I've also got one from the late '40s called "The American Hostess Cookbook" where various "society" ladies contributed recipes. Typical blurb about a contributor:
Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Young Gorham, Keuka Park, N. Y., wife of Donald R. Gorham, Professor of Psychology, Keuka College, attended Western State Teacher's College. She is a member of the D.A.R, and is interested in Church work and Music. Her hobbies are collecting Old Glass and Travel. Mrs. Gorham has two daughters, Ann aged 8 and Susan 6. She is a Baptist and a Republican.
There are a few more famous names scattered in here, including Miss Lillian Hellman, who contributed a recipe for New Orleans Chicken Gumbo.
Yikes. There's a recipe in here for "Winter Gumbo" that starts with "1 can chicken gumbo soup." (Contributed by Mrs. Bess Hirsh Kahn of Little Rock, Arkansas.)
Kat, yeah it sucks, but we got in today anyway and I started all the calls to the insurance for pre-certification stuff.
That is going to be very rough going between 2 hospitals. Any chance Noah could move if he is doing well?
I'm definitely going to have to finish transcribing our former housemate's German-descended mother's recipe collection. Lots of nummy stuff.
She got it from some store in Greenwich Village or Chelsea (forgot exactly where) that specializes in old cookbooks. I keep meaning to ask her exactly where the store is, but I fear for my paycheck if I found it.
I know that store! Not in the sense of knowing it's name or exact address, but I have been in there more than once. (My subconscious, being well aware of the states of both my bank account and available bookshelf-space, has refused to commit this information to memory in order to protect me from myself.)
[eta: NPR story about Bonnie Slotnick Cookbooks.]
[eta2: Bonnie Slotnick's website]
butterflocken
Nothing to say. Just had to see that word again.
"Butterflocken" sounds like something that the Swedish Chef uses when cooking.
Bork bork bork now foor de butterflocken!
That Scripture Cake in the cookbook in Jess's link is awesome.
I found some recipes in my American Hostess Cookbook from Mrs. J. Strom Thurmond. (A pecan pie which looks pretty much like every other pecan pie recipe I've ever seen, and "Frozen Fruit Charlotte" wich is 2 1/2 cups milk, 3 egg yolks, and 1/2 cup sugar mixed together, stir in 3 T geletine which has been soaking in cold water, cool, stir in 3 beaten egg whites, 1 cup cream, whipped, and 2 cups mixed fruit. Put in freezer, serve with whipped cream. That recipe scares me.)
Okay, so last night, I stared at a double magnum of Château Lafite Rothschild 1874 that apparently costs $35,000. I was afraid to move lest I break anything and have to take out a loan.
Wow.
I've also got a cookbook of community recipes that was sold to raise money for the Kennebunkport library. It's got a few from Barbara Bush. (Including a baked beans recipe that starts with two cans of baked beans. I don't understand these things.)
Shrift - they just have bottles of wine that cost as much as a car lying around for any random klutz to fall over and break? Talk about your luxury dining. . .