Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Country Baking or Wagon Wheel Kitchens

Country Baking: Recipes for Freshly Baked Goodies from Grandma's Kitchen to Share with Family and Friends

Author: Gooseberry Patch

Remember freshly baked treats from Grandma's kitchen? You'll find old-fashioned delights like apple pandowdy, country cheddar loaf, shoo-fly pie, buttermilk biscuits, sweet rolls and more in Country Baking Cookbook. It's packed with easy recipes for pies and pastries, biscuits and breads, cookies and cakes...lots of homemade favorites! Filled with fun, friendship and easy how-to's for thoughtful baked gifts.



Go to: Modern Indian Cooking or Magic Teaspoon

Wagon Wheel Kitchens: Food on the Oregon Trail

Author: Jacqueline B Williams

"This book holds an encyclopedia of information culled from diaries and contemporary newspapers. I can't think of a more intimate account of the lives of the overlanders, how they turned their rude wagons into homes, how they made meals both a comfort and a celebration. Some readers will want to try out recipes; others will read in awe as in the midst of difficult travel, women made certain their families marked the Fourth of July with cakes—fruit jelly and sponge-puddings, and ice cream—and clean underwear!"—Lillian Schlissel, author of Women's Diaries of the Westward Journey and Western Women: Their Lands, Their Lives

"This lively book puts the reader squarely on the Oregon Trail—baking bread in a Dutch oven over a campfire, searing buffalo meat, and trading for fresh vegetables and fish. Through emigrant guides, diaries, and 'receipts' of the day, Williams reconstructs the meals that succored emigrants as they crossed the Plains. To understand trail women's contributions to the migration, simply try one of Williams's 'pinch-and-a-handful' recipes—and do it over an open fire in a rainstorm."—Glenda Riley, author of The Female Frontier: A Comparative View of Women on the Prairie and the Plains

"It is tempting to think of Wagon Wheel Kitchens as a feminist supplement to De Voto's Across the Wide Missouri. Its cast of characters, its often rousing glimpses of trail life—and the recipes—illuminate the hard facts of the western migration. As one of the author's overlanders exclaims with ardor, 'What cooks we are!'"—Evan Jones, author of American Food: The Gastronomic Story

"A fascinating trip-within-the-trip on the great Oregon Trail. Williams is like the gold prospector who spent years digging constantly into mountains of material just to find a nugget of gold from time to time. This book is a large collection of her nicely polished gold nuggets of historical archaeology. It's a gift to us all."—Sam'l P. Arnold, author of Eating Up the Santa Fe Trail

Author Biography: Jacqueline Williams is coauthor of several popular books on nutrition, including Lowfat American Favorites and Hold the Fat, Sugar, and Salt, as well as numerous articles on frontier dining and pioneer cooking..

Publishers Weekly

Pioneers along the Oregon Trail in the mid-to-late 19th century not only traveled stoically, risked their lives, spent their savings and suffered, but cooked and ate as well. ``Simply surviving the trip was not the only goal,'' Williams ( Lowfat American Favorites ) notes. ``Food was a primary way of providing some pleasure and variety during the endless days of riding and walking.'' Her culinary history of an essential episode of the American story calls for its facts on diaries and letters written by the voyagers, newspapers and magazines of the era and period cookbooks. The result of research is a dutiful chronicle distinguished more by the information imparted than by much verve in the telling. How, let us say, did boudin blanc come to be cooked by travelers on the Trail? It was ``an ancient recipe for sausages'' made new, based on buffalo cow meat killed fresh while the settlers were en route. (Williams supplies the complete recipe, seductively archaic: cooks are instructed to make ``love to'' the ``lower extremity of the large gut of the Buffaloe'' with ``forefinger and thumb'' maneuvering the gut to keep what is needed and eject what is not.) Faithful readers will find lore like this interspersed with rather dull prose. (Aug.)



Table of Contents:
List of Illustrations
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
1Stocking Up1
2The Mobile Pantry48
3Essential Equipment77
4The Way They Cooked113
5The Glorious Fourth164
Epilogue187
Notes191
Suggestions for Further Reading211
Index215

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