Archive for October, 2008
Thursday, October 30th, 2008
Delia Smith’s Frugal Food officially re-issued today! Read the review at the Telegraph website. 
Read Delia’s biography at DeliaOnline.com.
The current issue of Yours magazine contains an interview with Delia about this book and other things. Woman magazine out today contains another interview.
Posted in Classics reprinted, News | Tags: Budget Cookery, delia smith, frugal food | No Comments »
Tuesday, October 21st, 2008

Today is the release date for Martha Stewart’s new book, Martha Stewart’s Cooking School: Lessons and Recipes for the Home Cook.
Check the “Cooking School Book Tour” listing on Martha’s website to see if she’ll be visiting your neighborhood bookstore.
Posted in 21st Century, News | Tags: Cooking School, Martha Stewart, Martha Stewart's Cooking School | No Comments »
Monday, October 20th, 2008
Released today: The Sweeter Side of Amy’s Bread: Cakes, Cookies, Bars, Pastries and More from New York City’s Favorite Bakery.
Posted in 21st Century, baking | Tags: Amy Scherber, Amy's Bread, Bakery, baking, Bar, Cake, Cookie, Desserts, New York City, Pastry, Toy Kim Dupree | No Comments »
Saturday, October 18th, 2008
The University of Kentucky Press has re-issued Jennie Benedict’s Blue Ribbon Cook Book. The recipe for her famous Benedictine spread, conspicuously absent from previous editions, appears in the re-issue.
Susan Reigler, former Louisville Courier-Journal restaurant critic and author of the Compass American Guide to Kentucky and Adventures in Dining: Kentucky Bourbon Country has contributed a new introduction.
According to John Egerton,
Jennie C. Benedict was a renowned Louisville caterer and cafe
owner from 1898 to 1925. Miss Benedict pioneered in gas-stove
cooking and was a creator as well as replicator of classic dishes.
Benedictine spread was one of her contributions. The recipes in
this collector’s dream of a cookbook are a blend of Southern and
cosmopolitan, from spoonbread and sugar pie to lamb chops.
J.P. Morton & Company (of Louisville) published Miss Benedict’s autobiography, The Road To Dream Acre in 1938.
Posted in Classics reprinted, Regional | Tags: Benedictine Spread, Jennie Benedict, Kentucky, Southern Cook Book, St. Louis, Susan Reigler | No Comments »
Tuesday, October 14th, 2008
Kancigor, Judy Bart. (1999). Melting pot memories: the Rabinowitz Family cookbook and nostalgic history. Fullerton, CA: Jan Bart Publications. 259 pp. Index. Printed in sepia on cream colored paper and with matching sepia photographs.
I compared a fourth printing (2001) of Melting Pot Memories (MPM) with Kancigor’s latest book Cooking Jewish (CJ). The copyright page of CJ lists the years 1997, 2003 and 2007. I speculated that CJ was a mainstream publisher’s (Workman) version of the privately published MPM.
Kancigor says, “. . . every time I reprinted MPM, which was a self-published book, I made changes and improvements. There were 8 printings! Now, the difference between my self-published book and my new cookbook, COOKING JEWISH, published by Workman is huge!! Cooking Jewish has 704 pages, over 500 family photos, tons more stories and is totally revamped. There are many new recipes, but even where I used a recipe that was in MPM, it is totally rewritten, because my new publisher really taught me how to write a recipe! And in the thorough, more professional test kitchen many adjustments were made.”
Posted in 20th Century, Edition history, Jewish | Tags: Cooking Jewish, Jewish Cookbook, Judy Bart Kancigor, Melting Pot Memories | No Comments »
Monday, October 13th, 2008
Today Matt Davis, of the Portland Mercury, published a refreshing post, On Not Interviewing America’s Most Famous Italian Cookbook Author.
Posted in 20th Century, Interviews, Italian | Tags: Interview, italian cookbook, marcella hazan, Matt Davis | No Comments »
Sunday, October 12th, 2008
Read Linda Morel’s interview, with the author of Cooking Jewish (532 Great Recipes from the Rabinowitz Family).
Kancigor is an Orange County-based food writer. She also speaks about Jewish cooking and family life at synagogues, women’s organizations, and cooking schools. She lives with her husband, Barry, in Fullerton, California.
The Kancigors privately published Judy’s first book, Melting Pot Memories.
Posted in 20th Century, Jewish, Profiles | Tags: Jewish cookbooks, Judy Bart Kancigor | No Comments »
Sunday, October 12th, 2008
Today, I revised and expanded the publishing history of the Joy of Cooking page on the store’s website.

Posted in 19th Century, 20th Century, Edition history, General, Influential | Tags: Ethan Becker, Irma Rombauer, Joy Of Cooking, Marion Rombauer Becker, publishing history | No Comments »
Saturday, October 11th, 2008
Read the article in Milwaukee Magazine: “Settlement Cookbook still dishes up warm memories by managing editor,” Bobby Tanzile.

Posted in 20th Century, Charitable, Influential, Jewish | Tags: Jewish cookbooks, Lizzie Kander, Mrs. Simone Kander, Settlement Cook Book, Settlement Cookbook | No Comments »
Monday, October 6th, 2008

Dr. Brian Wansink, of the Cornell Food and Brand Lab, is the author of a new research study on the Joy of Cooking.
The study involved comparing 18 recipes that have survived the various editions of Joy. 1936, 1946, 1951, 1963, 1975, 1997 and 2006 were the editions used in the study.
Researchers documented the serving size and caloric in each version of the 18 recipes. They found that 17 of the recipes underwent changes that mirrored America’s obestiy epidemic.
Dr. Wasink comments, “What we think is a normal serving size has increased dramatically over the last 70 years … as has what we demand in terms of fat and sugar in a recipe.”
“According to the study, in 1936, the average number of calories in each recipe was 261. The most recent recipes average 384 calories, an increase of 60 percent. If you were to compare just the recipe for sugar cookies, you would find an 142 percent increase in the number of calories from the 1936 recipe to today’s recipe.
Posted in 19th Century, 20th Century, Edition history, General | Tags: Diet, Dr. Brian Wasink, Joy Of Cooking, Nutrition | No Comments »