Better Homes and Gardens Cooking for Today – Pizzas

by WorldVillage Software Reviews, published Friday, March 31st, 2006 at 9:39 am

A SOFTWARE PLATTER OF PIZZAS


A Review of Better Homes and Gardens Cooking for Today – Pizzas




by Susan Davis

Sigh Another recipe program. At least that’s what I was thinking at

first, when I opened Better Homes and Gardens Cooking for Today -

Pizzas program. I had just finished dinner, and I definitely wasn’t

hungry. I figured that this was the perfect time to test the program’s

ability to lure me. Within ten minutes, I was practically drooling all

over my keyboard.

Keep in mind, of course, that I love pizza. I will eat almost anything

reasonable except green peppers and anchovies on pizza. But after

a while, the standard pizza fare becomes bland, even to me. With

Cooking for Today’s Pizza recipes, my faith in the eternal pizza has

been renewed.

Under Windows 95, the installation routine is smooth and automatic,

and quite easy to complete. Even with the minimum install to save disk

space, the program runs well on my Pentium-133. If I wanted to use the

disk space on the maximum install (which requires approximately 40MB),

I would expect the efficiency of both the display and the search

routines to increase significantly.

When you first start the program, you are greeted with a classy

display, and upbeat music. The screen opens to a clean, well-designed

interface modeled after a web browser. The icons are quite visible,

and the single-click browser method, including the back command, is

both familiar and efficient. The menu system gives you access to a

wide variety of functions, including the recipe list, a personal

recipe box section, a cooking encyclopedia, and the search routine for

filtering recipes.

The program allows you to select multiple recipe programs from

Multicom on installation, so your recipe searches and personal recipe

boxes can be expanded to include favorites from other recipe

compilations. The recipe box provides you with up to five separate

categories for personal organization of favorite recipes. In this

section, you also have the opportunity to add your own recipes, with

instructions and comments. You can even make notes about existing

recipes.

The meal planner section can be helpful, too, at times, especially

with today’s hectic work and play schedules. If you are inclined to

plan a day’s or a week’s schedule of recipes out at once, you can

print them, compile grocery lists, and have the entire week’s schedule

at your fingertips.

One of my favorite features, however, is the Encyclopedia of Cooking

Terms. This section provides you with descriptive, informative

definitions, often including visual details of items, market

preparation of the item (if applicable), and cooking hints. You can

also use the Encyclopedia sorted by recipe items to quickly look up

things that appear in the recipe. This can be handy if you don’t

recognize an ingredient, or you need to know how to prepare it for the

recipe.

The Herb Alternative Guide is part of this section. Listed under the

Herb definition is a particularly useful guide of Herb comparisons and

explanations for the amateur cook. If you don’t have something, check

here for potential substitutes, either for a different but

complementary flavor, or for a similar flavoring possibility. The

Emergency Substitutions section works well for the same kind of help

on other types of ingredients. You will also find another useful tool

in the ingredient equivalents list. It helps you substitute different

forms of the same substances, like slices of bread for bread crumbs,

when you don’t have something on hand and don’t want to buy a large

quantity for just one recipe.

However, the best tool for the truly amateur cook is a novel idea that

is missing in many cooking programs the cooking charts section. You

can actually choose a wide variety of foods and get detailed cooking

instructions and preparation times for each one. For example, how long

should you cook flank steak, and what method of cooking is best? You

can find it here.

For the average cook, those tools are enough to send you well on your

way to culinary success. But Multicom and BH&G didn’t stop there.

Large numbers of simple, but instructive video techniques are included

to help you master different cooking principles. Everything from how

to cut something into thin slices to the proper way to add pasta to

the boiling water in the pan.

What’s for Dinner? gives you a strong search engine, the main function

of which offers you a variety of ways to search for healthy eating

options. You can also search by preparation time or by ingredients, if

you are in a hurry or have a craving for something in particular.

Speaking of cravings, the recipes include not only the traditional

pizzas, but dessert pizzas, appetizer pizzas, and pizza spin-offs.

Since the more traditional pizzas like pepperoni have been covered

infinitely well in other places, this program doesn’t waste the space.

It concentrates on the truly unique and tasty possibilities found in

more creative recipes. Still, you need someplace to start. The Pizza

Basics section provides several recipe variations on basic pizza dough

and basic pizza sauce, including garlic and herb pizza dough and hot

and spicy pizza sauce. This program truly serves up a pizza gourmet’s

information heaven. Even the pictures can make you drool.

The last feature worth mentioning is the on-line component. While easy

to set up, it is a standard feature on the upper scale multimedia

programs on the market today. Because of that, you’d expect that

Multicom, with so many recipe programs available, would have a more

well-designed web page for your use. While the site is functional and

has some useful food-related links, it’s nothing special. This is

definitely the weakest section of the program.

Better Homes and Gardens Cooking for Today Pizzas provides the pizza

dreamer in you with pizza possibilities in more ways than you could

ever imagine. If you love pizza at all, you won’t be able to resist

most of these recipes. Even if you don’t like the exact ingredients,

the one thing pizza has always had in its favor is the flexibility of

toppings and preparation. So, explore the platter a little. You’re

sure to find at least one delightfully new spin on the pizza wheel.




Multimedia Cafe Scorecard



















Product:

Better Homes and Gardens Cooking for Today – Pizzas


Company:

Multicom Publishing, Inc.
1100 Olive Way, Suite 1250
Seattle, WA 98101-9919
(800) 850-7272
(206) 622-5530
E-mail: techsupport@multicom.com


Cost:

n/a






System Requirements:



WINDOWS:33 MHz 80486DX or better

Minimum 8MB RAM

MS DOS 5.0 or later

Microsoft Windows 3.1 or later (Windows 95 compatible)

MPC-2 Compatible CD-ROM drive (2x or faster)

SVGA monitor\display at 256 colors

SoundBlaster compatible audio board

Mouse, Modem or TCP/IP access (required for optional online features).
MACINTOSH:None




Breakdown:



Entertainment Value 3
Educational Value 5
Concept 4
Depth 4
Interface 5



Overall Score:






0 rating, 0 votes0 rating, 0 votes (* 0 rating, 0 votes)
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