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Breakfast

by Evan Hanczor

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A delicious ode to morning foods, featuring eggs, biscuits, meats, and pancakes you'll want to start every day with. Breakfast brings beauty and enthusiasm to the morning meal. George Weld draws on his passion and Southern roots to create the fresh, satisfying dishes his Williamsburg restaurant, Egg, has been serving for ten years. Breakfast begins with simple techniques that transform familiar ingredients into transcendent meals. A pantry section shows the ingredients to have on hand for whipping up delicious morning meals. Following are recipes for eggs (including the restaurant's signature Eggs Rothko), grains, meats, produce, sauces and syrups, juices, and pastries. Among the beloved recipes from Egg's kitchen are dishes adapted for meals at any hour, such as salads with eggs and smoked fish, fried chicken and biscuits, and toast with greens. Running through the book are contributions from farmers, fishermen, and athletes on the nourishing meals they fuel themselves with in the morning. Accompanied by images from Weld's own farm (which supplies Egg with many of its ingredients), this book will make breakfast the meal you dream about at night, and the most anticipated part of your morning.
"The first monograph on notorious photographer Chris von Wangenheim, whose shocking work epitomized the glamour and excess of the 1970s and reflected the fashionable underworld living life on the edge. Between the years 1968 and 1981, photographer Chris von Wangenheim shocked the world with a body of work that explored sex, violence, and danger in the realm of high fashion. Von Wangenheim's dark photographs were emblematic of the time--an era that encompassed Deep Throat, the sexual revolution, punk, and porn--and continually challenged the viewers' taste by its stylized depictions of suggestive (and often harrowing) narratives. His images appeared in every top fashion publication--including Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, Vogue Italia, and Interview--and he produced unforgettable campaigns for Dior and Valentino until he died in a car accident at age 39. This book, the first monograph on von Wangenheim's career, contains over two hundred provocative and iconic images from this tumultuous era, including never-before-seen outtakes from memorable shoots with such supermodels as Christie Brinkley, Lisa Taylor, and the late Gia Carangi. Drawing on interviews with models, editors, art directors, and photographers who were influenced by him, the Padilhas revive von Wangenheim's explosive depictions of the glamour and excess of the 1970s for a contemporary audience and reveal how his work continues to inform fashion imagery today."--Publisher's website.
These days, George Weld and Evan Hanczor, the farmer/restaurateur and chef behind Willamsburg's Egg eatery, are serving up more than just scrumptious concoctions like Eggs Rothko or Grafton cheddar omelets with broiled tomatoes. Authors of the newly released Breakfast, they are now offering menus and ideas. The book, they say, 'is our best argument for waking up and making something delicious for breakfast.' And what better way to start the day than at Egg, or with one? -Vogue

Evan Hanczor landed in New York with many passions but no plan. . . . Five years later, Hanczor has found success precisely by merging his work as a chef with his interests in writing and policy. - Huffington Post

George Weld opened Egg in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, 10 years ago, and since then it's become another sort of Sunday-morning place of worship, if you feel the same longing for waffles as, say, Leslie Knope does. And have you heard the good news? Now you can remain in your pajamas and have the Egg experience at home, because its cookbook, Breakfast: Recipes to Wake Up For, is coming out next week. Trust me, after this Bloody, you'll definitely feel risen. -VanityFair.com

Over the weekend, George Weld and Evan Hanczor, the duo behind Williamsburg's Egg restaurant, did what they do best: share the art of breakfast with perfect strangers in Brooklyn. They set up a very Southern hash bar at Smorgasburg flea market, and showcased recipes from their week-old cookbook, Breakfast: Recipes to Wake Up For (Rizzoli), at the annual Food Book Fair. -New York Times Magazine

We know what you're thinking: Is it really that hard to scramble an egg? But once you've had a taste of the scrambled eggs from Egg Restaurant in Brooklyn, you know: There are scrambled eggs, and then there are life-changing scrambled eggs. The latter is a piece of custardy heaven--and without the addition of any milk or heavy cream. So we got Evan Hanczor, one of the chefs at the restaurant and coauthor of the just-released cookbook Breakfast: Recipes to Wake Up For, to share his secret technique. -Women's Health Magazine

Owner George Weld and Chef Evan Hanczor of Williamsburg's Egg (109 N. 3rd St.) -- notorious for weekend lines and their ridiculously yummy Southern dishes -- debuted Breakfast: Recipes to Wake up For this week, with 200 pages of reasons for New Yorkers to slow down and enjoy their morning meal. -AM New York

Like Egg, Breakfast doesn't attempt to shock or surprise. The focus is on combining smart techniques with simple ingredients to create the kind of morning meals that will make you actually want to get out of bed. -TastingTable.com

Breakfast: Recipes to Wake Up For includes the restaurant's morning standbys like Eggs Rothko, a twist on an egg-in-toast that includes an insulation of melted cheddar, along with lesser-known hits (perfect fried chicken, for example) and sage advice like, 'If you learn to cook eggs properly, you will be a better human being.' It's a simple, beautiful book that embodies everything great about this quirky little restaurant that's improbably navigated Williamsburg's transformation from affordable artist refuge to major tourist destination. -Food & Wine

Brooklyn chef George Weld knows breakfast. Not only did he open a restaurant ten years ago devoted to the most important meal of the day, he has just released a cookbook on the subject. Breakfast: Recipes to Wake Up For is not the hipster brunch manual you might expect from a guy who owns a Williamsburg restaurant called Egg, though. -Epicurious.com

Judging by the popularity of George Weld's Brooklyn breakfast joint, Egg, I'm not the only [hungry] morning person around. In the book's foreword ('In Defense of Morning'), Weld lists many of the oppositions people pose to eating more than cold cereal in the morning - and then shoots them full of holes. The ensuing recipes shore up his argument in the most delicious way. -Cookbook365.com

Waned in Virginia and the Carolinas, and a PHD in Literature, no wonder [co-author] George's Southern affect on Williamsburg's morning drawl, eventually lead to a cookbook, Breakfast: Recipe To Wake Up For." -Heritage Radio Network

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Product Details

  • Rizzoli International Pub Brand
  • Mar 31, 2015 Pub Date:
  • 0847844838 ISBN-10:
  • 9780847844838 ISBN-13:
  • 208 Pages
  • 9.8 in * 7.9 in * 1 in Dimensions:
  • 2 lb Weight: