The Frugal Gourmet by Jeff Smith


The Frugal Gourmet
Title : The Frugal Gourmet
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0517203650
ISBN-10 : 9780517203651
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 388
Publication : First published January 1, 1984

All the ingredients that make THE FRUGAL GOURMET one of the most popular cooking shows on television are in this bestselling cookbook, including: a complete range of cooking techniques, advice on kitchen equipment, special hints and tips, exciting ideas for vegetarian meals, PLUS more than 100 illustrations of recipes and techniques.


The Frugal Gourmet Reviews


  • Kathleen

    i am so sentimental about this book. i remember the tv show. i remember the cookbooks on my parents shelves. and there are a few recipes in here that i go to frequently (esp. the hollandaise). however, looking through it now, it's definitely no longer gourmet (if it ever was). these are simple recipes for people just learning to branch out with cooking. and there are some great meat dishes i remember from my childhood. however, those aren't for us anymore...

  • Yaaresse

    This cookbook would seem very basic now, but in the 80s, it was very popular. Smith had a cooking show on PBS that taught many a college student to be competent in the kitchen (and in the grocery store.) It's the kind of cookbook that beginner cooks could feel confident using until they suddenly realize they don't need it anymore because they understand the skills and techniques behind the recipes.

    It probably would rate much lower if I were reading it for the first time today, so my rating is based on my experience with the book when it was shiny and new. At the time, it was one of the better general cookbooks available.

  • Aprilleigh

    While I agree with some of the other reviewers that this is not what would be considered gourmet cooking today, the idea that gourmet cooking has to involve complicated recipes with lots of fancy ingredients is exactly the mindset the author discouraged. A gourmet is simply a connoisseur of good food. He believed that didn't have to mean hours in the kitchen and lots of expensive ingredients.

    In addition to the recipes, which of course are the raison d'être of any cookbook, there are a variety of hints and tips sprinked throughout the book (including tips on reducing the amount of time spent in the kitchen and how to prepare certain ingredients efficiently), and a short section each on kitchen equipment, cooking terms, ingredients, herbs and spices, and menu planning. He's even included a list of the recipes he covered on episodes 101 to 139 of his television show, along with the theme for the episode.

    As is common to many of his books, some ingredients may be hard to find. Don't get your heart set on anything until you've checked the ingredient list and know everything can be obtained or substituted. For example, the very first recipe calls for bare rendering bones that you may find difficult to obtain if you don't have access to a decent butcher. Numerous recipes call for ingredients you will need to find at a Middle-Eastern or Oriental market. and some are just hard to find. Thankfully, Amazon can usually help.

    The variety among the recipes is astonishing. Everything from basic brown soup stock, to Lebanese stuffed tomatoes, to Mushrooms à la Provençale. There are a few I won't be tempted to try (I can't seem to convince myself that the Carrot Ring is worth the 2 cups of shortening for 8-10 servings - yikes!). I'm particularly intrigued by the recipes from show 108, An Onion Celebration, and show 121, Garlic! Garlic! Garlic! I'm not sure I'll ever make the Russian garlic salad (it's essentially just marinated garlic cloves), but if I do it will be with the intention of chopping it up and adding it to a large bowl of fresh salad greens and veggies because I can't imagine trying to eat it straight.

  • Joycee

    So many post-it notes to mark pages of interest ... such a mix of cuisines, and always with entertaining tidbits of knowledge - feeding the mind as well as the belly!

  • Lauren

    Fascinating read that I found interesting. He reminded me of Alton when Alton would teach you the information on cooking. There are a lot of items that if you live in a very small town with limited option that you may not get unless you had a specialty store or ordered on line.

  • Jen Mays

    The Basics: This is a true recipe book---no gimmicks or flashy photos since that would take away valuable room from the 400+ recipes included. In addition, cooking tips and tricks and recommendations are liberal throughout and the introduction spells out the goal: to make cooking accessible to families and bring them back around the table with minimal fuss. Popular for his cooking show on PBS during the early 1980s, Smith provides a broad variety of recipe ideas, many of which were featured on his show.

    The early sections are divided as one would expect from a cookbook: an introduction, a few recipes in expected sections like Poultry, Appetizers, Salads, etc. But there is a tremendous amount of other sections, from eggs dishes to southern style barbecue. There is even a section for International Cuisine, in which recipes from China, France, Greece, and Africa are featured. The index is organized by ingredient and/or type so that should one wish to make something with onions (for example), a quick look-up will provide recipe pages and suggestions for this ingredient. There are also other reference pages, including a glossary of herbs and their uses, cooking terminology, and how to treat and store garlic.

    The Photos: Whether a consequence of the time it was published (1984) or the fact that it was keeping to its "frugal"ness, there are no photos at all in this book. There are occasional illustrations, pen and ink, most of which appear to be old fashioned woodcuts of thematic images rather than helpful to the recipe at hand.

    The Audition: I decided to toss myself a little bit of a gauntlet with this one and chose a recipe for an ingredient that I don't particularly care for: sweet potatoes. I was curious to see if preparing them in some manner myself rather than sampling them as they were served to me (the only way I've ever tried them and I haven't liked them yet) might alter my feelings any. Plus, the recipe was provided in the Africa section and it used cardamom as an ingredient, which I had just that week purchased from the store. It seemed like it was meant to be.

    The recipe itself was pretty simple: simmer cubed sweet potatoes in a bath of coconut milk mixed with ground cardamom and brown sugar until tender. Cutting the sweet potatoes into cubes proved to be challenging though; those suckers are tough! I served them with some Mesquite grilled steak and steamed broccoli and I actually kind of liked them! Well...didn't hate them might be more apt, but still--I consider this a vast improvement. I would not be opposed to making this recipe again once in a while, and my roommate who really likes sweet potatoes enjoyed having the leftovers (with some extra brown sugar) for breakfast the next day.

    Overall: This book was clearly written and intended to be a go-to kitchen book, an every day kind of resource. There are many recipes that rely on other basic core recipes also included in the book (many of the soups, for example, build upon a basic chicken stock recipe so that stock is included as an ingredient of the soup). If I were inclined to use this as an everyday or multiple times a week book, this wouldn't be so bad, but as a "one-off feel like doing a new recipe" exploration, I found it a little frustrating to find something substantial (i.e. not a sauce or something) that didn't require some other recipe as part of the ingredient list. The book is also quite dated, so I found myself amused when being advised to check an Oriental or fancy foods market for coconut milk. I wonder if I should let Safeway know that they are a fancy foods market now. These and the lack of photos make the book unappealing to me as an occasional cook.

    However, I can remember watching The Frugal Gourmet with my dad when I was a kid. It was one of his favorite shows and the fact that I found this on the shelf of a used bookstore that he used to take us to in the town he used to live in...well, it's too much of a nostalgia item to let go of, even if all I keep it for is the one sweet potato recipe I don't hate.

  • David Webb

    Long before the Food Network gave us a a dozen cooking shows a day to choose from, the Frugal Gourmet was "must-see-TV' for me! Jeff Smith was a font of wonderful insights on just about every area of food preparation----from utensils to spices to wines to ingredients both exotic and mundane, Smith gave me tons of wonderful advice that I use every day. I hate how his career ended. If the allegations brought against him are true, it gives me decidedly mixed emotions about him, his books, his show, and his legacy. But I still return to the cookbooks fairly often....they are full of treasures!

  • Meg

    I have very vague memories of watching Jeff Smith on television when I was quite young, and enjoying it, even when I didn't have the slightest idea of how to cook anything.

    This book remains one of the most helpful in my collection of cookbooks; it's one of the places I turn when I want to find the simple way of doing something, rather than the method involving 10 extra ingredients or some entirely new tool for doing a simple task.

  • OssifrageRage

    Jeff Smith is a strange but entertaining guy. I watched his show on PBS for years.

    This book is great for some very simple to prepare classic dishes. Small book, and does not cover complex techniques, but there are recipes here you will turn to again and again.

    This is a good addition to a library for someone who likes simpler recipes, and has a cookbook that covers technique already.

    It is a bit dated.

  • Emmalee

    Loved watching his show on PBS for years as a child.

    We never did make anything out of the cookbook though, as it seemed we needed to buy so many specific hard to find ingredients or tools at the time to make something.

    We lived in a small town in the middle of cornfields in the 80s....it wasn't like we could just run out to whole foods or something.

  • Gheeta

    I like the chattiness of Jeff Smith's style. One can tell he was a minister and professor because each section comes with something of a short sermon discussing the history and cultural points of interest. It is written in an older style with no photos but occasional hand drawn or woodcut illustrations. It was also cozy to sit and thumb through the cookbook.

  • Dixie Diamond

    Seems like a good enough general book, but not really to my taste. Feels like it tries to cover too much ground and offers only a few recipes in each section. Might have been better with less breadth and more depth and variety.

  • Heather

    I adored this guy when I was a kid... I looked forward to this show! I wouldn't say it's beginner cooking, but I'm finding some good recipes. A lot of basics, but a good staple for any cook's bookshelf.

  • Serge Pierro

    Jeff Smith presents classic and simple recipes from his entertaining TV series "The Frugal Gourmet". His enthusiasm inspired many (including me) to push themselves deeper into the culinary arts. The classic recipes from the TV show are here.

  • Naomi

    I was given this book as a gift and really have never developed a love for it. While I have made a couple of recipes out of it, I didn't see them as really standing out compared to all the other cookbooks or to the hype of the cookbook had received.

  • James

    Not bad for it's time but I don't eat that much meat anymore. Old school measurements, no pictures and no total prep time listed.


    My Standard Cookbook Rant

  • Janice

    my aunt trish gave me this book 15 years ago, and this is how i learned to cook, and grew to love cooking.

  • Gill

    My mom handed down her copy to me a few months ago. It is a great cookbook with yummy recipies and lots of basics! I love it!

  • Alto2

    My very first cookbook. I learned so much from watching this guy on TV.

  • Michel

    Gourmet? Reminds me of a fast-food joint in town, that features "Gourmet hotdogs".
    Maybe a good primer for someone who cooks vegetarian for the first time. So frugal you'll outgrow it fast.

  • Liliana F

    Fed my love for food

  • AJ

    I registered a book at BookCrossing.com!

    http://www.BookCrossing.com/journal/11492777

  • pjr8888

    one of the VERY few cookbooks that i've read and used to successfully prepare good tasting food!

  • Gary Turner

    If you enjoy cooking books, this is a must buy for your library. Jeff Smith was a very fun show to watch and his books are just as entertaining.