Nintendo Brings Multiplayer Into the Kitchen
Rounding out our week of videogames and food is a look at the next culinary title to hit the DS, America's Test Kitchen: Let's Get Cooking.
Let's face it: his article this week [http://www.amazon.com/Cooking-Mama-Nintendo-DS/dp/B000FUWCRY/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=videogames&qid=1279570718&sr=1-1] about how he and his wife assembled a six-course meal of Japanese delicacies with Mama as his only guide, he may have left out a crucial caveat: "Your mileage may vary." Thankfully, if all you have is a DS and a kitchen full of ingredients, there's a better way.
America's Test Kitchen: Let's Get Cooking [http://www.amazon.com/Americas-Test-Kitchen-Cooking-Nintendo-DS/dp/B0033BJS8S/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=videogames&qid=1279570795&sr=1-1] isn't the first DS cooking aid to hit store shelves, but it could be the most collaborative. Many of its touted features have to do with making cooking as much of a communal process as sitting down for a meal. Recipes list age-appropriate kitchen tasks, so you don't need to worry about your 6-year-old brother deboning a roast. And for the less skilled among us, the software offers prompts to clarify some of the more confusing terminology. (Did you know that "mincing" means "to chop finely"? Because if you didn't, you should probably put down that knife.)
There's also sorting functionality that lets users rate their favorite recipes, view possible dishes by ingredients, difficulty, cooking time or calorie count and write notes with the touchscreen and stylus to add their own personal touch to the recipe. But perhaps the coolest feature is the ability to send select recipes from one DS to another, even if they don't have a copy of the game - so the next time you throw a potluck, you may want to make sure your guests bring their handhelds along.
America's Test Kitchen will be available on March 28 for the price of $19.99. It's rated E for Everyone, although the ESRB notes there are "alcohol references." Could America's Test Wet Bar be far behind?
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Rounding out our week of videogames and food is a look at the next culinary title to hit the DS, America's Test Kitchen: Let's Get Cooking.
Let's face it: his article this week [http://www.amazon.com/Cooking-Mama-Nintendo-DS/dp/B000FUWCRY/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=videogames&qid=1279570718&sr=1-1] about how he and his wife assembled a six-course meal of Japanese delicacies with Mama as his only guide, he may have left out a crucial caveat: "Your mileage may vary." Thankfully, if all you have is a DS and a kitchen full of ingredients, there's a better way.
America's Test Kitchen: Let's Get Cooking [http://www.amazon.com/Americas-Test-Kitchen-Cooking-Nintendo-DS/dp/B0033BJS8S/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=videogames&qid=1279570795&sr=1-1] isn't the first DS cooking aid to hit store shelves, but it could be the most collaborative. Many of its touted features have to do with making cooking as much of a communal process as sitting down for a meal. Recipes list age-appropriate kitchen tasks, so you don't need to worry about your 6-year-old brother deboning a roast. And for the less skilled among us, the software offers prompts to clarify some of the more confusing terminology. (Did you know that "mincing" means "to chop finely"? Because if you didn't, you should probably put down that knife.)
There's also sorting functionality that lets users rate their favorite recipes, view possible dishes by ingredients, difficulty, cooking time or calorie count and write notes with the touchscreen and stylus to add their own personal touch to the recipe. But perhaps the coolest feature is the ability to send select recipes from one DS to another, even if they don't have a copy of the game - so the next time you throw a potluck, you may want to make sure your guests bring their handhelds along.
America's Test Kitchen will be available on March 28 for the price of $19.99. It's rated E for Everyone, although the ESRB notes there are "alcohol references." Could America's Test Wet Bar be far behind?
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