Church Cookbook Great
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Texas Church Supper & Family Reunion Cookbook
$5.95 Need a recipe that'll be the pride of the potluck, or just something new and quick? Dona Mularkey and Dolores Runyon sifted through generations of recipes from family, friends and fellow congregants to put together this collection of nostalgic dishes for all courses and situations. From Devil Made Me Do It Eggs, Angel Biscuits and Diet Dr Pepper Salad, to Garden of Eatin' Lasagna, true Southern Fr... |
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Great Cooks Rise ... With the May River Tide: --With the May River Tide
$10.00 ... |
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Great Expectations-Wraps/Comb Spine
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Cooking is a necessity of life and for some, as the Jaguar Julie and Chef Keem maybe the kitchen is one of the great pleasures of life. No doubt admire. And I would like to gather up the same enthusiasm. But I prefer to go dancing!
I am one of the lucky ones, whose husband does all the cooking. And I do not take it for granted. I admire all meals and thank each.
If I had to cook, I would. And I have.
Especially if you wanted to invite people to the house, which I consider the menu carefully. The food is full of vegetables, although I am no longer a strict vegetarian.
I inherited a box full of recipes that have been in the family for several generations.
I had dinner with my cousins the other night and had a discussion about old family recipes. My cousin's wife, Eleanor, said it has a similar picture of lovely recipes ancestrial and she wants to create a cookbook of family. He says he has a classic Pennsylvania Dutch Chicken Pot Pie recipes handed down from her grandmother, who has not tried to do yet but who remembers eating as a child. She remembers the taste of food so exquisitely that literally seemed to melt into every taste bud.
He also mentioned Aunt Ella Cinnamon Flop Recipe. Because, yes, that one is my recipe box. too. Everyone raved about this dish!
In two weeks, go to the 100th birthday of my Aunt Helen and I know Cinnamon Flop that the dish will be the topic of conversation more than once.
She was the aunt of my aunt's aunt and my aunt Helen. When I met she lived in a nursing home, but in its day, was a spirit and loving woman. He never married, so that everyone referred to her as the maiden aunt.
The recipe for eggnog Eisenhower was there, and I made a lens that, just before it collapsed into pieces recipe forever. That particular recipe was passed from of General Eisenhower that time my Uncle Earl, who played with him on the bridge of WW2. Earl was a military chaplain, in turn, later to become bishop of the Episcopal Church.
Family photos also will be the theme at the birthday party of my aunt 100a. My aunt turned to painting at age 99, so I know we'll have an art exhibit of their work. She sent me a painting, he also made a lens. Grandma Moses painting dedicated to 77 years. My aunt has its own rhythm. He took her at age 99.
So I continued to look through the box. I found that several different recipes brought back memories.
For example, all my Christmas cookie recipes from the Mother of recipes in that box. I remember my parents not taken at least ten different types of cookies, I'm kidding, and stay up all night every night for three nights, to bake cookies dozen forty years, at least. My mother was obsessed with making these cookies. Then we would have to eat them and they, until Easter.
Many people stopped to eat some crackers. My mother had an open door policy – Drop in any time and had to get a real pleasure, beyond any of those cookies!
Finally, I found the recipe of Cinnamon Flop!
Cinnamon Flop
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3 / 4 cup sugar
2 heaping tablespoons Crisco
1 egg
1 cup milk
2 cups flour
salt (pinch)
3 teaspoon baking powder
put in the pan
1 cup brown sugar Lunches, sprinkle over the top – put the butter in the holes, then sprinkle with cinnamon oven 350 degrees for 30 minutes? (here she has a question mark!
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Perhaps Eleanor and I get together to write a cookbook family. I wonder if it would be more interesting if each recipe had a story behind it?
Perhaps the interview different family members to obtain their memory from the memory capsule or on the person who created it.
Since Joan wrote in his comment below, handwritten recipe is a thing of the past. He did go out with handwritten letters? O handwritten notes to people? Or read a book?
It is possible to recover these wonderful practices of the past, and slow down their lives so that the "time" does not feel so fleeting?