Good Food : How to Cook It ; Where to Get It. A book for every-day use in the kitchen - Rare Book Insider
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[Ladies of the Park Street Free Baptist Church (Lake Village, N.H.)]

Good Food : How to Cook It ; Where to Get It. A book for every-day use in the kitchen

[Concord, N.H.: Republican Press Association, 1891
  • $350
[Concord, N.H.: Republican Press Association, 1891. Booklet, stapled in wrappers (17.5 x 11.5 cm.), 39, [1]pages. Index. Publisher's advertisements throughout and on the wrappers. Title and publication information from wrapper. FIRST & ONLY EDITION. Recipes in narrative form and unattributed They are also provided in no particular order, with Graham Bread, Creamed Oysters, and Fruit Jumbles all appearing on the first page of receipts. Lake Village has been consumed by the better-known Laconia, both on the shore of Lake Winnisquam. Fine, in publisher's pale salmon wrappers, titled in black. [OCLC locates no copies; not in Brown; Cook, page 160 (citing a similarly titled and paginated work issued by the Ladies of the Center Street Church)].
More from Rabelais - Fine Books on Food & Drink
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The World Food. Rice, Eaten by all peoples, adapted to all climes. For Rice Recipes, write to Rice Association of America, Crowley, La. Mailed Free. [cover title]

[Louisiana; Rice Association of America (Crowley, Louisiana)] Crowley, La: Rice Association of America; Signal Print. Co, 1911. Stapled booklet (14.5 x 9 cm.), 20 pages. Illustrated wrapper. Date of publication from external sources. Evident FIRST EDITION. A promotional recipe booklet, encouraging the use of rice. An earlier publication, titled Creole Mammy Rice Recipes was published by the Rice Association circa 1909. That work is known in a single copy, (at Kansas State). The dating of the two booklets is possible by comparing the tenures of various officers of the Rice Association. Creole Mammy Rice Recipes was published while Henri Gueydan was President, while this booklet was issued after George Hathaway of Jennings, L. ascended to the post. ~ Recipes include Rice Waffles, Rice Fritters, Rice Gumbo Soup, Red Beans & Rice (a famous Creole combination), Rice Croquettes, Rice Jambalaya, a Daube with Rice, and Rice Custard. Cooking hints recommend the use of garlic, and the preference for lard over butter. "The Rice Association, Crowley, La., has issued a little booklet of rice recipes, "Creole Mammy Rice Recipes." In this book are given many ways of preparing rice as a hearty food instead of in desserts. Southerners use rice as Northerners use bread. Rice is served three times a day on Southern tables. Creole recipes are given for it is generally understood that the old "mammies" could turn out a dish of rice in such a delicate state of perfection that no French chef could approach them. In most ways these rice dishes could be used by vegetarians leaving out the meat additions and substituting oil or butter for the lard, which is so much used in the South. The price of this booklet is two cents. Send for it and learn about rice." (The Vegetarian Magazine, volume 13, page 46). The booklet weighs in on the nutritional value of rice at several points, perhaps most notable in a section on the "Effect of Rice on Japanese." Illustrated wrapper, depicting a young girl, nestled amongst rice branches and "on top of the world". A bit of light rubbing to wrappers; small adhesion mark to top of rear wrapper panel. Very good. Unrecorded. [OCLC locates no copies; not in Brown or Uhler].
  • $900