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Two hundred eighty-eight delicious recipes carefully worked out so that you can reproduce, in your own kitchen, the true flavors of Cajun and Creole dishes. The New Orleans cookbook whose authenticity dependability, and wealth of information have made it a classic.
Presents a history of the famous New Orleans restaurant and the family which has owned and operated it for one hundred years, along with recipes for some of its signature dishes.
The second oldest restaurant in New Orleans continues today its tradition of serving excellent, fresh Creole cuisine in the heart of the French Quarter. This mouthwatering cookbook offers a history of the beloved establishment, food and beverage recipes from the 1850s to today, and historical and food photographs. The dramatic story of the successful recent effort to save the restaurant from a possible sale is included.
The Lena Richard cookbook is filled with 330 New Orleans recipes. This is classic Creole cooking at its best. Made from scratch old Southern recipes featuring family favorites like Court Bouillon, Crawfish Bisque, Shrimp Rémoulade, Jambalaya and Gumbo. Inside her Southern style cookbook you'll find Cajun recipes for: Appetizers Soups Salads Vegetables Meat and seafood Pies cakes and cookies Candy Party menus and much more The easy-to-follow recipes in this Creole Cajun cookbook make cooking for beginners a snap. While satisfying expert chefs with these tried and tested culinary delights. Enjoy Creole cuisine when you add Lena Richard's New Orleans classic cookbook to your collection.
A modern instructional with 120 recipes for classic New Orleans cooking, from James Beard Award-winning chef and restaurateur Justin Devillier. IACP AWARD FINALIST • NAMED ONE OF THE BEST COOKBOOKS OF THE YEAR BY THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW With its uniquely multicultural, multigenerational, and unapologetically obsessive food culture, New Orleans has always ranked among the world's favorite cities for people who love to eat and cook. But classic New Orleans cooking is neither easily learned nor mastered. More than thirty years ago, beloved Paul Prudhomme taught the ways of Crescent City cooking but, even in tradition-steeped New Orleans, classic recipes have evolved and fans of what is arguably the most popular regional cuisine in America are ready for an updated approach. With step-by-step photos and straightforward instructions, James Beard Award-winner Justin Devillier details the fundamentals of the New Orleans cooking canon—from proper roux-making to time-honored recipes, such as Duck and Andouille Gumbo and the more casual Abita Root Beer-Braised Short Ribs. Locals, Southerners, and food tourists alike will relish Devillier's modern-day approach to classic New Orleans cooking.
We are what we eat—not just physiologically, but culturally. This collection of cross-cultural, generational essays, and accompanying recipes shows the profound importance of food dishes within American women's lives. For people of every ethnicity, food provides much more than mere fuel for the body—it contains an invisible component that ties families and generations together with the continuity of shared experience. And for the women who are entrusted with the responsibility of keeping that priceless cultural thread intact, family recipes embody tradition, bridge generation gaps, and erase age differences. This book is organized around 50 short essays and recipes presented by women from multicultural backgrounds and dissimilar walks of life. The chapters depict the paths of these individuals in their lives and the details of how they acquired their precious family recipes. The stories document how women universally use inherited family recipes to remember and memorialize key women in their lives and to aid and measure their own growth and development. Included are reminiscences of an Egyptian aunt, a poor mother from Australia, a Katrina-flooded New Orleans family, Turkish relations, Chinese mothers, and Indian grandmothers.