Best of
Cooking

1973

The Classic Italian Cook Book: The Art of Italian Cooking and the Italian Art of Eating


Marcella Hazan - 1973
    May be plastic wrapped for additional protection

The Good Housekeeping Illustrated Cookbook


Good Housekeeping - 1973
    We planned this cookbook so that even abeginning cook could successfully use our recipes simply by.t-ollowing the diagrams of the steps along with the recipe itself. Inthis collection of recipes, we demonstrate all the fundamentalcooking techniques, from folding in egg whites, to kneading bread,rolling piecrusts, decorating cakes and cookies, even boning certaincuts of meat and poultry. We've included recipes that are oftenconsidered difficult as well as everyday ones.Since recipe selection and meal planning are easier when a pictureshows exactly how the food will look, all of our recipes are shownin the large color picture index at the beginning of the book. Youcan browse through these pages and select the recipe best suited foryour specific occasion. The color pictures also suggest how togarnish and serve the dish. Captions to the pictures provideinformation on the recipe seasonings, cooking methods used, timeneeded to prepare the food, number of servings and so on.For the first time in a cookbook, menu planning is made easier asthe pictures are arranged according to the course of the meal,starting with all the appetizers and going through to maindishes, salads, breads and desserts.Many of these recipes are classics, direct from the pages of GoodHousekeeping Magazine. Others are newly developed for this book.All have had the careful scrutiny of Mildred Ying, GoodHousekeeping's food editor. She and her staff checked andrechecked these recipes, trying several brands of ingredients,eliminating extra steps, using fewer utensils, confirming the cookingtimes, making sure they are nutritionally sound and, mostimportantly, that they tasted as good as they looked.Besides Mildred, Ellen Connelly of the food staff helped especiallywith the planning of the chapters; Lucy Wing helped with checkingour how-to drawings and with many hours of proof-reading.

Beard on Bread


James Beard - 1973
    Now, this classic collection of 100 scrumptuous bread recipes is available in a new trade paperback edition featuring more than 90 illustrations by Karl Stuecklen.

Couscous and Other Good Food from Morocco


Paula Wolfert - 1973
    Reveals the variety and flavor of the country itself."The Paula Wolfert I know is an adventuress, a sensualist, a perfectionist cook, a highwire kitchen improvizationalist. And this book is the story of her love affair with Morocco." -Gael Green North Africa is the home to one of the world's great cuisines. Redolent of saffron, cumin and cilantro, Moroccan cooking can be as elegant or as down-home hearty as you want it to be. In Couscous and Other Good Food from Morocco, author Paula Wolfert has collected delectable recipes that embody the essence of the cuisine. From Morocco's national dish, couscous (for which Wolfert includes more than 20 different recipes), to delicacies such as Bisteeya (a pigeon pie made with filo, eggs, and raisins among other ingredients), Wolfert describes both the background of each recipe and the best way to prepare it. As if the mouthwatering recipes weren't enough, each chapter includes some aspect of Moroccan culture or history, be it an account of Moroccan moussems, or festivals, or a description of souks, or markets. Just reading the recipes will be enough to induce ravenous hunger even on a full stomach. Once you've tried the Chicken Tagine with Prunes and Almonds, or the Seared Lamb Kebabs Cooked in Butter, Paula Wolfert's Couscous and Other Good Foods from Morocco will become a well-worn title on your cookbook shelf.

The Auberge Of The Flowering Hearth


Roy Andries de Groot - 1973
    Impressed by the devotion of its owners — les Mesdemoiselles Artraud and Girard — to perpetuating the tradition of supreme country dining, Mr. de Groot returned to the inn to record their recipes for natural country soups, heavy winter stews, roasted meats, pâtes, terrines, and fruity and spirituous desserts — the best of French cooking.Superb food, fine wine, and the perfect blending of both into a series of menus for memorable lunches and dinners, together with the unique French Alpine recipes that build each meal — these are the ingredients of this remarkable book, now considered a classic.

The Cookery Year


Elizabeth Pomeroy - 1973
    

The Justin Wilson Cookbook


Justin Wilson - 1973
    Perhaps no public figure is better known or loved during recent times in the Pelican State than Justin Wilson. Curiously enough, Wilson got his start as an industry safety engineer, a highly valued and respected one too, instructing oil refinery workers, dockworkers, and law enforcement officers all over the South.It was this line of work that inspired the Cajun storyteller in Wilson, judging from what Wilson himself has to say: "Way back when I first started as a safety engineer, I took myself pretty seriously. And I found I was putting audiences to sleep. So, having lived all my life among the Cajuns of Louisiana, and having a memory for the patois and the type of humor Cajuns go for, I started interspersing my talks on safety with Cajun humor. And you know what? My audiences stayed awake."Not only did they stay awake, they chuckled, laughed and roared-and learned their safety lessons. For nearly two decades, Wilson was in heavy demand as master of ceremonies for everything from a supermarket opening to a Miss Texas contest.He recorded an album, The Humorous World of Justin Wilson, which broke all album sales records in Texas' recording history. After that he made four more (all successful), appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show, MC'd conventions, parties, political rallies, christenings, and you name it.Although he'd accomplished all that, Justin Wilson still wasn't satisfied-he decided to expand his range of expertise to include the culinary arts, and has enjoyed lots of success in that arena, beginning it all with The Justin Wilson Cookbook. When it was first published by Pelican in1965, it was a cookbook like no other-a Cajun cookbook-and it still stands alone as a masterpiece of Cajun cooking and of culinary expertise in general.Readers will be glad to know that The Justin Wilson Cookbook reflects the Justin Wilson personality-entertaining and authentic. And the meals you cook from this book will go down in your gastronomical memory as the most exciting and interesting ever.

The Ebony Cookbook: A Date with a Dish


Freda DeKnight - 1973
    Freda DeKnight's selection from the thousands of American Negro recipes in her collection is unique. It preserves many dishes that might otherwise be lost to a TV-dinner generation. It provides a guide and reference for everyone, from novice cook to discriminating gourmet, who loves good food. The uses of herbs, spices and wines, a 'Guide for the Housewife' (which really tells how to cook), and a section of complete menus supplement the organized presentation of recipes for everything from appetizers to dessert.

Pearl's Kitchen: An Extraordinary Cookbook


Pearl Bailey - 1973
    Laced with practical advice on the care and feeding of friends and family, Pearl's Kitchen is truly an extraordinary experience.

Ethnic Cuisine: How to Create the Authentic Flavors of Over 30 International Cuisines


Elisabeth Rozin - 1973
    It's now possible to find spring rolls in Arkansas, burritos in Minneapolis, and bagels in Montana. We can all attest to the wide variety of foods each culture has to offer. But what's not so readily apparent is what these foods have in common -- and The Universal Kitchen offers a gastronomic world tour to discover not only the differences but the surprising similarities in a variety of ethnic cuisines.In chapters devoted to such themes as Meat on a Stick, Garnished Grains, and Sweet Elaborations, Elisabeth Rozin provides historical and cultural perspectives with 250 distinctive recipes and explanatory narratives. She points out that Italian ravioli and Chinese potsticker dumplings are both variations on the same theme, as are French beef brochettes and Turkish Shish Kabobs, Mexican quesadillas and Jewish knishes. Earthy, erudite, and eclectic -- and filled with easy recipes sure to satisfy your cravings for any country's cuisine -- The Universal Kitchen is a testament to the kitchen as a focus of our common humanity and to the cook as the interpreter of our shared culinary heritage.

The Joy of Cooking: Volume 2: Appetizers, Desserts & Baked Goods


Irma S. Rombauer - 1973
    Fully illustrated.

My Learn to Cook Book


Ursula Sedgwick - 1973
    Illustrated step-by-step directions for making such favorites as hamburgers, hot dogs, pizza pie, pigs in a blanket, and animal crackers.

Indian Vegetarian Cookery


Jack Santa Maria - 1973
    They reflect a traditional view in which each daily act - including preparation, cooking and eating - forms a part of the divine gift of life.The creative use of foods and spices, and the variety of vegetable cooking techniques, allow the enthusiast to choose a delightful and well balanced menu for every day of the year.

The Cornucopia: Being a Kitchen Entertainment and Cookbook


Judith Lewis Herman - 1973
    Drawing on more than 150 sources, beginning with The Forme of Cury (1390), through to the 1890s and some of the most beautiful examples of culinary Victoriana, this richly good-humored book tumbles out a virtual treasury of food lore, commentary and opinion, custom and attitude, and more than three hundred delectable recipes, given in their original format.From a 1598 recipe for "four and twenty blackbirds baked into a pie," to an exquisite 1653 Izaak Walton recipe for stuffed pike, to an 1898 formula for a drink improbably named "the Bosom Caresser" (sherry, brandy, sugar, an egg yolk, and a pinch of cayenne pepper), this unique volume is all the food lover could ask for.

The American Cider Book


Vrest Orton - 1973
    In a single volume, Mr. Orton captures the history, customs, and folklore surrounding America's most natural drink and the best techniques for making it today. The book's one hundred twenty delightful recipes demonstrate the versatile and historic uses of cider in punches, nogs, and nightcaps, as well as countless cider family favorites, ranging from buckwheat muffins to basted game and dried apple pie. Mr. Orton reminds us that apple cider is a wholly American invention, once as valuable to American cooking as wine is to French cuisine.