<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>More than 100 wildly delicious recipes that use North America's original red meat, from bison rancher and award-winning food writer Jennifer Bain. <p/><i>Buffalo Girl Cooks Bison</i> is the first comprehensive contemporary bison cookbook for a general North American market. With more than 100 well-tested, delectable recipes, Bain ensures that you'll have plenty of culinary inspiration for every cut of bison. <p/>Recipes include Bison + Cheddar Biscuits, Quinoa + Kale Bison Soup, Maple-Whisky Bison Burgers, Southwestern Braised Bison Short Ribs, Pan-Fried Bison Liver with Dijon-Shallot Cream Sauce, and many more. <p/>Bison are primarily grass-fed as well as hormone and antibiotic free. And their meat is naturally lean and high in protein, iron, and omega-3 essential fatty acids. <p/>In <i>Buffalo Girl Cooks Bison</i>, you'll also meet prominent bison ranchers from all over the United States and Canada who share their rowdy and riotous adventures. They champion ethical carnivorism: meeting what you eat, caring about how an animal is raised, and being respectful enough to eat every available part.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>Reviewing the 100-plus recipes in this photo-rich 240-page book, it's clear that [Bain] has discovered delicious ways to cook [bison] ... she has smartly divided the book into user-friendly chapters dedicated to [specific cuts] and provides dishes for every season. --<i>Times Colonist</i> <p/>The Buffalo Girl provides some background on the animal that inspired her and shares a delicious recipe in a guest post for Slow Food USA. <p/>Jennifer Bain addresses the buffalo/bison name debate and how delicious it is, no matter what you call it, in a guest post for Slow Food in Canada. <p/>Each palate pleasing, appetite satisfying bison meat recipe is thoroughly 'kitchen cook friendly.' A unique and original specialty cookbook, <i>Buffalo Girl Cooks Bison</i> will prove to be an enduringly popular addition to personal, professional, family, and community library cookbook collections. --<i>Midwest Book Review</i> <p/><i>The Toronto Star</i> shared an excerpt and recipes from <i>Buffalo Girl Cooks Bison</i>. <p/><i>Metro Daily News</i> featured the recipe for Karen's Flying D Chili, a favourite from Buffalo Girl Cooks Bison. <p/>The Test Kitchen at <i>Canadian Living</i> was inspired by <i>Buffalo Girl Cooks Bison</i> to try a few recipes. The Tallest Poppy's Pulled Bison was very good, the flavour was similar to beef, but taken up a notch. Someone in the Test Kitchen even referred to it as 'a stampede of flavour.' --<i>Canadian Living</i> (includes recipe) <p/>A surprisingly diverse creation ... it is a cookbook, but it's also a compelling history text, and a selection of stories about bison. --<i>The Edmonton Journal</i> (includes recipe)<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Jennifer Bain</b> is an award-winning food writer and food editor at the <i>Toronto Star</i>. She is the author of <i>The Toronto Star Cookbook: More Than 150 Diverse and Delicious Recipes Celebrating Ontario</i>. Follow her on Twitter at @thesaucylady.
Cheapest price in the interval: 24.49 on October 22, 2021
Most expensive price in the interval: 24.49 on November 8, 2021
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