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Saucepans & the Single Girl, Cookbook of the Day

cover of Saucepans and the Single GirlI found this adorable retro cooking-and-lifestyle book from 1965 in a vintage store in Wisconsin. Enchanted by the title, I picked it up (for fifty cents) and have never regretted it.

Written by two Stanford roommates, this book is hilariously frank and provides great tips the modern Bachelorette can still use.

Example: Here's an excerpt from the Table of Contents:

4. Food fit for a...
  • Man in a Brooks Brothers Suit
  • Man's Man
  • Man in a Garret
  • Lover with a Leica
  • Man in the Gray Flannel Lederhosen
The list goes on. It's not misogynistic, it's hysterical. Other chapters include "Deadly Little Dinners" and "Happiness is a Very Dry Martini." Each includes an introduction, usually with an anecdote, and often with a warning about putting plastic bags over your head or something silly. I'm certain that Jinx and Judy would have been girlfriends of mine.

I recommend this book. And guess what a simple Googling told me? In 2006, they updated the book! Same gals, still funny. Visit saucepansandthesinglegirl.com to read about it and see where to buy!

Filed under: Cookbook Spotlight, Books, How To

The Spice Islands Cook Book, Cookbook of the Day

cover of The Spice Islands Cook Book I added this volume to my ever-growing collection of vintage cookbooks while I was in Chestertown, MD over Labor Day weekend. It was sitting on the shelf, a burst of vibrant, mid-century color amidst a row of brown and mustard-colored spines from the seventies. As you can see from the price tag on the cover (I couldn't get it off without ripping the dust jacket), I paid $3 for it. That's more than I typically pay for interesting old cookbooks, but I just couldn't let this one slip away.

Written by the Spice Islands Home Economics Staff, The Spice Islands Cook Book was published in 1961 and offered housewives a comprehensive guide on how to incorporate a full spectrum of spices into their cooking.

In addition to offering 150 pages of recipes (everything from appetizers to main dishes to drinks), the authors also incorporated a comprehensive glossary of herbs, so that those cooks who wanted to learn more about the rosemary they were sprinkling into their meals would have easy access to information. There is also a table of equivalents that offers tips on how to substitute one ingredient for another so that a recipe wouldn't be ruined by an empty spice bottle.

Some of the standout recipes from the book include Herb Corn Bread (page 128), Hawaiian Bean Pot (page 94) and the Greek Walnut Cake (page 142). Heidi at 101 Cookbooks also has a copy of this volume and several years ago, posted the recipe from it for Gold Coast French Toast. Yum!

Filed under: Cookbook Spotlight

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Julia Child and Company, Cookbook of the Day

cover of Julia Child and Company
In the days before the internet, cooking shows had to figure out an easy way for viewers to get a hold of the recipes featured on their programs. There was typically an address that one could write to to obtain the recipes. Alternately, they would leave the ingredient list and instructions up on the screen for some time at some point during the program, so that a quick transcriptionist could hurriedly jot them down. Sometimes, the only option for the viewer was to take notes while watching (my Aunt Doris always watched Julia Child with steno pad and pencil in hand).

This book, Julia Child and Company, was something of a revolution. Printed in 1978, it came out at the very same time as Child's show of the same name began to air. That way, viewers could watch the show at leisure, unworried about catching every nuance of the recipe as they knew they'd have Child's clear and careful written instructions to reference later on. Now, thirty years later, we can't follow along with the series, but we can still utilize the recipes in the book.

It is organized by menu, which is fun in that you can see just how Child would have served a meal (it's not just French food in this volume, she incorporates a variety of cultural favorites). However, if you don't want to recreate an entire show's worth of food, you do have to poke around a bit more to find what you're looking for. If you're a fan of Child and want another opportunity to "hear" her calm, helpful voice in the kitchen, this is a good book to add to your collection.

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Filed under: Cookbook Spotlight, Books, Celebrities

Pretty vintage cookbooks inspire the baker in all of us

vintage cinnamon cakeHas your baking bug bit? Here's one way: take a peek in a vintage cookbook, especially one like Amy's beautiful Fleishmann's pamphlet. It makes me just want to head to the kitchen and bury my fingers in flower, butter, sugar and lots and lots of cinnamon. On my schedule for tonight's late-night baking fix: either orange-lemon bundt cake or toasted hazelnut cake from Patricia Wells' Trattoria (I'm in love with Patricia today). Hmm...

Are you inspired to bake in this gray, drizzly, cold days?

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Filed under: On the Blogs, Books, Methods

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