|
|
Tarfumes.com - Americas Best Lost Recipes: 121 heirloom recipes too good to forget

|
List Price: $29.95
Our Price: $19.77
Your Save: $ 10.18 ( 34% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Cook's Illustrated
|
Average Customer Rating:     

|
|
Binding: Spiral-bound Dewey Decimal Number: 641.5973 EAN: 9781933615189 ISBN: 1933615184 Label: Cook's Illustrated Manufacturer: Cook's Illustrated Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 224 Publication Date: 2007-10 Publisher: Cook's Illustrated Release Date: 2007-10-01 Studio: Cook's Illustrated
|
|
|
|
|
|
Editorial Reviews:
|
Ever heard of cold-oven pound cake, Hummingbird Cake, Mile-High Bologna Pie, or Mashed-Potato Fudge?
You'll find these recipes and more like them in America's Best Lost Recipes, a book that grew out of a nationwide contest for the best heirloom recipes, with recipes selected and put through their paces by the editors of Cook's Country magazine.
Evocative of both family ties and our national heritage, recipes like these are powerful touchstones for the past. Packed with full-color photos and enhanced features that make it a perfect gift (blank pages on which to detail your own family's lost recipes, a pocket to hold the recipes, and a bookplate), this collection features food you will want to make for your family and friends. Test kitchen notes tell the story of our recipe testing and detail what you need to know to be successful in the kitchen.
Contest entrants describe the recipes and history in their own words in brief introductions, lending this collection a narrative and personal quality few cookbooks possess. A slice of Americana, America's Best Lost Recipes aims to preserve the best our culinary heritage has to offer.
|
|
|
Spotlight customer reviews:
|
Customer Rating:      Summary: Wonderful Recipes Comment: I bought this cookbook after seeing it at someone's home. I think the "old" recipes are the best for envoking thoughts and memories of loved ones. There are great recipes and even better stories. I have given 2 as gifts.
Customer Rating:      Summary: America's Best Lost Recipes Comment: I expected to see many restaurant recipes, but instead got too many family recipes. I certainly did not want "Grandpa Cooley's Angry Deviled Eggs" nor "G-mom's Spanish Dressing'. Many of the recipes should have remained lost.
Customer Rating:      Summary: BOOK Comment: I GAVE THIS AS A GIFT TO A COOKBOOK COLLECTOR. SHE IA VERY HAPPY WITH IT.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Beautifully bound... but where's the beef?!? Comment: If the America's Test Kitchen folks would take the recipes from their new The Cook's Country Cookbook: Regional and Heirloom Favorites Tested and Reimagined for Today's Home Cooks, and put them into the format and binding of this text, then they'd have one of the best cookbooks on the market!
I have rarely come across a cookbook which is as user-friendly as "Lost Recipes" -- it's sturdy, it lies open perfectly, the paper stock is heavy and resists stains, the recipes are one-per-page with terrific color photos alongside many of the finished dishes, the fonts are quite readable, and there's a nice back section of lined pages for one's personal notes.
Unfortunately, a large number of the recipes in here are not of a sort which are going to hold much appeal for most home chefs in terms of feeding their families. Kolotny Borscht (p. 32) and Chocolate Marlow (p. 168) are just not the types of dishes which excite one's taste buds.
I bought this book, chiefly for two reasons:
1. to find some of the so-called "lost recipes" which I anticipated being in here (and they were not), and,
2. to have some really old-timey, good-quality, home-cooking recipes.
These expectations having not been fulfilled, this cookbook has been lying around in the way for a couple of months now. I'm going to pass it on to a niece who enjoys making recipes that are out on the fringe in the hope that she can find something in this text.
The staff of America's Test Kitchen is comprised of some really well-schooled and knowledgeable people but I wish they had worked with different "lost recipes" than the ones I found here. There are a total of 121 recipes to be found throughout the text and my wife and I could discover only six that we had any interest in trying -- here are the lonely six which we liked:
Cheese Puffs, (p. 3)
Szekely Goulash (Pork Stew with Sauerkraut), (p. 38)
Texas Chili Dogs, (p. 40)
Naked Ladies with Their Legs Crossed, (p. 68)
Gram's Doughnuts, (p. 71)
7-Up Cake, (p. 113)
For the price of the book, six recipes of interest manifested a notable disappointment. For a superb America's Test Kitchen Cookbook (in terms of both the format and the recipe quality), get this one: The America's Test Kitchen Family Cookbook, Heavy-Duty Revised Edition
Customer Rating:      Summary: Real recipes for real people, with great stories Comment: I checked this book out at the library before I bought it, so I already knew it was a winner. It's a perfect cookbook - recipes that real people can make with ingredients we all have, great pictures and just enough history to make it interesting, but not distracting. Highly recommended.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
include("/rightadmenu.txt"); ?>
|