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Celebrate the 7-time National Champion Ohio State Buckeyes! Have your own Buckeye fans celebrating in the stands with your pre-game tailgate party foods and treats. The Ohio State University Cookbook recipes will start 'em off with Buckeye Nation Pigs in a Blanket, Buck Chops, and Gold Pants Potato Packets, then warm 'em up with mugs of Scarlet and Gray Hot Cocoa, and finally sweeten the deal with a helping of Red Zone Velvet Shortbread Cookies. These recipes are game winners! Jen Elsner has a passion for cooking and hosting game-day parties. She has a Master's Degree in Professional Writing from the University of Oklahoma and is the author of The University of Oklahoma Cookbook. She lives in Norman, Oklahoma. Julie Metzler is a graduate from The Ohio State University and is a huge Buckeye fan. Julie lives in Sidney, Ohio, with her husband and two daughters.
Celebrate the 7-time National Champion Ohio State Buckeyes! Have your own Buckeye fans celebrating in the stands with your pre-game tailgate party foods and treats. The Ohio State University Cookbook recipes will start ‘em off with Buckeye Nation Pigs in a Blanket, Buck Chops, and Gold Pants Potato Packets, then warm ‘em up with mugs of Scarlet and Gray Hot Cocoa, and finally sweeten the deal with a helping of Red Zone Velvet Shortbread Cookies. These recipes are game winners! Jen Elsner has a passion for cooking and hosting game-day parties. She has a Master’s Degree in Professional Writing from the University of Oklahoma and is the author of The University of Oklahoma Cookbook. She lives in Norman, Oklahoma. Julie Metzler is a graduate from The Ohio State University and is a huge Buckeye fan. Julie lives in Sidney, Ohio, with her husband and two daughters.
The first edition of the Centennial Buckeye Cook Book was published in 1876. Between 1876 and 1905, a total of thirty-two editions of the cookbook were published, and more than one million copies sold. The book began as a project of the Marysville, Ohio, First Congregational Church when the women of the church decided to publish a cookbook in order to raise money to build a parsonage. Their effort launched a cookbook that rapidly became one of the most popular publications of nineteenth-century America. This is the first reprint of the original 1876 edition.
In Seattle, people swear by Pike Place Market. In the Big Apple, native New Yorkers trek to Zabar's. In Northeast Ohio, everyone salivates at the thought of West Point Market's Killer Brownies. West Point Market, a market like no other, packs 350 varieties of cheese, 3,000 different wines, and 8,200 international gourmet items into 25,000 square feet of sheer culinary heaven. Family-owned since 1936, the Market's national reputation for quality and panache attracts professional chefs, party planners, gastronomic connoisseurs, and anyone who savors a dish that adds spice to life, literally.
In the dark poetry of her newest collection, Sue Owen reflects on the devil’s dreams, the hammering of the last nail in a coffin, and the brilliant death of a shooting star. Owen turns proverbial sayings (in “Getting to the Point,” “Until Hell Freezes Over,” or “If the Other Shoe Drops”) into fully developed parables that examine and elaborate upon the assumptions we all make. This is a cookbook with recipes that instruct, where hell becomes a kitchen of wisdom and insight. The heat in these poems reminds us of the evil in our contemporary lives and challenges us to look straight at it, without fear.
With love of great cuisine and the bounty of our nation evident throughout this book, Capitol Hill Cooks contains recipes from members of Congress, as well as every president from George Washington (Cranberry Pudding) to Abraham Lincoln (Mary Todd Lincoln's Vanilla Almond Cake) to Barack Obama (The Obama Family's Linguini). Taste Vice President Biden's Kahlua Chocolate Fudge Cake, Senator Charles Grassley's Bacon and Bean Chowder, or Senator Scott Brown's Italian Soup, Congresswoman Michele Bachmann's Minnesota Rhubarb Dessert or Congressman Ron Paul's Texas Sweeties?and hundreds more. Many contributors to this book even include notes about their ethnic backgrounds, favorite indigenous foods, and fond memories of meals shared with others. (Barack really likes this, the first lady says of her own apple crisp.)
A seasonal food journey with native Kentuckian Maggie Green, The Kentucky Fresh Cookbook takes home cooks through a year of cooking delicious meals. Green guides both aspiring and experienced cooks through the rich variety of Kentucky ingredients and traditions with easy-to-follow instructions. Incorporating seasonal and local Kentucky produce and products in her recipes but also substituting frozen or canned food when necessary, Green makes cooking homemade meals not just tempting but effortless. Combining more than two hundred recipes with menus for daily meals, holiday events, and special family occasions, The Kentucky Fresh Cookbook acknowledges the cycle of Kentucky's culinary and agricultural traditions. Green shows how cooking with regional ingredients, including buttermilk, cornmeal, Bibb lettuce, bourbon, blackberries, pork, fresh herbs, honey, and black walnuts, can shape menus throughout the year.
From the organization that brought us The Black Family Reunion cookbooks comes The Historical Cookbook of the American Negro, a fun, richly brewed collection of recipes, historical facts, photos, and personal anecdotes. First published in 1958 by the National Council of Negro Women, it includes contributions from members in thirty-six states plus the District of Columbia and offers exceptional insight into American history and the African-American community at the time of its publication. As John Hope Franklin (whose own family owns a copy of the book) points out, much of the cultural information in the cookbook has never been passed down to successive generations. Arranged according to the calendar year, the cookbook opens with a cake to be baked in celebration of both New Year's Day and the Emancipation Proclamation. Scattered among the recipes one finds excerpts from documents such as the Gettysburg Address and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Tributes to well-known figures like Harriet Tubman, Phillis Wheatley, and Booker T. Washington appear alongside brief bios and recipes in celebration of important but obscured figures. This delightful collection of delicious recipes helps us commemorate African-American history throughout the year.