Showing posts with label southern cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label southern cooking. Show all posts

Y'all Come: Food for When You're Hungry for Home Review

Y'all Come: Food for When You're Hungry for Home
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This is the best cookbook I have ever owned! Great recipes, interesting stories. I have yet to try one of the recipes and not have it turn out to be wonderful and delicious.

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Best of the Best from Mississippi: Selected Recipes from Mississippi's Favorite Cookbooks Review

Best of the Best from Mississippi: Selected Recipes from Mississippi's Favorite Cookbooks
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I was familiar with this cookbook from a friend's copy. Just had to have one myself. Used several recipes out of it and all were good. Have used a crockpot for some of the casseroles that were supposed to be baked in the oven and they turned out delicious.

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Best of the Best from Tennessee: Selected Recipes from Tennessee's Favorite Cookbooks Review

Best of the Best from Tennessee: Selected Recipes from Tennessee's Favorite Cookbooks
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The cookbook is full of wonderful basic recipes for all types of dishes. It also includes several nice delicacies for entertaining, special dinners, etc. I have grown up in the South and find this is a great guide to keep me in touch with my roots and the great meals we shared. The book is well written and wonderfully illustrated with pencil sketched country scenes. Many recipes are personalized with comments from the provider that give it great personality without taking away from its main objective; Great Food. My hats off to the editors and all of the contributors!!

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Recipes from Miss Daisy's - 25th Anniversary Edition Review

Recipes from Miss Daisy's - 25th Anniversary Edition
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This cookbook is a real treasure of good Southern cooking. These are the very dishes that made Miss Daisy's Tearoom a Nashville landmark. Miss Daisy's Tearoom has been such a pervasive influence on cooking in Nashville that my mother and all her friends must have been cooking from this cookbook back when I was growing up in Nashville. Amazingly to me, here are the very recipes my mother cooked from before her recipes got lost in a move! Until I picked up this book, I had given up hope of being able to duplicate certain beloved dishes, like the Christmas Ribbon Salad that used to grace our buffet table in its red-green-and-white glory whenever we had a party, as well as the Fresh Apple Cake that I used to help make by grating the Granny Smith apples. This book is chock-full of delectable recipes, and I highly recommend it to all who want to have a taste of Nashville's culinary heritage. My gratitude to Miss Daisy herself, for sharing her recipes with us!

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For twenty-five years Recipes from Miss Daisy's has been the cookbook of choice for the thousands of people who have enjoyed the warm hospitality and delicious food that were the hallmarks of Miss Daisy's Tearoom in Franklin and in the Green Hills area of Nashville, Tennessee. Now, in response to popular demand, a new edition of the "wonderful little yellow cookbook" has been lovingly prepared for those who have nearly worn out their well-thumbed copies as well as generations of Middle Tennesseans who will continue to enjoy it for years to come.The story of Miss Daisy's Tearoom is as interesting as the food served there. When Carter's Court in Franklin was still on the drawing board, the developers recognized the need for a place where ladies could come for lunch. When a turn-of-the-century house was moved there, people exclaimed, "That's got to be a tearoom," and so it was. The restaurant moved to Green Hills in 1982, expanding to a full-service restaurant, and returning to Franklin in 1986 as Daisy's of Carter's Court.The food in Recipes from Miss Daisy's is the same food that was served at the restaurants plus some more wonderful dishes that no proper Southerner could resist. Turkey Divan, Buttermilk Pie, Congealed Cucumber Salad, Sally Lunn Muffins, Creamed Chicken, Festive Cranberry Salad, Marinated Carrots, Fudge Pie, Garden Tomato Stuffed with Tearoom Tuna Salad, Miss Daisy's Beef Casserole (a favorite!), and Tomato Aspic are among the Tearoom favorites that have become classic fare for Middle Tennesseans and across the South.Updated to include serving amounts and to clarify some of the original instructions, this 25th anniversary edition of Recipes from Miss Daisy's will earn a well-deserved place in kitchens and on cookbook shelves everywhere.

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Savor the Seasons (Culinary Collection) Review

Savor the Seasons (Culinary Collection)
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The third volume in a truly outstanding series of cookbooks created by the members of The Junior League of Tampa, "Savor The Seasons" offers year-round seasonal menus, festive dishes, and dining traditions with a twist. Very nicely illustrated with occasional full color photography, the menus with their component recipes are organized into five major sections: 'Celebrations'; 'Openers', 'Complements', 'Centerpieces'; and 'Finished Touches'. Of special note are the concluding appendices: 'The Perfect Setting'; 'Community Projects'; 'Recipe Contributors and Testers'. "Savor The Seasons" concludes with an Index and 'Order Information'. From Crab and Brie Dip with Artichokes; Sherried Mushroom Soup; Roasted Beef Tenderloin with Brand Cream Sauce; and Skirt Steak with Chimichurri; to Bacon and Leek Quiche; Snapper on Fava Bean Puree with Fig Marsala Reduction; Stacked Turkey with Cranberry Cream Cheese, and Chocolate Amaretto Cheesecake with Raspberry Amaretto Sauce, "Savor The Seasons" offers 'kitchen cook friendly' recipes and menus appropriate for any dining occasion and that will please any palate while satisfying any appetite.

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Savor the Seasons, Volume 3 of the Junior League of Tampa Culinary Collection, invites you to join us on a year-round tour of seasonal menus, festive flavors and traditions with a twist.Join us for a celebration of holidays that span the calendar, from New Year's and Valentine's Day to Halloween and Thanksgiving.Our collection of holiday recipes offeres countless menu combinations to help you Savor the Seasons.

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Tampa Treasures Review

Tampa Treasures
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After several outstanding meals at my friend's home, I asked for a few of her recipes . . . when she informed my that they all came from "Tampa Treasures," I decided to try and get my hands on a copy. I've now made several of the recipes and have found that each one is easy to prepare and outstanding. The Junior League of Tampa has indeed been very generous in sharing their culinary best!

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Feel like you're on a Florida vacation while still at home!The tastes and treasures of Tampa come alive in recipes, theme menus, and "treasure tips."Area chefs and restaurants contributed signature recipes that make this a perfect gift for any cook.A 1992 National Winner of the Tabasco Community Cookbook Award.

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The New South Carolina Cookbook: S.C Family & Community Leaders Review

The New South Carolina Cookbook: S.C Family and Community Leaders
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This is an excellent cookbook - definately worth buying. I am very impressed with the variety of recipes, as well as the simplicity of instructions!! Very valuable resource!!

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The Lady & Sons, Too: A Whole New Batch of Recipes from Savannah Review

The Lady and Sons, Too: A Whole New Batch of Recipes from Savannah
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This is Paula Deen's second cookbook. It predates her regular Food Network series and may predate her first appearance on any Food Network shows. Unless you look carefully to notice the imprimatur of the giant publisher Random House, you may take this for a local, self-published cookbook done by a church or women's social group to raise money, because that is exactly how the recipes come across. They represent your basic southern meat and potatoes and grits and collard greens menu and succeed very well in filling that niche.
That is almost exactly the same opening paragraph I used for Paula's first book. It is as true of the second book as it was of the first, even down to the plastic amateur binding which makes the Random House imprimatur so surprising.
One of the few differences between the first and the second books is that the second adds more details to how Paula and her sons came to establish their restaurant. Another difference is that only a very few of the recipes are cited as dishes served at Paula's restaurant. A third difference is that Paula strays a bit outside the standard Southern culinary canon. Some distinctly French and Italian standards such as steak au pauvre and pasta Puttanesca sauce have found their way into the book. My humble opinion on the Italian dishes is that a few important details of the proper techniques are missing, but your result from following these recipes will be quite acceptable.
Like the first volume, almost all of the recipes call for a reasonable number of easily obtained ingredients and require a relatively few steps. Many recipes call for prepared or processed ingredients such as canned soups, packaged rice dishes, and Velveeta.
Like the first book, I would open this volume if I wanted to find something to make for a person whose fussy zone excludes things like curry, lemon grass, hosin sauce, wines, and leeks. This would be a fallback source if I wanted something to fit a Pennsylvania Dutch palate, but the Pennsylvania Dutch cookbooks on my shelf fail to inspire.
I would not go to Paula's books for baked goods. I am certain her recipes work. I have tried several and find them too long on butter and eggs and too short on fruit. If you, dear reader are an inexperienced cook, I would put this book to the side and start with a cookbook specifically written to teach techniques such as Madeline Kamman's `The New Making of a Chef'.
If you like basic American Cooking done with the cachet of a Food Network celebrity chef, this is an excellent source at a very reasonable price. Many of the recipes have been featured on Paula's Food Network show, so this book gains value if you are fond of following her show. I would also agree with other reviewers that her first book is preferable to the second, but the second is worthy of her style.

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The Seasonal Palette Review

The Seasonal Palette
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I'd recommend this book to anyone who likes throwing luncheon and dinner parties, casual or formal. Also, there are some great recipes using fresh ingredients depending on the season, such as the Avocado, Tomato, Cucumber Dice salad, one of my favorites... MMM!!

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The About.Com Guide To Southern Cooking: All You Need to Prepare 225 Delicious Home Cooked Favorites (About.com Guides) Review

The About.Com Guide To Southern Cooking: All You Need to Prepare 225 Delicious Home Cooked Favorites (About.com Guides)
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To Date (3/5/11), I have made 41 of the 225 recipes contained within this tome of Southern cooking.
I'm not sure why I picked this book up. Its not like my normal selections for cookbooks. I usually go for the kind with lots of pictures and for more exotic cuisines. But I am a big fan of Southern food and about the only person in my family who likes greens. Therefore, it just kinda made sense for me to add this to my ever-growing cookbook collection. Overall I was pleased with the book, it had some decent recipes, and everything was pretty easy to make for the most part. I found a lot of the recipes I had to up the seasoning quite a bit as it was somewhat bland, but I'm fond of heavy spices so this may not hold true for everyone.
The book is laid out 15 chapters and some appendices. Within the chapters themselves there are spaces on the sides of the pages where tips, tricks, links to online recipes or articles dwell. There are also some comments on usage of tools in the kitchen. In the back is an index, but everything is pretty much grouped by type of food so locating things is fairly easy. Each chapter starts out with a list of recipes that are contained within the chapter as well. For those who like pictures though, be warned, the only picture in this book (aside from the authors face in areas) is the one on the front cover.
CHAPTER ONE-BEVERAGES
This chapter covers drinks, and by far, I didn't really accomplish much within this chapter. I did try the Mint Julep (which I didn't care for but then again I don't drink a lot of alcohol) and the hot chocolate mix, which was very good. It also contained recipes for frozen drinks and coolers. The julep that I tried was kind of involved, but the hot chocolate was easy to make and the recipes in this section varied between the two in difficulty.
CHAPTER TWO-APPETIZERS AND BREADS
I found it a little strange that the bread was in this section, but it worked out alright and at least it was titled as so. I'd have to say that I probably tried the most recipes out of this section because they were all fairly easy to make and sounded delicious. The Spicy Cheese Straws tasted like Cheez-Its, which I personally don't like, but any who do would probably love. The crab stuffed mushrooms were good but probably could have been better with more crab and less breadcrumbs. The Deviled Eggs recipe was pretty standard and I imagine the staple recipe anyone would have. I did try the Creamy Crab Dip as well and it was good, but it turned out a lot thinner than I expected and didn't make a good "dip". My fiance was a big fan of the Tangy Glazed Sausage Bites, in which you make your own sauce for instead of a store bought sauce. I do have to say that when I got to the bread part of this section, I was vastly disappointed in the cornbread. For a Southern cookbook, this cornbread was dry and tasteless. The Perfect Buttermilk Biscuits on the other hand, where extremely easy to make and were light, fluffy and delicious.
CHAPTER THREE-BREAKFAST
Surprisingly I didn't try much out of this section although there were plenty of wonderful recipes contained within. Most involved making Casserole's or Breakfast Bakes (which I did make the Mississippi Breakfast Bake, which looked beautiful when finished but could have used some more spice). I was very happy to see Beignets which I think are delicious and can't wait to give this recipe a try.
CHAPTER FOUR-SOUPS AND SALADS
There was a whole lot going on in this chapter and it was pretty evenly split up between the soups and salads. Included in the salads though are recipes like potato salad or cole slaw so its not just a green salad section. I tried out the Chicken Tortilla Soup and thought it was easy to make. The crispy tortilla strips made to accompany were good just on there own and the most popular part of the meal. The Ham and Bean soup was also very easy to make and was just perfect on a rainy day and surprisingly thick. For salads I absolutely adored the Broccoli Salad with Raisins and Pecans (although I used dried cherries, she said any dried small fruit would work) and like most of the recipes within this cookbook, it was very easy to make. The Black Eyed Pea Salad with Basil Dressing was an interesting refreshing take on a bean salad and not quite what I expected when I first started making it.
CHAPTER FIVE-SANDWICHES
I hadn't heard of a Kentucky Hot Brown until I cracked open this book. The name isn't actually very appealing, and at least for this recipe, there was nothing brown about it (I later learned it was named after a place) but it was tasty and very filling. The Out of the Ordinary Burger was tender, but not big on flavor. There were some other Southern classics that I haven't yet tried, like Pimento Cheese Sandwiches, but they looked fairly easy to make through the instructions.
CHAPTER SIX-BEEF, VEAL, AND LAMB
This is the biggest chapter of the book and contains quite a bit of recipes for all of these meats. So many sounded good and they all were fairly inexpensive cuts of meat (aside from lamb, which is always pricey). The Country Fried Steak I was a bit disappointed in. There wasn't a lot of flavor, and maybe it was just the cut of meat I got (which was the suggested cut in the book) but it wasn't very tender and terribly hard to eat since it was so chewy. The Country Style Meatloaf was good and chock full of veggies that you didn't even realize were there while eating it. The Barbecued Meatballs with Rice was a big hit with my fiance, but I just thought they tasted like tangy ketchup (which was a main component of the homemade bbq sauce for the recipe). I haven't yet been able to try any of the Lamb or Veal, and probably won't in the near future due to cost and squeamishness respectively.
CHAPTER SEVEN-PORK AND HAM
I love bacon, ham, and all things pig. This was a pretty large section and it was nice because the few ham recipes used, you could later turn into other ham recipes with the leftovers. The Cajun Seasoned Pork Tenderloin didn't make it to leftovers though. It was incredibly delicious and tender and the only thing I noticed was that I used all of the seasoning for about half of the poundage of meat advised. The Oven Barbecued Pork Chops were easy to make but despite slow cooking they didn't turn out very tender and the sauce was merely ok.
CHAPTER EIGHT-CHICKEN AND TURKEY
This section was actually smaller than I expected for a Southern cookbook. There was still quite a few recipes, but it did shock me that the beef section was larger than this one. The Fried Chicken Strips were good, especially dipped in sauce, but makers should beware that you don't need as much flour mix as is called for in the recipe. The Oven Barbecued Chicken was average, but easy to make.
CHAPTER NINE-FISH AND SHELLFISH
I haven't tried too many recipes out of this section either, just because of seafood costs in my local area, but a lot of the recipes sound pretty good. Frying is a main preparation but there are also croquettes and broiled fish available as well. I did make the Baked Dijon Catfish with Crumb Coating and it did have a good flavor but wasn't as crispy as I would have liked.
CHAPTER TEN-RICE, PASTA, GRAINS, AND BEANS
This section was small, but had a nice little array of recipes. Since I had a whole ton of beans, I chose to make the Louisiana Red Beans and Rice which wasn't bad but took way longer to cook than stated. I also simmered some Down-Home Pinto Beans that were reminiscent of some restaurants, but lacked the depth of flavor even though I used a nice smoked ham hock.
CHAPTER ELEVEN-VEGETABLES
I was actually on the fence about this chapter. Most of these veggies are cooked but not with a lot of seasoning and a pretty standard bland cheese sauce is used for a good many f them. The Easy Fried Corn was interesting, but had a decidedly weird texture. Savory Collard Greens were great with hot sauce, but alas, it made so many and I was only one person eating them and couldn't get through them all. Spinach Casserole with Eggs and Cheese was easy to make, but once again, could have used more spice. But the Creamy Potato Scallop was good, and while it took longer than expected to cook because it was so liquidy, it didn't ruin the flavor. Broccoli with Cheese Sauce, as stated before, had a bland kind of cheese sauce that did nothing for the vegetable. The same applies to the Savory Baked Cabbage as well.
CHAPTER TWELVE-SAUCES, PICKLES, AND PRESERVES
Just like it sounds, this chapter was a mash up of things. The Creamy Sausage Gravy (which I thought should have been in the Breakfast section) was pretty standard fare and very hearty. A real stand out in this chapter was the Come Back Sauce. I will come back anytime for this interesting and tasty sauce that I used on the Fried Chicken Strips. The Barbecue Sauce with Bourbon definitely had a hint of alcohol, but wasn't my favorite bbq sauce.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN-CAKES AND PIES
For some reason I haven't touched this chapter much even though it holds an astonishing amount of goodies. I did make the Praline Cheesecake with Pecan Crust that was sinfully rich, but noticed that the resident cheesecake lover scraped off the topping and went just for the plain cheesecake underneath. There are a couple pies in here that I definitely want to get to making and I think in the future that this chapter will get some heavy use.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN-COOKIES AND CANDY
This chapter did get a lot of use and all of it was very filling and sugary. The Old-Fashioned Peanut Butter Cookies were classic and eaten quickly while The Best Chocolate Chip Cookies were pretty...Read more›

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My Southern Food: A Celebration of the Flavors of the South Review

My Southern Food: A Celebration of the Flavors of the South
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From cover to cover, I have tasted the charm with my eyes and my southern heart! I have tried numerous recipes, perfectly pleased with each one. The way Devon O'Day presents the flair of the South is exactly right, on each page I can see my dear, departed mother, and can taste her southern cooking! My Southern Food is a walk down memory lane with fantastic recipes that are sure to please, and it makes a great gift! The Cathead Cheese Biscuits are to LIVE for!

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Celebrate the South with this beautifully illustrated cookbook. Southern food has rightfully earned its place as one of the most beloved and popular forms of cooking in the United States. However, Southern food doesn't have to be prepared just in the South- delicious Southern dishes can bring appreciative diners from any state to the table.My Southern Food will take readers and cooks on a mouthwatering journey with photographs, stories, and 200 recipes that make this much more than a traditional cookbook. Sunday Dinner and Other Family GatheringsBreakfast in the South Treasures from the Southern Garden Summer Celebrations What Every Southern Lady Knows Cooking for Company Glorious Southern Desserts Eating Out Southern Style

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Paula Deen & Friends: Living It Up, Southern Style Review

Paula Deen and Friends: Living It Up, Southern Style
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If you are a true Paula Deen fan as I am, you will buy this book regardless. I don't think this one is near as good as her other cookbooks. There are alot of recipes provided by friends and peers, and a few repeats from previous cookbooks. And seems like several are more exotic than her normal downhome type of things. I always liked Paula's older recipes cause chances are you already had most of the ingredients already in the pantry. I know it would be hard for her to keep coming up with original recipes given her schedule, but I'd give my eye teeth for another book of solely Paula and her family's recipes of good old southern cooking.
If you watch Paula on tv and are looking for a good sampling of her work, pick up The Lady & Sons Savannah Country Cookbook
or Just Desserts and you'll turn to it time and time again. For true die-hard fans who already own the other three, you'll enjoy the intros and witty comments made by Paula throughout the book.

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Bless Your Heart: Saving the World One Covered Dish at a Time Review

Bless Your Heart: Saving the World One Covered Dish at a Time
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My husband asked me what I was chuckling about. I said I was reading a new cookbook. Then I told him "Take this cookbook and hide it. I want to cook and eat everything in it."
Two authentic Southern girls have put together THE Southern cookbook. Operating under the accurate assumption that anyone in her right culinary mind would want a cookbook suggesting right offerings for the right occasions, they've organized this set of recipes and recollections around church potlucks, sickbeds, gifts, football and clean-up days; it's not the regular divisions of appetizers, soups, salads, main dishes, desserts and such.
Patsy Caldwell knows how to coach the preparation of a good, not-too-hard dish; Amy Lyles tells the funny story of what that good dish really MEANS.
Put a bib on for this one - you're going to drool.

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Bless Your Heart celebrates the uniquely loving way that Southerners show they care with food (which can usually be frozen and reheated). What Southern lady hasn't shown up with a covered dish (with her name written on masking tape on the bottom so she can get her pan back) at the church potluck, the school fundraiser, or at the home of someone who has lost a loved one to show just how much she cares? Bless Your Heart includes storiesthat perfectly and humorously capture the occasions when nothing else will work but putting aluminum foil overa favorite 9 x 13-inch dish filled with a best "show off" recipe.Here aremore than two hundred recipes that are always popular at family reunions, holiday gatherings, tailgate parties, and the always popular all-day singing and dinner on the grounds. Whatever the occasion, Bless Your Heart aims to save the world one covered dish at a time.

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