From Publishers Weekly:
Lindquist, a Key West caterer, has created recipes using bananas for breakfasts and snacks, appetizers, salads, sandwiches, entrees and, of course, desserts. And while the nutrition-packed banana is an admirable and versatile fruit, this volume is filled with the kind of test-kitchen sorcery that can give exotic trappings to a food that may not be appropriate (as in the author's banana rumaki and banana gazpacho tropicale). Many recipes here are cloyingly sweet (like banana daiquiri pie and banana upside-down cake), with very few providing unusual contrasts or juxtapositions ofsweet, ripe bananas and complementary tastes. Among these: banana tomato chutney and banana ginger wafers. Inexplicably ignored are opportunities for recipes using the somewhat exotic plantain (a variety of banana that must be cooked) and banana leaves (employed as a wrapper for delicious steamed items in the cooking of Latin America and Southeast Asia). Lindquist's discussion of banana types is limited to outlining the differences between underripe, green or green-tipped bananas, firm golden yellow bananas, and brown, flecked or fully ripe bananas, although she makes the point that "there are more than 450 varieties."
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal:
In a single-subject book that should have lots of fans, Linquist points out that our per capita consumption of bananas is 26 pounds a year. In addition to the more traditional categories of breakfast dishes, breads, and desserts, she offers recipes for banana appetizers, soups, and main dishes, from Hot Banana Peanut Soup to Banana Shrimp Curry. Some of Lindquist's ideas seem a little far-fetched, but most of her simple recipes are both sensible and appealing. For most collections.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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