Filmed in the Brookline, Mass., test kitchen of Cook's Illustrated magazine, America's Test Kitchen is the most watched cooking show on public television.
Listen to America's Test Kitchen Radio on 89.7 WGBH each Saturday at 2pm.
| Monday 5/21/12 7:30 PM WGBH 44 |
Tuesday 5/22/12 7:30 PM WGBH 44 |
Wednesday 5/23/12 7:30 PM WGBH 44 |
Thursday 5/24/12 7:30 PM WGBH 44 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cold-Weather Comfort | Fall Classics | Rise and Shine Breakfast | Chocolate Torte |
| Saturday 5/26/12 3:00 PM WGBH 2/HD |
Monday 5/28/12 7:30 PM WGBH 44 |
Tuesday 5/29/12 7:30 PM WGBH 44 |
Wednesday 5/30/12 7:30 PM WGBH 44 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soup and Bread From Scratch | Gnocchi and Panzanella | Pasta, Please | A Slow and Easy Thanksgiving |
| Thursday 5/31/12 7:30 PM WGBH 44 |
Saturday 6/2/12 6:00 AM WGBH Create |
Saturday 6/2/12 11:00 AM WGBH Create |
Saturday 6/2/12 6:00 PM WGBH Create |
| A Latin Celebration | Cool and Creamy Desserts | All-American Fruit Desserts | Cool and Creamy Desserts |
| Saturday 6/2/12 11:00 PM WGBH Create |
Sunday 6/3/12 12:00 AM WGBH Create |
Sunday 6/3/12 2:30 AM WGBH Create |
Sunday 6/3/12 12:00 PM WGBH Create |
| All-American Fruit Desserts | Lazy Day Breakfast | Lazy Day Breakfast | Cool and Creamy Desserts |
| Sunday 6/3/12 5:00 PM WGBH Create |
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| All-American Fruit Desserts | |||
Related Features
About America's Test Kitchen
Filmed in the Brookline, Mass., test kitchen of Cook's Illustrated magazine, America's Test Kitchen is the most watched cooking show on public television. Host Christopher Kimball presents carefully developed recipes, solves everyday cooking problems, and tests equipment and supermarket ingredients for quality and practicality.
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Julia Child: A Tribute
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Behind The Scenes With America's Best Food Critics
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Saturdays at 2pm on 89.7 WGBH
Comment on This Program
Casey commented on America's Test Kitchen on 10.26.11
1. I almost NEVER watch ANY cooking program. Sometimes, while enjoying that male pastime of clicking through channels, I briefly pass over a cooking show, briefly watch, then, CRITICALLY leave for some ACTION or SPORTS program.
2. I briefly see young/older people presenting recipes and their audiences Necessarily, of cours oohing and ahhing about their wonderful food we cannot seem them GAG offscreen.
3. I treated YOUR program in a similar manner UNTIL I chanced upon that series about the wonderful VICTORIAN MEALFROMSCRATCH. Having just visited the Mark Twain house in Hartford and having seen the kitchen there, it had extra meaning and, as I clicked through channels, stopped at YOUR program more often.
4. The problem I find having served as a cook aboard towboats on the Mississippi, Ohio, and other rivers for yearswas that many of the presenters a use unsanitary practices, b have no CLUE as to what they are doing, c and, evidently are presenting to their wonderful, sociallyconnected friends who watch only because IT IS THE THING TO DO. Example Every time I see a certain guy with long bushy hair showing his skills good or not I want to shout at the screen "Get a Hair Net! Asshole."
5. As I saw more and more parts of your programs I realized that you actually TRY stuff MORE THAN ONCE and present something that, at least, YOU find to your liking. I can live with that.
6. A few weeks ago I saw a segment and was enticed to watch about homemade MASHED POTATOES you know, the ones STEAMED, not BOILED "So it easier to soak up all that butter and milk." TRIED IT AT LUNCH TODAY KISS THE BLONDE LADY FOR ME and KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK.
7. Tip You MAY have discussed this on MANY occasions, but, since I do not WATCH most cooking shows, I wouldnt know that "Steaming vegetables and cooking them until they are barely done may be HEALTHFUL, but being from the South is often not TASTY. Example Yellow Squash or Zuchinnisp? I EAT it, not SPELL it. have LITTLE flavor unless COOKED DOWN UNTIL MUSHY. Try this for flavor to put with those wonderful mashed potatoes Cut up yellow and/or green squash simple slices will do. Crossslice 1 2 onions I use yellow its cheap and who cares what COLOR your food is?. Put in sauce pan with a little olive oil or pat of butter, salt, pepper. start on medium heat, then reduce, cover, and cook UNTIL IT IS ALL COOKED DOWN TO A VERY SOFT TEXTURE. If you let it sit 5 10 minutes before serving, it is even MORE flavorful, but who can wait that long to eat something that smells so good.
YOU WILL FIND IT HAS AN ENTIRELY DIFFERENT TASTE THE BARELY COOKED STUFF I usually eat when I steam them.
Another item that is a SLEEPER with flavors unknown when cooked AS USUAL
= EGGPLANT My dear old mother used to peel, cut into chunks, add small onion and a little water and BOIL DOWN SLOWLY UNTIL PULPY. She would add salt, pepper, flour, then spoon it into hot skillet LIKE POTATO PANCAKES. These also need to cool for a few minutes before eating. They dont LOOK so great, they are not crisp, they are rather soft, but have a WONDERFUL flavor all their own.
KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK.
Ann commented on America's Test Kitchen on 09.29.09
I cant find Cooks Country when using your search field and I cant find it on your schedule. When are you airing the new episodes?
Filmed in the Brookline, Mass., test kitchen of Cook's Illustrated magazine, America's Test Kitchen is the most watched cooking show on public television. Host Christopher Kimball presents carefully developed recipes, solves everyday cooking problems, and tests equipment and supermarket ingredients for quality and practicality.
Each episode features recipes we've carefully developed to make sure they work every time. Christopher Kimball and the test cooks solve everyday cooking problems, test equipment so you never have to waste money on things that don't work, and taste supermarket ingredients to save you time in the store. It's a common-sense, practical approach you won't find on other cooking shows.
For the first time, the show is now available whenever you want to watch it. Sign up for America's Test Kitchen TV OnDemand and watch recipes, testings and techniques whenever and as often as you'd like.
A Grand, Sweet Finale
A Latin Celebration
A Moroccan Feast
A Slow and Easy Thanksgiving
All-American Fruit Desserts
All-Time Cookie Favorites
An Austrian Supper
An Old-Fashioned Thanksgiving
Asian Favorites at Home
Asian Take-Out at Home
Backyard Chicken Dinner
Backyard Steak and Potatoes
Best Burgers and Fries
Best Weekend Breakfast
Breadmaking, Simplified
Bringing Home Italian Favorites
Chewy Brownies and Chocolate Cupcakes
Chicken and Rice: Indian-Style
Chicken Classics, Reinvented
Chocolate Torte
Classic Asian Appetizers
Classic Beef Braises
Coconut Layer Cake
Coffee Break Sweets
Coffeehouse Treats
Cold-Weather Comfort
Cookie Jar Favorites
Cool and Creamy Desserts
Crêpes and Croissants
Deep-Dish Pizza
Desserts With an English Accent
Dinner With a Latin Accent
Dutch Oven Classics
Easier Italian Favorites
Easy Apple Desserts
Egg Dishes with an Accent
Everyone's Favorite Cake
Fall Classics
Fall Favorites
Fish Made Easy
Four-Star Stuffed Chicken Breasts
French Classics
French Classics, Reimagined
French Country Cooking
Gnocchi and Panzanella
Great Glazed Chicken
Great Grilled Roast Beef
Grilled Pork Chops and Ribs
Grilled Rack of Lamb Dinner
Grilled Steak and Gazpacho
Here's the Beef
Holiday Ham and Biscuits
Indian Favorites Simplified
Italian Bread and Sauce
Italian Comfort Classics
Italian-American Classics
Kansas City Barbecue
Lazy Day Breakfast
Lemon Layer Cake
Let's Do Chinese
Lightening Up Chocolate Desserts
Lunchtime Specials
Meat and Potatoes for Company
Mediterranean Specials
New York-Style Pizza at Home
Old-Fashioned Breakfast Cakes
Old-Fashioned Fruit Desserts
Old-Fashioned Snack Cakes
Old-Fashioned Sunday Dinners
One Great Thanksgiving
Paella & Sangria
Pasta, Please
Perfecting Pasta Sauces
Pizza Party
Pork on the Grill
Puddings---From Simple to Spectacular
Rainy Day BBQ Pork Chops
Resurrecting the Roast Beef Dinner
Rise and Shine Breakfast
Rolls and Loaves
Salmon and Sole
Salmon: Indoors and Out
Salted Turkey and Green Beans
Saucy Italian Favorites
Seafood in a Skillet
Sensational Skillet Recipes
Shake and Bake Reinvented
Shrimp in a Skillet
Shrimp Two Ways
Simply Chicken
Simply Italian
Slow-Cooker Revolution
Soup and Bread From Scratch
Soups of the Day
South-of-the-Border Supper
Southern Fare, Reinvented
Steak Frites
Stuffed Beef Tenderloin
Summertime Supper Fare
Sweet Endings
Thanksgiving Turkey
The Best Blueberry Pie
The Cookie Jar
The Crunchiest Pork Chops Ever
The Italian Grill
The Perfect Roast
Tostadas and Empanadas
Triple-Chocolate Mousse Cake
Turkey on the Grill
Two Ways With Pork
Vegetarian Pasta Night
Weeknight Summer Supper
Weeknight Workhorses
Who Wants Pasta?



