Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Paleo Snacks - A Paleo Snack Cookbook Full of Healthy Paleo Snack Foods - cover

We are sorry! The publisher (or author) gave us the instruction to take down this book from our catalog. But please don't worry, you still have more than 500,000 other books you can enjoy!

Paleo Snacks - A Paleo Snack Cookbook Full of Healthy Paleo Snack Foods

Rockridge Press Press

Publisher: Rockridge Press

  • 0
  • 2
  • 0

Summary

Are you too busy to eat healthfully? Do you surrender your diet to a bag of potato chips or a chocolate chip cookie when you're hungry and on the go? 
 
Whether traveling, at work, or at the gym, Paleo Snacks: A Paleo Snack Cookbook Full of Healthy Paleo Snack Foods provides delicious Paleo treats for those long, tempting stretches between meals. 
 
Paleo Snacks is the easy answer to all those moments of weakness. In Paleo Snacks you'll discover:
 
40 Paleo-friendly snacks, from tasty snack bars to low-calorie healthy snacks, to Paleo kids' snacks and Paleo protein snacks.
 
Paleo recipes for an array of Paleo snacks and appetizers, from delicious No-Bake Fruit and Nut Bars to Oven-Fried Sweet Potato Chips, to Spicy-Sweet Chicken on a Stick and Lunch Box Granola Mix.
 
A concise introduction to the Paleo diet, the benefits of Paleo, and a helpful Paleo Food Guide.
 
For more information on how to make Paleo versions of all your favorite foods, check out the rest of the books in this series, including Paleo Cookies, Paleo Muffins, Paleo Pasta, and the New York Times Best Seller Paleo Slow Cooker.
Available since: 03/12/2013.

Other books that might interest you

  • Japanese Patisserie - Exploring the beautiful and delicious fusion of East meets West - cover

    Japanese Patisserie - Exploring...

    James Campbell

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Stunning recipes for patisserie, desserts and savouries with a contemporary Japanese twist. This elegant collection is aimed at the confident home-cook who has an interest in using ingredients such as yuzu, sesame, miso and matcha.
    Show book
  • Gluten-Free Baking for the Holidays - 60 Recipes for Traditional Festive Treats - cover

    Gluten-Free Baking for the...

    Jeanne Sauvage

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    “Recipes for everything from spritz cookies to bûche de Noël . . . shatters the assumption that if you can’t eat wheat, you can’t eat well during the holidays.” —San Jose Mercury News 
     
    The holidays are a time to celebrate and indulge in baked goods warm from the oven. Unfortunately for the gluten-sensitive, seasonal pleasures such as sugar cookies and mincemeat tarts have been off-limits. Not anymore!  
     
    Jeanne Sauvage, author of the popular blog Art of Gluten-Free Baking, has perfected 60 gluten-free recipes with all the flavors of their wheat-filled counterparts. Also included are tips on how wheat-free ingredients work and Jeanne’s own gluten-free flour mix. With favorites like apple pie, plum pudding, rugelach, bûche de Noël—even a gingerbread house—everyone can pull up a chair to the holiday table with comfort and joy. 
     
    “Her cookies and cakes and other treats (and I have reached for many a second helping at various Seattle events over the years) are reliably the best on the table even when they’re up against traditional gluten-full baked goods.” —Seattle Times
    Show book
  • Taste of Honey - The Definitive Guide to Tasting and Cooking with 40 Varietals - cover

    Taste of Honey - The Definitive...

    Marie Simmons

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A comprehensive cookbook and guide to honey “packed with good recipes [from] one of the absolute best food writers around” (Mollie Katzen, author of Moosewood Cookbook).  
     
    Honey is a lot like olive oil: How do you know what type to select at the farmers’ market or store? Are all honey bears created equal? What makes one variety different from another? Which is better for baking or best for savory dishes? Why is one darker than another, and what does that mean? These questions and more are answered in Taste of Honey. Marie Simmons reveals the life of a bee, and how the terroir of its habitat influences both the color and flavor of the honey it produces. Then she explains how these flavor profiles are best paired with certain ingredients in over sixty sweet and savory recipes including:  
     
    Snacks and Breakfast: Flatbread with Melted Manchego, Rosemary and Honey; Honey, Scallion and Cheddar Scones; Honey French Toast with Peaches with Honey and Mint 
     
    Main Dishes: Crispy Coconut Shrimp with Tangy Honey Dipping Sauce; Salmon with Honey, Miso and Ginger Glaze; Baby Back Ribs with Chipotle Honey Barbecue Sauce 
     
    Salads and Vegetable Side Dishes: Pear, Stilton and Bacon Salad with Honey Dressing and Honey Glazed Pecans; Mango and Celery Salad with Honey and Lime Dressing; Roasted Eggplant Slices with Warmed Feta and Honey Drizzle 
     
    Sweets: Honey Pear Tart with Honey Butter Sauce; Chunky Peanut Butter and Honey Cookies; Honey Zabaglione; Honey Panna Cotta; Micki’s Special Honey Fudge Brownies  
     
    Each recipe includes a guide for the type of honey that will work best with it, and ideas to experiment with. In addition, there are fast, simple things to do with honey at the end of each recipe chapter; a glossary covering forty different varietals of honey; information about its healing properties; and tidbits about bees and honey through history. Photos by Meg Smith capture the intimate life of the bee and its activity producing honey—along with the gorgeous food you can make with it.  
     
    “Holy honey! Taste of Honey, with its lush photos and delectable recipes, not only teaches how to best use single-origin honey in the kitchen, it reminds us that honey is an almost magical substance, connecting us to our landscape, and to the hardworking honey bee. Marie Simmons’s book has made robbing the hive even sweeter.” —Novella Carpenter, author of Farm City 
     
    “I’m a honey collector, too, but unlike Marie, I tend to stick to a drizzle of honey over cheese, toast, or hot cereal and the occasional dessert. There are so many more ideas here for using honey . . . And I do hope that the appeal of honey itself with lead us to care more for our struggling bee populations.” —Deborah Madison, author of Local Flavors
    Show book
  • The Country Cooking of France - cover

    The Country Cooking of France

    Anne Willan

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    “This beautiful book is proof that there is always something more to learn about the cuisine of France, even for a French-trained professional chef.” —JacquesPépin, chef, James Beard Foundation Award–winning cookbook author, and Emmy Award–winning public television cooking series host   Renowned for her cooking school in France and her many best-selling cookbooks, Anne Willan combines years of hands-on experience with extensive research to create a brand new classic. More than 250 recipes range from the time-honored La Truffade, with its crispy potatoes and melted cheese, to the Languedoc specialty Cassoulet de Toulouse, a bean casserole of duck confit, sausage, and lamb. And the desserts! Crêpes au Caramel et Beurre Sal (crêpes with a luscious caramel filling) and Galette Landaise (a rustic apple tart) are magnifique. Sprinkled with intriguing historical tidbits and filled with more than 270 enchanting photos of food markets, villages, harbors, fields, and country kitchens, this cookbook is an irresistible celebration of French culinary culture.
    Show book
  • Hitler's Vineyards - How the French Winemakers Collaborated with the Nazis - cover

    Hitler's Vineyards - How the...

    Christophe Lucand

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    “Fascinating. Detailed, well-written, and controversial, Lucand’s history of France and its wine during the Nazi Occupation is an unexpected treat.” —The Wine Economist 
     
    During the Second World War, French wine was hardly a trivial product. Indeed, following the Fall of France, it proved to be one of the most valuable French commodities in the eyes of the Nazi leaders. In 1940, “Weinführer” (official delegates and wine experts appointed by Berlin), were sent to all the wine regions of France to coordinate the most intense looting that the country had ever seen. 
     
    Alongside the very ambiguous relationship of the Vichy Regime and the collaboration of many French professionals with the occupiers, this immense program of wine collection was a drama that many would prefer to forget. Now, more than seventy years after the end of the conflict, the time has come to tell the story of what really happened. 
     
    Following a meticulous investigation and relying exclusively on previously unpublished sources, Christophe Lucand reveals the history of the world of French wine that was subjected to the tests of war, occupation and of all the compromises this entails. 
     
    “The author has walked the line with sensitivity and provided a balanced review of this very painful time for French winemakers.” —Firetrench
    Show book
  • The Bagel - The Surprising History of a Modest Bread - cover

    The Bagel - The Surprising...

    Maria Balinska

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A “scrumptious little book” about the cultural and historical background of this humble and hearty treat (The New York Times).   If smoked salmon and cream cheese bring only one thing to mind, you can count yourself among the world’s millions of bagel mavens. But few people are aware of the bagel’s provenance, let alone its adventuresome history. This charming book tells the remarkable story of the bagel’s journey from the tables of seventeenth-century Poland to the freezers of middle America today, a story rooted in centuries of Polish, Jewish, and American history.   Research in international archives and numerous personal interviews uncover the bagel’s links with the defeat of the Turks by Polish king Jan Sobieski in 1683, the Yiddish cultural revival of the late nineteenth century, and Jewish migration across the Atlantic to America. There the story moves from the bakeries of New York’s Lower East Side to the Bagel Bakers’ Local 388 Union of the 1960s, and the attentions of the mob. Maria Balinska weaves together a rich, quirky, and evocative history of East European Jewry—and the unassuming ring-shaped roll the world has taken to its heart.   “Thought-provoking and fact-filled . . . Uses the bagel as a way of viewing Polish-Jewish history.” —The New York Times   “Gives readers plenty to chew on . . . Thoroughly entertaining.” —The Wall Street Journal
    Show book