|
Books > Health, Home & Family > Cookery / food & drink etc > General cookery > Cookery dishes & courses > Desserts
Pudding usually brings to mind flavors like chocolate, vanilla, and
tapioca, but prepackaged pudding cups don't even scratch the
surface of global pudding varieties--the term can denote dishes
containing candied fruits and nuts or even frugal blends of little
more than flour and suet. "Pudding: A Global History" explains how
puddings developed from their early savory, sausage-like mixtures
into the sweet and sticky confections we are now familiar with, and
he describes how advances in kitchen equipment have changed
puddings over time. Tackling blood, bread, rice, batter, and
vegetable puddings, Jeri Quinzio describes the diverse ways cooks
around the world make their puddings and how versions from
different countries vary--England's rice pudding, for instance, is
flavored with vanilla, nutmeg, or cinnamon, whereas in India it is
made with nuts or raisins. In addition to investigating the history
of puddings on the dining table, Quinzio also looks at the
prominent place puddings have had in novels, poems, songs, and
cartoons. He shows how authors and artists like Anthony Trollope,
Robert Burns, and George Cruikshank have used puddings to
illustrate their characters' sorrows, joys, and even political
leanings. Bursting with choice morsels about puddings past and
present, this is a book for fans of blood pudding and plum pudding
alike.
Crisscrossing her home state of North Carolina over the course of
six tasty years, Foy Allen Edelman visited families in their own
kitchens and communities and discovered a treasure trove of
delicacies. Sweet Carolina offers the recipes for more than 220 of
these confections, along with their cooks' equally flavorful
reminiscences, tips, and instructions for successfully creating
desserts and candies that are bound to become favorites all over
again in the Old North State and beyond. From easy apple dumplings,
black walnut pound cake, Cherokee persimmon cake, and Miss Peach's
sweet potato pie to lemon squares, coconut melt-away cookies,
buttermilk pie, vanilla ice cream (or try the peach), old-fashioned
butter mints, and five-minute fudge, this cookbook features many
desserts as familiar as old friends--and some new and surprising
delights, like the lazy day sonker (a deep dish pastry served with
flavors such as peach, cherry, or sweet potato). As many of the
contributing cooks point out, the use of seasonal and local
ingredients is prized in these wide-ranging and mouth-watering
recipes. An invitation for home cooks of all levels of experience
to get into the kitchen, this cookbook will satisfy more than the
sweet tooth. From the mountains to the Piedmont to the coast, Sweet
Carolina preserves a significant record of North Carolina and
southern culinary traditions.
|
|