 - 2019, which is described as including every single recipe from the show through the 2018 season. Unfortunately, I have to say that so far I've made a few and none have been worth repeating.
Most recently, I tried their Arrabiata sauce recipe and it was pretty disappointing. I should have known better once I saw the inclusion of paprika because really, what self-respecting Italian recipe would include it? Nevertheless, I followed the ATK recipe to the letter and ended up with a mediocre outcome. It wasn't terrible but it wasn't anything I'd ever make again, either.
I've repeatedly improvised better sauces. I mean how hard is it to make a decent, spicy tomato sauce? As I ate it, I thought, this isn't too horrible for a meatless sauce but then I remembered, it wasn't even meatless. It includes anchovies. I didn't think the trade-off was worth it. I'm guessing this dish would have been at least 95% of what it was, even without the anchovies. Why bother making something that you can't serve to everyone unless it's good enough to justify it?
So often the recipes include seemingly-wacky steps, shortcuts that make no sense or ingredients that have absolutely no business being included. I wonder if this is because they are geared toward people who don't know any better. Maybe it's because they're intended for people who live in areas where authentic ingredients are just not available. Or maybe it's because, as I said to myself while I ate my stupid Arrabiata sauce, these people just don't get out much.
Pleasant, reasonably entertaining tv, nice-looking food but nothing with which a knowledgeable home cook or devoted eater needs to bother. I'm just glad I had the instinct to only buy the book rather than subscribe to their website. $20 a month for that is a true sucker play, especially when you think about how many cook books by knowledgeable, accomplished authors one could buy for $240/year.
=R=
By protecting others, you save yourself. If you only think of yourself, you'll only destroy yourself. --Kambei Shimada
Every human interaction is an opportunity for disappointment --RS
There's a horse loose in a hospital --JM
That don't impress me much --Shania Twain