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Wisconsin's rich and diverse ethnic heritage is expressed most robustly in its food traditions. Here, Terese Allen takes us on a sumptuous tour, visiting family-run bakeries, country meat markets, prizewinning cheese factories, and beloved confection shops. We meet the people behind the foods, hear their interesting stories, and come away with some of their favorite recipes. For people who love to eat, cook, and travel, this book is the ultimate companion for both kitchen and car.
For 10+ years, Vi has captured her family's recipes, experimented with modern techniques, and taught cooking classes. Now, you can share in all that she's learned. Immerse yourself in both recipes and their history. Enjoy classics such as Banh Mi to modern Vietnamese-inspired cocktails like the Perilla Mojito. Read about Pho's evolution from the French Invasion through the Vietnam War. Learn what happened - and taste it for yourself - when the Spanish-Indian spice trade came to Vietnam, giving locals a chance to incorporate new spaces into their dishes. You'll get lost in both the cultural journey and the tastes of Vietnam with Vi's cookbook.
Each year, the United States legally resettles tens of thousands of refugees who have fled their homelands. Refugees, unlike economic migrants, are forced to leave their countries of origin or are driven out by violence or persecution. As these individuals and their families struggle to adapt to a new culture, the kitchen often becomes one of the few places where they are able to return "home." Preparing native cuisine is one way they can find comfort in an unfamiliar land, retain their customs, reconnect with their past, and preserve a sense of identity. In Flavors from Home, Aimee Zaring shares fascinating and moving stories of courage, perseverance, and self-reinvention from Kentucky's resettled refugees. Each chapter features a different person or family and includes carefully selected recipes. These traditional dishes have nourished both body and soul for people like Huong "CoCo" Tran, who fled South Vietnam in 1975 when Communist troops invaded Saigon, or Kamala Pati Subedi, who was stripped of his citizenship and forced out of Bhutan because of political and religious persecution. Whether shared at farmers' markets, restaurants, community festivals, or simply among friends and neighbors, these native dishes contribute to the ongoing evolution of American comfort food just as the refugees themselves are redefining what it means to be American. Featuring more than forty recipes from around the globe, Flavors from Home reaches across the table to explore the universal language of food.
There's no region of the country more cherished and unique when it comes to food than the South. Southerners celebrate our food traditions. They are totems of our collective identity. Our grits, our fried chicken, our sweet tea, our butterbeans, our biscuits: These are powerful symbols of not just of Southern tastes but also of Southern values, of the kind of simple, honest-to-goodness home cooking, prepared with generosity of spirit and served up with generosity of ladle. These recipes are what distinguish and bind Southern culture. No Taste Like Home embraces the cultural identity of towns large and small all throughout the South and provides readers with recipes, stories, and highlights of all the unique regional flavors -- from the Heartland of Dixie to Cajun Country, from The Coastal South to Bluegrass, Bourbon and BBQ Country and all points in between. Organized geographically, the cookbook focuses on each of 6 regions in the South. Every chapter will include highlights of specific towns and contain essays describing, literally, the flavor of the place. The highlighted towns will offer multiple recipes as well as musings from notable locals, and "locally famous" chefs. Just some of the recurring editorial features include: a travelogue introduction discussing regional specialties and folklore Standout recipes from local chefs and "almost famous" home cooks Musings from locals about their town "Hometown Flavor" features on Southern iconic ingredients that are commonly used in the regional cuisine "What We're Craving" features highlighting a local restaurant or town-specific dish that locals crave when they're not at home "Local Know-how" features of insider secrets from the locals, from how to pick the freshest produce, to the best way to prepare their own recipes
In his eagerly awaited first cookbook, award-winning chef Charles Phan from San Francisco's Slanted Door restaurant introduces traditional Vietnamese cooking to home cooks by focusing on fundamental techniques and ingredients. When Charles Phan opened his now-legendary restaurant, The Slanted Door, in 1995, he introduced American diners to a new world of Vietnamese food: robustly flavored, subtly nuanced, authentic yet influenced by local ingredients, and, ultimately, entirely approachable. In this same spirit of tradition and innovation, Phan presents a landmark collection based on the premise that with an understanding of its central techniques and fundamental ingredients, Vietnamese home cooking can be as attainable and understandable as American, French, or Italian. With solid instruction and encouraging guidance, perfectly crispy imperial rolls, tender steamed dumplings, delicately flavored whole fish, and meaty lemongrass beef stew are all deliciously close at hand. Abundant photography detailing techniques and equipment, and vibrant shots taken on location in Vietnam, make for equal parts elucidation and inspiration. And with master recipes for stocks and sauces, a photographic guide to ingredients, and tips on choosing a wok and seasoning a clay pot, this definitive reference will finally secure Vietnamese food in the home cook’s repertoire. Infused with the author’s stories and experiences, from his early days as a refugee to his current culinary success, Vietnamese Home Cooking is a personal and accessible guide to real Vietnamese cuisine from one of its leading voices.
Everyone loves state and county fairs for the fun, festivities and, most important, the food! From corn dogs, funnel cakes and turkey legs to prize-winning pies, blue-ribbon cakes, and award-worthy barbecue, everything just tastes better at the fair. Now you can relish those lip-smacking specialties at home with the all-new cookbook, Blue Ribbon Winners. Indulge in your favorite fair foods all year long and cook with confidence knowing that the dishes in this book are proven winners! Not only will you find fair-worthy recipes, but we’ve also included prize-winning specialties from chili cookoffs, barbecue competitions, baking challenges, national recipe contests and dozens of other culinary tournaments. In addition, you’ll find stories and photos from state fairs all across the country as well as heartwarming memories about fairs from yesteryear. Plus, tips from our Test Kitchen pros help you capture the flavors of the fair with ease. So, get ready for fried cheese, succulent fudge, grilled corn, decadent cream puffs and food on sticks. With Blue Ribbon Winners it’s never been easier to serve up a prizeworthy dish. CHAPTERS The Best Fair Foods Fried Favorites Snacks & Other Crowd Pleasers Chili Cookoff & Tex Mex Winners Prizewinning Entrees Baked to Perfection Winning Jams, Jellies & Preserves Best Cookies, Bars & Brownies Blue-Ribbon Pies Gold-Trophy Cakes Grand-Prize Desserts, Sweets & Treats RECIPES Deep-Fried Cheese Bites Tacos on a Stick Buffalo Chicken Egg Rolls America’s Favorite Funnel Cakes Root Beer Pulled Pork Sloppy Joe Meatball Subs Deep-Fried Mac & Cheese Shells Fair-Favorite Corn Dogs Fried Mashed Potato Balls Calgary Stampede Ribs Contest-Winning Blueberry Quick Bread Gingerbread Spice Jelly Best-Ever Strawberry Pie Five-Star Brownies Blue-Ribbon Red Velvet Cake State Fair Cream Puffs
The Wisconsin Historical Society published Harva Hachten's The Flavor of Wisconsin in 1981. It immediately became an invaluable resource on Wisconsin foods and foodways. This updated and expanded edition explores the multitude of changes in the food culture since the 1980s. It will find new audiences while continuing to delight the book’s many fans. And it will stand as a legacy to author Harva Hachten, who was at work on the revised edition at the time of her death in April 2006. While in many ways the first edition of The Flavor of Wisconsin has stood the test of time very well, food-related culture and business have changed immensely in the twenty-five years since its publication. Well-known regional food expert and author Terese Allen examines aspects of food, cooking, and eating that have changed or emerged since the first edition, including the explosion of farmers' markets; organic farming and sustainability; the "slow food" movement; artisanal breads, dairy, herb growers, and the like; and how relatively recent immigrants have contributed to Wisconsin's remarkably rich food scene.
Tried-and-true recipes, tips, hints and hosting ideas make for memorable moments all year long…and this latest book from Taste of Home is here to help! From barbecue buffets to festive yuletide menus, the perfect party planner is at your fingertips with Taste of Home Celebrations. Take the worry out of hosting and get ready to impress with party-planning timelines, complete menus, easy decorations and so much more. Whether you’re planning an evening to watch fireworks, hosting game night, baking a birthday cake, throwing a holiday bash or ringing in the New Year, let this all-new Taste of Home Celebrations be your guide! CHAPTERS Spring Gatherings Valentine’s Day St. Patrick’s Day March Madness Mardi Gras Bash Easter Dinner Mother’s Day Brunch Baby Shark Birthday Party Karaoke Party Summer Bashes Juneteenth Celebration Father’s Day Barbecue Independence Day Firework Watching Party Around the Campfire Wet & Wild Pool Party Tailgating Fun Autumn Gatherings Bewitching Halloween Day of the Dead Get-Together Thanksgiving Dinner Black Friday Buffet Apple Picking Fun Holiday Celebrations Christmas-Movie Watching Party Cookie Exchange Vintage Holiday Happy Hour Christmas Morning Buffet Formal Holiday Menu Gingerbread House Decorating New Year’s Blow Out
Mapping Modern Beijing investigates the five methods of representing Beijing-a warped hometown, a city of snapshots and manners, an aesthetic city, an imperial capital in comparative and cross-cultural perspective, and a displaced city on the Sinophone and diasporic postmemory-by authors travelling across mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and overseas Sinophone and non-Chinese communities. The metamorphosis of Beijing's everyday spaces and the structural transformation of private and public emotions unfold Manchu writer Lao She's Beijing complex about a warped native city. Zhang Henshui's popular snapshots of fleeting shocks and everlasting sorrows illustrate his affective mapping of urban transition and human manners in Republican Beijing. Female poet and architect Lin Huiyin captures an aesthetic and picturesque city vis- -vis the political and ideological urban planning. The imagined imperial capital constructed in bilingual, transcultural, and comparative works by Lin Yutang, Princess Der Ling, and Victor Segalen highlights the pleasures and pitfalls of collecting local knowledge and presenting Orientalist and Cosmopolitan visions. In the shadow of World Wars and Cold War, a multilayered displaced Beijing appears in the Sinophone postmemory by diasporic Beijing native Liang Shiqiu, Taiwan sojourners Zhong Lihe and Lin Haiyin, and migr martial arts novelist Jin Yong in Hong Kong. Weijie Song situates Beijing in a larger context of modern Chinese-language urban imaginations, and charts the emotional topography of the city against the backdrop of the downfall of the Manchu Empire, the rise of modern nation-state, the 1949 great divide, and the formation of Cold War and globalizing world. Drawing from literary canons to exotic narratives, from modernist poetry to chivalric fantasy, from popular culture to urban planning, Song explores the complex nexus of urban spaces, archives of emotions, and literary topography of Beijing in its long journey from imperial capital to Republican city and to socialist metropolis.
With All-American Cookbook, it’s easier than ever to sample our nation’s most iconic foods. With a mouthwatering lineup of recipes that celebrate everything from the South’s love of barbecue to the Midwest’s enthusiasm for casseroles, you’ll find nostalgic classics—as well as modern twists—your family will ask for time and again. The United States is famous for being a melting pot of flavors, but there are distinct dishes and culinary traditions that have influenced the American table. Indulge in hot and hearty dinnertime faves such meatloaf and pot roast, complete with a scoop of mashed potatoes swimming in gravy. Savor Mom’s chocolate cake, lattice-crowned pies and other sweet indulgences that made you look forward to dessert. You’ll also find holiday and party standbys, steaming soups, hearty sandwiches, grilled greats, a fresh array of veggies and sides, heartwarming breads, and other time-tested dishes. More than just a collection of recipes, this must-have book is packed with hundreds of gorgeous full-color photos, pro cooking tips and regional featurettes celebrating unique twists and fun facts on America’s favorite foods. Taste of Home’s All-American Cookbook takes the guesswork out of preparing traditional down-home meals with sure-bet classics and ingenious tips and tricks to help you—whether you’re a beginner or an experienced cook—prepare the meals that grace the tables of families from coast to coast. •370 Recipes. Hundreds of recipes that deliver all the flavor and comfort you’d expect from Taste of Home. Best of all, every dish relies on common ingredients and pantry staples you likely already have on hand. •Cooking Featurettes. Intermittent sections featuring food facts, folklore, regional specialties, ethnic twists and other fun factoids that will inspire your cooking. •Bonus Chapters: County Fair Classics. A fun bonus chapter filled with classic fair food including blue prize winners and other contest-worthy nibbles and bites. •Complete Nutrition Facts and Diabetic Exchanges. Whether you’re following a specific diet or simply watching what you eat, the nutrition facts offered with every recipe help you set the right foods on the table. You’ll also find diabetic exchanges with applicable recipes. CHAPTERS Small Bites & Thirst Quenchers How Do You Like Your Eggs? Soup & Sandwich Shop Dinner’s in the Oven Classic Stovetop Suppers Superb Salads & Sides Bakers, Start Your Ovens! Slow Cookers, Air Fryers & Instant Pot Mom, What’s for Dessert? Backyard Barbecue Come One, Come All! Putting By Bonus chapter: County Fair Classics