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Showing posts from September, 2020

Betty Crocker's Cooky Book (1963)

For my friends who like history and cooking, I have the greatest cookie cookbook ever written. Seriously. If you do not already own a copy of this cookbook, you owe it to yourself to pop over to Amazon and order one right now (I checked, and there is a 2002 reprint currently available.) When I was a kid, my mom's copy of the Betty Crocker Cooky Book was the one that I baked from the most. My dad has a sweet tooth, and every week we had something coming out of the oven which never lasted very long around him. I particularly enjoyed baking cakes and cookies, and this cook book has a tremendous variety of recipes. It has my all-time favorite recipes for chocolate brownies, butterscotch brownies, snickerdoodles, chocolate crinkles, and lemon squares (which I later modified into orange squares; substitute orange juice for the lemon juice - it's sublime!).  This book starts out with a "cooky primer" section divided into the six methods of cookies making: drop, bar refrigera...

The General Foods Kitchen Cookbook (1959)

  For my friends who like history and cooking, I have a real fun one. The General Foods Kitchens Cookbook is from 1959 (436 pages, authorship credited to "The Women of General Foods Kitchens"). It's loaded with full-color, full-page photographs and two-color drawings, and has an unusual square-ish size. I think of this as one of the first "modern" lifestyle cookbooks in its look and feel. (Modern, retro and dated all at once!) It has a marked difference in its approach to handling the recipes, which I think reflects the new prosperity in lifestyle and more leisure time that Americans found in the 1950s.  Instead of grouping similar foods together in chapters (e.g, Meats, Breads, Vegetables), General Foods organizes eight chapters around "everyday and special situations," including family meals, daytime entertaining, parties, meals outdoors, and holidays. Each chapter describes various scenarios under the topic, with sample menus and recipes.  Unique to...

The White House Cook Book (1900)

For my friends who like history and cooking comes The White House Cook Book (1900, 590 pages), a thick white tome that has seen several iterations over the decades. I'd bet some of you may have your own copy.  My book is from 1900, the fourth copyrighted version. The original came out in 1887. The co-authors  listed are Hugo Ziemann, a White House steward; and Mrs. F.L. Gillette, whom the publishers note in their foreword "is no less proficient and capable, having made a life-long and thorough study of cookery and housekeeping, especially as adapted to the practical wants of average American homes." This book actually has very little to do with the White House, despite Ziemann's later involvement ( Fanny Gillette is the sole author and copyrighter of the original in 1887).  My 1900 version has full-page black-and-white photos of Ida Saxton McKinley and Frances Folsom Cleveland, with sketched collages of other First Ladies. There is a drawing of the White House kitche...

Household Discoveries and Mrs. Curtis's Cook Book (1909)

  For my friends who like history and cooking, I have a curious double book from 1909. This book is actually two books bound together into one volume. The first 740 pages are Household Discoveries  by Sidney Morse, and the concluding 280 pages are Mrs. Curtis's Cook Book  by Isabel Gordon Curtis. The volume was published by Success Magazine in New York, and according to a notice in the front of Household Discoveries  "it is not offered for sale through book stores and can only be obtained of our regular authorized solicitors or from the publishers direct." I have heard of "Salesman Samples:" these special volumes had the complete double book plus information about binding styles and handwritten client notes. "Household Discoveries" is subtitled "An Encyclopaedia of Practical Recipes and Processes" and is dedicated to "the thousands of practical housekeepers, readers of Success Magazine, and others, whose discoveries are embodied in this ...