The Piglet2015 / Quarterfinal Round, 2015

Brooks Headley's Fancy Desserts vs. Flavor Flours

Brooks Headley's Fancy Desserts

Brooks Headley

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Flavor Flours

Alice Medrich

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Judged by: Edward Lee

Edward Lee is the chef and proprietor of 610 Magnolia, The Wine Studio, and MilkWood, all in Louisville, KY. He is a multiple finalist for the James Beard Foundation Award Best Chef: Southeast. He is the author of the best-selling cookbook, Smoke & Pickles. He appears regularly on television, most recently as the chef and host for Season 3 of the Emmy-winning series, Mind of a Chef. His signature small batch bourbon with Jefferson’s Reserve called Chef’s Collaboration Blend has garnered praise from the nation’s top publications. He resides in Louisville, KY and is an avid karaoke singer.

The Judgment

I rarely cook from cookbooks. I finger through the cool pictures and scan the ingredients, but mostly, they make my library look cool. 

Dessert books are different. I actually use them, and they sit on my kitchen counter dog eared and dirty. There’s a quiet zen to measuring and scooping that makes the process of using one pleasant. A good dessert recipe is about trust; I don’t question authority, but instead allow myself to be led through a series of instructions while my brain drifts in and out of focus. So I was relieved when I got these two greatly anticipated dessert books to review. And then I realized they couldn’t be more different: Aside from the fact that both live in the dessert section of your local bookstore -- please support your local bookstore -- they have nothing else in common. Reviewing them would be difficult. Here goes: 

I’ll start with the more conventional book, Flavor Flours. Alice Medrich is a god among mortals; I own all of her books, and so should you. I’d be lying if I said I never pilfered one of her recipes to enhance a dessert on my menu. Her truffles are legendary, her lemon bar is the touchstone for all others, and her chocolate torte can’t be improved upon. Her body of work (this is her eleventh book!) is known for its precision, elegance, and reliability. Flavor Flours fits right in. 

She tackles the world of wheat substitute flours with an approach that is both familiar and refreshingly bold. This volume gives ancient grains the lengthy conversation they deserve; it eschews the polarizing topic of gluten-free in favor of a lusty-yet-educational approach to working through our unfamiliarity with flours from corn and buckwheat to teff and sorghum. (Here’s an example of the resource page being quite helpful -- some of these flours are hard to find.) It’s filled with logical instructions, majestic photography, and plenty of helpful substitution ideas. She’ll confidently assume you have some prior baking experience, and she doesn’t cut corners for the sake of novices. (If a recipe doesn’t work, it’s your fault, not hers.)  

Medrich is adept at coaxing deep flavors out of recipes as simple as her Buckwheat Sponge Cake -- which sounds and looks odd but the nutty, almost savory finish is so haunting I know I will make it again and again. Her Chestnut Jam Tart is a great example of something so familiar and recognizable and yet unlike anything you’ve ever tasted. The decadent, taut crust gives way to a chewy center that’s both impossibly soft and crunchy at the same time -- it’s easily the best dessert I’ve had in my mouth this year. And recipes like the Corn Flour Tea Cake are easy enough to instantly become a staple in your repertoire. All throughout, it’s evident how much research and testing went into this book.    

As with any compendium of recipes, some ideas can seem to overreach. The rice flour beignets were tasty, but I wouldn’t put them above a traditional wheat flour and lard recipe. In her introduction, Medrich explains that she made a decision not to introduce Aboriginal recipes -- instead she chose to focus on the familiar canon of Western desserts. I wish she would have ventured more into the unknown; teff and sorghum offer a world of exotic possibilities that I would have loved to delve deeper into. And what about the dizzying variety of sweet cakes and dumplings that rice flours have contributed to Asian cultures? As I read and cooked my way through her book, I was thankful for her exhaustive treatment -- but also left feeling like I wanted more of a cultural context from whence these delicious flours came.   

Which brings me to Brooks Headley’s Fancy Desserts. For him, everything is a cultural context. You don’t navigate through his recipes in a vacuum; you listen to them through his lens of punk rock, his sardonic New York City attitude, his Holden Caulfield-esque skepticism of anything that smells like it came from a “pastry chef” kitchen, and most importantly, his contagious passion for what he does day in day out. 

Books like his are not easy to digest; they involve a level of commitment that, frankly, most home cooks aren’t willing to invest. He can be self-deprecating about this, so let me clarify something before we go any further: You will never make desserts like Mr. Headley. You may buy his book and faithfully follow his recipes, but you will not recreate his desserts on the level that he does. (If you’ve been to Del Posto, then you know what I’m talking about.) 

So why should you crack open this book at all? Therein lies the beautiful contradiction: It is precisely in that failure to reach perfection that you will find your way to becoming a better cook. Headley doesn’t assume that you have prior baking experience. He doesn’t care. The recipes do not follow a logical course; they are at times mercifully short and frustratingly abridged. You’ll feel helpless because you don’t have Tristar strawberries. You’ll feel angry reading that his tangerine dessert is just a tangerine over cracked ice. 

But you’d be an idiot not to make the Cucumber Creamsicle -- a dessert that so fragrant, sweet, and savory that it forces you to rethink your notions of what a “sweet” dessert is. Or the Sbrisolona, a cookie-cake hybrid so addictive that you don’t care that he doesn’t tell you what it is for or how to pronounce it only to discover later that it’s a component on a dessert in a different part of the book. He takes Brown Butter Panna Cotta, which sounds so mundane, to another stratosphere by making it a three-day process. Set in a plastic lid, it’s the thinnest panna cotta you’ve ever had -- and the book is full of little details like this that just blow your mind. All of these desserts will alter the rest of your life, if you have the patience to make them. They’re that good.  

Fancy Desserts, with its recipes connected like a mystery novel, can be confusing, illogical, hilarious, disarming, vulnerable, and intimidating -- and I could not put it down. Part culinary manifesto, part punk rock tapestry, part New York City folklore, this book is not just a fascinating read, it’s a portrait of a person, of a time, and of a place so unique you feel lucky to live it through the pages of a book. I wish more chefs were this honest about themselves. Hell, I wish more people were too. 

What I will say is this: Don’t attempt to make a recipe until you’ve read the whole book -- every page, cover to cover. Let it sink in. Listen. Don’t just turn to page 62 and start pulling out your measuring cups. No, you may not have Tristar strawberries, but what’s important is that you smell, touch, feel, and build up your vocabulary of ripeness, of taste memory. It’s important that you be aware. Understand that first, and then start on the recipes. If that isn’t zen, I don’t know what is. 

Alice’s book is measured elegance. With her, you get to cook the perfect recipe. With Headley, you get a chance to be a better cook, and maybe, if you really listen closely, a better person.  

And the winner is…

Brooks Headley's Fancy Desserts

Brooks Headley's Fancy Desserts

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Do you Agree?

56 Comments

LeBec F. March 17, 2015
HA! So many of us have commented what a great writer he is: check this out:
" Lee attended college at NYU graduating Magna cum Laude with a degree in English Literature. At 22, he chose to pursue a culinary career instead of a literary one."
Yay, edward!
 
LeBec F. March 17, 2015
wow, edward lee, you obviously have 'great writer DNA'. If all the piglet reviewers could have Lee's articulate writing and clear analytical skills, combined with a firm knowledge of cooking and sweets cooking, we 52ers would be soooo lucky. Here's hoping we'll see more of his reviews in one format or another...!
 
Juliebell March 9, 2015
I loved this review so much I am buying Edward Lee's cookbook
 
Connie C. November 27, 2017
I did, too. I reviewed it on a few sites. It's not only one of the best cookbooks I've ever read, it one of the best books of any kind I've ever read.
Edward Lee is a marvelous writer. Reading his stories makes me wish he lived next door.
 
satyamama March 9, 2015
this was an incredible review. honestly heading in to it, i figured that of course Ms. Medrich would emerge the winner. NOW, well, I feel the need to have both books. AND that Mr. Edward Lee needs to write more reviews. It was such a well balanced and nuanced review, thanks for that.
 
Juliebell March 8, 2015
This review was beautifully written! Thank you for such valuable insight.
 
Helen March 7, 2015
Oh man. I love Flavor Flours, it's handsome and contains the best German Chocolate Cake recipe ever conceived and I was rooting for it to win. But having read this review, my only response is that I need to go buy Fancy Desserts, too.
 
HeatherM March 6, 2015
Wow, high praise! This review is so well written. I have no intention of buying a dessert cookbook, but I really enjoyed reading about them.
 
pandapotamus March 3, 2015
I need both of these!!!
 
Connie C. March 3, 2015
I have neither the skills nor the confidence to cook or bake from either of these books, but I can dream. And I can drool over them.
The elegance of the review itself is a joy to read. Thank you.
 
JudyH March 3, 2015
This thoughtful review was a pleasure to read. Well done, Mr. Lee. I now want both books.
 
Nicole B. March 3, 2015
Looks so fun!
 
luvcookbooks March 3, 2015
Seriously need to go to Del Posto, then get the book.
 
hobbit2nd March 2, 2015
Great review. Flavor Flours sounds interesting but I think that I'd rather eat desserts than make them!
 
Zensister March 2, 2015
I'm now curious about Fancy Desserts. I just started experimenting with Flavor Flours, and I'm thrilled with it. It's a far more intuitive look at wheat flour alternatives than I've worked with.
 
chels March 2, 2015
This is the best review I've ever read! Like someone else said, it gave me all the information I wanted about each book. It made me absolutely certain that I want to own Flavor Flours, but also deeply curious (and on the hunt) for Fancy Desserts as well!
 
rosalind5 March 2, 2015
This is a excellent review - but as other have commented, I'm definitely going to buy Flavor Flours (this review cemented the deal; I'm going to *love* this book), however I'm still very much on the fence about buying Fancy Desserts.

"All of these desserts will alter the rest of your life, if you have the patience to make them." I celebrate the fact that such cookbooks exist (and work!), but isn't that what restaurants are for?
 
Inko March 2, 2015
I enjoyed the review but it made me want to buy Flavor Flour. I'd be content to be a worse person making foolproof and delicious desserts.
 
C W. March 2, 2015
Thoughtfully crafted review - thank you! And what a cliff-hanger. I respect the choice, but for me I am more likely to purchase Medrich's book and check Headley's out at the library.
 
Naomi M. March 2, 2015
Food that is so good 'it will alter the rest of your life'. Bingo! That is exactly what I want! Which is why I pick the Flour book, not the dessert one! In order to HAVE a 'rest of a life' that exceeds the next two years, due to revenge of The Cancer, I cannot have wonderfully decadent sugar and flour filled goodies. Which is why I love Flavor Flours so much! It allows you to have the occasional fabulous gluten-free dessert, and still feel great! The Peach Crumble looks so amazing, I can't wait until the peaches are ripe so I can try it! Which is why it is great that there is a list of variations so I can make it right now with blackberries! Dark chocolate soufflés made with rice flour, yum! Most gluten free cookbooks simply try to swap out flour with something gluten free. But Medrich makes pretty amazing looking recipes using better tasting flours such as coconut and nut flour, which takes baking to a whole new level. Books that help you have better health almost never compare well with conventional books, which is why I was so stunned Flavor Flours got this far. Truly, I wish we could all eat and drink the way we could when we were about 25, but doing that for a few decades takes a serious toll. Sorry, don't intend to bum out the dessert hard-core. I am sure the Fancy Dessert book is amazing, especially for dessert chefs! But I no longer want to spend 3 days making something. But I would love to look at the winner! I just got Flavor Flours in the mail today, and now want Dorie's latest too, if only for sweet dreams!
 
Thom C. March 2, 2015
I think think he was going to come to that conclusion but I agree. I want a book that will make me think and make me a better cook in the process even if I can't achieve the perfection of the author.
 
Anita March 2, 2015
Thanks to Chef Lee for a thoughtful and beautifully written review! I want BOTH books :)
 
Miss H. March 2, 2015
wow. The review had me at the edge of my seat. I need both books!!
 
Katie March 2, 2015
I'm still ravenous to dig into Flavor Flours and scared of Fancy Desserts... That being said, I just LOVE reading these reviews. I have huge respect for Edward Lee, and it was fun to picture him meticulously baking these different desserts.
 
Alice M. March 2, 2015
Edward Edward Edward! Losing has never been so sweet. Thank you for your very thoughtful review and kind words. Excuse, me if I run off to buy a copy of Fancy Desserts. Congratulations Brook!
 
StaceyMoreno March 2, 2015
So classy! I love Flavor Flours and have filled my freezer with a whole variety of alternative flours so I can bake from it at a moment's notice.
 
Victoria C. March 2, 2015
Alice Medrich, you are the best. Where would I be without Almond Cake With a Crunchy Crust. Only a little thinner. I have one in my kitchen right now!
 
rosalind5 March 2, 2015
Where would I be without your beautiful labneh tart? So refined, so easy and so quick to make. THANK YOU!
 
witloof March 2, 2015
Dear Alice, I was twenty years old when I moved to Berkeley in the 70's from the midwest and had rarely tasted anything besides a Hershey bar or a supermarket bakery cake when I first experienced Cocolat. That was a life changing experience!
 
creamtea March 3, 2015
Dear Alice, you are so gracious! I echo witloof--my former roommate and I were students at UC Berkeley. We'd treat ourselves to chocolate truffles from Cocolat--we'd carve a sliver or two each night and somehow make the treat last a whole week. We're still friends, and we still have fond memories of those days.
 
Alexandra H. March 2, 2015
Fantastic review! I treasure both books for different reasons. Hard choice-- I bought both book to educate and enrich my knowledge and expand my baking repertoire. I bought Medrich's book as a reliable reference, and Headley's to get inside his head and find inspiration to think outside the box. Thanks for such a thoughtful review.
P.S. Edward Lee's season of PBS's "The Mind of a Chef" is as incredibly rewarding and insightful to watch as this review is to read! My favorite food show in years!
 
QueenSashy March 2, 2015
What a thoughtful and reflective review. I while ago, I chose not to buy Fancy Desserts, because it was aesthetically very different from what I was ready to absorb in a cookbook. Edward Lee's review is making me revisit the decision. I too quickly judged the book by its cover…
 
ChefJune March 2, 2015
What an interesting and thorough review. I feel like I'm now acquainted with both books, though so far I own neither. After watching Mr. Lee on Top Chef a few years back, I was surprised at how erudite his approach to the review was. I've been suitably impressed! Now off to order both books, because that Cucumber Creamsicle sounds like a summer must.
 
E E. March 2, 2015
Mr. Lee's review is splendid. It's everything a cook wants to know about in a review.
 
garlic&lemon March 2, 2015
I second this comment!
 
sexyLAMBCHOPx March 2, 2015
Good review, both books look awesome.
 
mcs3000 March 2, 2015
YES! Another Sophie's Choice round. Edward Lee captures so beautifully why I think Brooks Headley's book should win the Piglet in a rock star field of contenders.
 
GinaP March 2, 2015
I love the reasoning here. I am shocked to see Medrich lose, but it's incredibly hard to make an argument otherwise.
 
Cynthia C. March 2, 2015
This was incredibly, beautifully written. Thank you so much for this review!
 
Ginger S. March 2, 2015
What an enjoyable review and read. I am not familar about Edward Lee but after reding his review I want to learn more about him and his cooking as well as Books Headley's Fancy Deesert and Flavor Flours.
 
Marla H. March 2, 2015
You're an excellent writer, Mr. Lee. Encountering the good writing in the opening of the review is the only thing that kept me reading, honestly. I really have no interest in either of these books. I love desserts, love to bake and actually love a challenge or a "project" in the kitchen. The style and content of these two books just don't appeal to me at all. Thanks for the review though. It was thorough enough to solidify to me that I probably wouldn't want to own these two.
 
cookinginvictoria March 2, 2015
Thank you, Edward Lee. This is such a thrilling review -- perhaps my favorite PIglet review ever! He articulates so well how I (and probably many others) feel about cookbooks. Sure, they are fun to read and cook from, but it's absolutely exhilarating when we discover certain ones, and they show us something that we didn't already know and change our lives. Love it when a cookbook -- or any book, really -- makes me feel that way. After reading this review, I want both books, and I can't wait to devour each one from from cover to cover.

P.S. And during my next visit to New York City, I will make sure to dine at Del Posto, to try Mr. Headley's awesome-sounding desserts in person. :)
 
Tabledeckers March 2, 2015
P.S. Already purchased Flavor Flours after the last review, cannot wait to cook from it!
 
Tabledeckers March 2, 2015
Thoughtful and beautifully written review of each book. After the first review of the "Fancy Desserts", (while the format was creative), it didn't make me want to read the book. After this review I cannot wait to read it!
 
AntoniaJames March 2, 2015
Interesting. Quite interesting. ;o)
 
witloof March 2, 2015
When I was done reading, I whispered, "Wow."
 
Sarag March 2, 2015
Great review!! Thoughtful, balanced and based on actually testing recipes. Sad to see Flavor Flours go down, but based on this review I will definitely buy the book. Alice Medrich, your book may not have advanced, but it still seems to be a real winner. Off to buy chestnut flour.
 
pretty_pathetic March 2, 2015
Oh wow, cucumber creamsicle sounds amazing. And I always appreciate a cookbook that reads like a bookbook!
 
Connie C. November 27, 2017
You might want to dip into Edward Lee's "Smoke & Pickles." Some of his stories will have you chuckling to yourself, others will undoubtedly have you in tears. Gorgeous writing as well as wonderful recipes.
Plus, he a bourbon man. Allright!
 
Lauren R. March 2, 2015
I think I do agree. Would love to try some of those recipes!
 
Diana March 2, 2015
Wow, what a great review. I thought Fancy Desserts sounded good during the first round, but now I must have it. I am impressed by the fact that Mr. Lee baked his way through so many recipes before reaching his decision. It also sounds like he devoured both books, cover to cover. I already own Flavor Flour. Now, I am looking forward to exploring the chestnut tart. I also agree that each of us should support our local book stores!!!!
 
calendargirl March 2, 2015
Super review and yes, I now want both books. Heck, all the books in this year's excellent Piglet.
 
Victoria C. March 2, 2015
ANOTHER fabulous review. Did you tell the reviewers this year that there was some punishment for just writing about what sounds good without trying the recipes? I don't get it. The reviews this year are light years ahead of any before. It makes this year's Piglet the absolute best.

There's really no winner here because by the time you finish this review, you want both of these books - which I had actually decided from the first round, even though I swore I would only by one by the time Piglet was decided.

Thank you Edward Lee for this writing - so thoughtful, so beautiful.
 
Kenzi W. March 2, 2015
:) So happy to hear this!
 
LLStone March 2, 2015
I love this fabulous review! And, I think I want both books.
 
drbabs March 2, 2015
What a great review!