Pictures Tennessee trip Recipes

The Long-Time High-Heat® Cookbook

by

Monsieur Longtemps, Chef de Cuisine

With additional material contributed by

Monsieur Haut-Chaud, Sous-Chef

Lord Kelvin, Chef de Dessert

and

Monsieur Allez-pour-ça-Toujours,
Saucier,
Chef de Pastrie, and
Inventor of the Methode

Table of Contents

Disclaimer

Warning: This book is a joke! Except for this page, do not believe anything you read in this book. Do not attempt to follow any of the recipes. The authors, publisher, and everyone associated in any way, however peripheral, with the production and distribution of this book, including but not limited to their families, heirs, friends, pets, neighbors, the mail carriers who brought their checks, and the delivery people who brought pizza during the long, hot writing sessions, disclaim any and all responsibility for any injury or insult resulting from the recipes in this book. Enemies; them you can sue.

Introduction: The Invention of the Methode

The Historic Day dawned like any of ten thousand others, with no sign, hint, or portent of the Great Event that was about to occur. Later that day, with the natural and unaffected brilliance which is his watermark, Monsieur Allez-pour-ça-Toujours proceeded to cook a simple American hamburger. Using his humble genius which borders on the miraculously accidental, Monsieur Allez-pour-ça-Toujours turned the heat to "High" (!) and left the meat sizzling unattended for a Long Time (!). Eventually, with that air of inevitability that pervades all the greatest discoveries, Monsieur Allez-pour-ça-Toujours Père noticed the signs of the incipient breakthrough -- predominantly copious quantities of greasy smoke -- and reacted with the horror and fear which are the typical reaction of the merely conventional when confronted the truly new: "What are you doing? You cook food for a long time at low heat, or a short time at high heat, but you never cook for a Long Time at High Heat!"

Sitting nearby, coincidentally within earshot, Monsieur Haut- Chaud could not fail to overhear this statement of traditional values. But with the innocent childlike creativity of an Einstein, Monsieur Haut-Chaud grabbed this thought and refused to let go, despite considerable outside pressure from the many who could never understand the true implications of the discovery about to be made. "What if?", he thought repeatedly. "What if?" we ignored convention; "What if?" we turned the entire world of cooking on its side, heading in a different direction altogether? And then, finally, the Momentous Thought: "What if?" we did cook for a long time at high heat?

And thus history was made.

Benefits of Long-Time High-Heat Cooking

Cooking with High Explosives

Our Other Book shows how you can:
E-mail: tempsw@mcs.com © 2001 Updated 2001-04-20