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Recipes and Revelations from Two Great American Cooks
Knopf
April 2003
ISBN: 0375400354 Hardcover
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Cookbooks
Edna Lewis--whose The Taste of Country Cooking has
become an American classic--and Alabama-born chef Scott
Peacock pool their unusual cooking talents to give us this
unique cookbook. What makes it so special is that it
represents different styles of Southern cooking--Miss
Lewis’s Virginia country cooking and Scott Peacock’s
inventive and sensitive blending of new tastes with the
Alabama foods he grew up on, liberally seasoned with Native
American, Caribbean, and African influences. Together they
have taken neglected traditional recipes unearthed in their
years of research together on Southern food and worked out
new versions that they have made their own.
Every
page of this beguiling book bears the unmistakable mark of
being written by real hands-on cooks. Scott Peacock has the
gift for translating the love and respect they share for
good home cooking with such care and precision that you
know, even if you’ve never tried them before, that the
Skillet Cornbread will turn out perfect, the Crab Cakes will
be “Honestly Good,” and the four-tiered Lane Cake something
spectacular.
Together they share their secrets for
such Southern basics as pan-fried chicken (soak in brine
first, then buttermilk, before frying in good pork fat),
creamy grits (cook slowly in milk), and genuine Southern
biscuits, which depend on using soft flour, homemade baking
powder, and fine, fresh lard (and on not twisting the
biscuit cutter when you stamp out the dough). Scott Peacock
describes how Miss Lewis makes soup by coaxing the essence
of flavor from vegetables (the She-Crab and Turtle soups
taste so rich they can be served in small portions in
demitasse cups), and he applies the same principle to his
intensely flavored, scrumptious dish of Garlic Braised
Shoulder Lamb Chops with Butter Beans and Tomatoes. You’ll
find all these treasures and more before you even get to the
superb cakes (potential “Cakewalk Winners” all), the
hand-cranked ice creams, the flaky pies, and homey custards
and puddings.
Interwoven throughout the book are warm
memories of the people and the traditions that shaped these
pure- tasting, genuinely American recipes. Above all, the
Southern table stands for hospitality, and the authors
demonstrate that the way everything is put together--with
the condiments and relishes and preserves and wealth of
vegetables all spread out on the table--is what makes the
meal uniquely Southern. Every occasion is celebrated, and at
the back of the book there are twenty-two seasonal menus,
from A Spring Country Breakfast for a Late Sunday Morning
and A Summer Dinner of Big Flavors to An Alabama
Thanksgiving and A Hearty Dinner for a Cold Winter Night, to
show you how to mix and match dishes for a true Southern
table.
Here, then, is a joyful coming together of two extraordinary
cooks, sharing their gifts. And they invite you to join them.
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