<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>"Don't toss those leftovers or pitch your beet greens. Eat it up! Sherri Brooks Vinton helps you make the most of out the food you bring home. These 150 delicious recipes mine the treasure in your kitchen--the fronds from your carrots, leaves from your cauliflower, bones from Sunday's roast, even the last lick of jam in the jar are put to good, tasty use."--Provided by publisher.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>Don't toss those leftovers or pitch your beet greens! Eat it up! Sherri Brooks Vinton helps you make the most out of the food you bring home. These 150 delicious recipes mine the treasure in your kitchen--the fronds from your carrots, leaves from your cauliflower, bones from Sunday's roast, even the last lick of jam in the jar are put to good, tasty use.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><b>Milwaukee Shepherd Express</i>, 7/19/16</b><br>"In many ways, <i>Eat It Up!</i> is a recipe for returning to the kitchen economy of a century ago when stale bread became bread pudding and leftover bones were simmered in a pot of broth. Vinton's recipes include great ideas for using fruit peels, vegetable stalks, fat and 'whole animal dishes' that overlook nothing that is edible. <i>Eat It Up!</i> is a call to arms as well as a cookbook." <p/><b><i>Joint Forces Journal</i>, 7/14/16</b><br>"Sherri Brooks Vinton helps you make the most out of the food you bring home. The 150 delicious recipes...show you the way to mine the uncovered treasures in your kitchen--that's right, the limp celery stalks, leaves from your cauliflower, bones from Sunday's roast, and even the last lick of jam in the jar are all put to good, tasty use." <p/><b>Sand and Succotash, 7/28/16</b><br>"<i>Eat It Up!</i> comes to the rescue with produce insights, pantry tips, upcycling scraps recipes, and how to use up every bit of that whole chicken you came home with." <p/><b>Huffington Post, 8/5/16</b><br>"Vinton's book offers recipes that'll help you cook up pretty much any food scrap into a delicious meal ? think dishes like Radish Tops Tabouleh ? but it also shares other helpful tips along the way, like how to properly stock your fridge to fight food waste before it starts."<br><br><b>Praise for <i>Eat it Up!</i></b> <p/><b><i>Myrtle Beach Sun News</i>, 5/17/16</b><br>Vinton presents ways using up food can save time, taste great, [and] preserve natural resources...Usually I wait until a book comes out before I send in a review, but this one merits a pre-order...Even the most experienced chef will find this book interesting and the novice chef will get off to a good start on cooking without waste. <p/><b><i>Booklist</i>, June 1, 2016 issue</b><br>"A sterling resource for the ecologically minded cook." <p/><b>January Magazine, 7/3/16</b><br>"Vinton's well thought out recipes show us how to use every little bit. Nor is all (or even any!) of this 'leftover food.' Vinton's 150 recipes feel very fresh and new...and many are real keepers. <i>Eat It Up</i> is one for your permanent cookbook shelf. A book that will make you better, inside and out." <p/><b><i>Greene County Record</i>, 7/13/16</b><br>"Recipes...for a no-waste, great-taste kitchen."<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Sherri Brooks Vinton</b> is the author of the Put 'Em Up! series. Sherri's books, lectures, and workshops have taught countless eaters how to have a more delicious life. Her first book, <i>The Real Food Revival: Aisle by Aisle, Morsel by Morsel</i> (Penguin, 2005), teaches readers how and why to enjoy sustainably raised foods. Sherri's current series of Put 'Em Up! books provide a modern take on home food preservation. She has been featured on numerous radio and TV programs, including <i>Martha Stewart Radio</i> and the <i>Leonard Lopate Show</i>. Sherri is a former Governor of Slow Food USA and is a member of Women Chefs and Restaurateurs, the Northeast Organic Farmers Association, International Association of Culinary Professionals, and Chefs Collaborative. Sherri's discussions and workshops on how to reclaim the food chain have been offered across the U.S.A., from Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture in New York to the San Francisco Ferry Plaza Market. <p/> sherribrooksvinton.com
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