2024 the best cornbread recipe review


Price: $27.00
(as of Oct 17, 2024 04:53:12 UTC - Details)

“Cornbread? I LOVE cornbread!” For six years, that’s the response Crescent Dragonwagon got when people asked her what she was writing about. Over time, she came to understand: Not only is hot, just baked cornbread delicious, it evokes—powerfully—the heart, soul, and taste of home. There is an abundance of satisfying cornbreads, as Crescent discovered when she followed the cornbread trail from the Appalachians to the Rockies to the Green Mountains. Traveling to family reunions, potlucks, tortilleras, stone-grinding mills, and the National Cornbread Festival in South Pittsburgh, Tennessee, she heard the stories, tasted the breads, learned the secrets. Join her in this overflowing cornucopia: over 200 irresistible recipes for cornbreads, muffins, fritters, pancakes, and go-withs. Cornbreads from below the Mason-Dixon line (Skillet-Sizzled Buttermilk Cornbread, Truman Capote’s Family’s Alabama Cornbread) meet those from above (Durgin-Park Boston Cornbread, Vermont Maple-Sweetened Cornbread). Southwestern offerings—Chou-Chou’s Dallas Hot Stuff Cornbread, delectable homemade tamales, and tortillas from scratch—meet internationals like India’s Makki Ki Roti. A Thanksgiving with Crescent’s Sweet-Savory Cornbread Dressing is rapturous. Desserts like Very Lemony Gorgeous Cornmeal Pound Cake make any meal exceptional. Along with this, Crescent gives us the greens, the beans, the salads, stews, and soups that accompany cornbread to perfection. And she tells us the stories, too. Enthusiastic and heartfelt, this thoughtful, exuberant love song to America’s favorite breadstuff and all that goes with it will embrace readers and cooks everywhere.

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Workman; First Edition (December 11, 2015)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 390 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0761119167
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0761119166
Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.43 pounds
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 8 x 0.88 x 8 inches
Reviewer: C. Smith
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: sizzling!
Review: As another reviewer suggested, this is the sort of cookbook that you'll want to keep near you for lively, inspired reading. By the time I finally got this book back into the kitchen, it was already dog-eared, and I've been cooking from it almost every day since. The recipes are clear, delicious, and fail-proof. I have been a big fan of Crescent Dragonwagon's Inspired Vegetarian cookbook because she's such a fantastic, generous writer. In The Cornbread Gospels, she dives deep into a beloved subject and just keeps dishing up great recipes, corn-lore, and people stories. She also has included recipes for side-dishes and ways to use leftovers. When you open up your oven to pull out a batch of sweet-smelling cornbread (try the Dairy Hollow Skillet-Sizzled recipe), all will be right in your world. Crescent Dragonwagon knows how to satisfy our bellies, minds, and hearts.

Reviewer: Julie Blaskie
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: a wonderful journey of different styles of cornbread!
Review: I love this book! I've had the physical book for years and just bought a Kindle version because I love this book so much!The stories about the recipes and the regional differences just her in the US alone made it a fun read! It's nice to know where the recipes came from! 🙂 I've made many of the different recipes and enjoyed the results! My adventure making cornbread was to start with the earlier Colonial recipes... and work my way around the world as I could! I was so glad to find the South African mealie bread here, too! Johnnycakes... hoe cakes... I could go on and on!This was my first introduction to Crescent Dragonwagon and her work - and it remains my favorite! I had bought the book because of the the name and the topic... and her name! However, I fell in love with the book for the variety of cornbread, the anecdotes, and overall charm of the book. The recipes are delicious! This is my "go to" book if I need a cornbread recipe - and then I agonize over deciding which one!I still enjoy this book and had to buy another because mine is a bit beaten up from use and moving! If you love cornbread, you will enjoy this book!

Reviewer: Moccasin
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Soul Satisfying
Review: When I think of cornbread, I have flashbacks to many occasions in my life growing up in rural Winston County and suburban Mobile Alabama. My grandma liked hers yellow, my mother liked hers yellow, both cooked in a cast iron pan, never as muffins. So when I married a Yankee, it surprised me that his concept of cornbread could be so different. This ebook gives regional recipes, but also explains the key differences. Last night I read the chapter on these differences to my husband...because he liked his sweet, with flour, cooked as muffins, with syrup, frequently for breakfast...while I chose to serve it with dinner, especially cooked greens or crumbled in a goblet of milk. How appalling to pair it with sweet items. Thus we were out of sync about cornbread.Well written, with references to other sources both culinary and historical, the differences in the manufacture of stone ground and steelcut. It even discusses grits, hominy, and polenta. The live links are clickable and take you to specific recipes...or almost to the recipe, because it is a page number which could be off if you set your font size larger. I flipped to the beginning of the NEXT recipe and had what I wanted. Obviously this ebook was carefully planned and organized to provide the reader or cook with more than a recipe.

Reviewer: R. Clay
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Off to a new cooking advenure!
Review: I'm not much of a cookbook kind of guy. I tend to read recipes, and once the basic ingredients and methods are clear in my mind I put the basics (dough, prepped food, utensils, etc. together, and let it cook. Since a lot of my food is done by a slow-cook method I can take it easy and not get anxious about exact timing, etc.I grew up in Georgia, where biscuits and cornbread (including muffins, corn sticks, pan-fried breads and so forth) were a daily part of my diet. But I took these things for granted, and simply enjoyed them. It wasn't until I was "on my own," married with children, that I developed an interest in baking the same sort of corn and flour-based goods that I grew up eating. Alas, by that time most of my older cooks, along with their secret techniques and special little add-ins that made their cornbread and biscuits so delicious, was lost. So now I'm on a quest to find and master the basics, and then go from there.After reviewing many of the cornbread cookbooks available, I decided to start with "The Cornbread Gospels" because it seems well written, not too technical, and not too sentimental either. It gives a lot of information that I can use as my skills increase, and that's the best way for me to develop proficiency in a technique.I received the book quickly and immediately began to plan my first attempts to enter the world of cornbread. I may amend this review once I've done a few recipes and gotten a feel for how practical and well-written the book is, but for now, "The Cornbread Gospels" is my new go-to reference book.I like that it covers so many variations on the basic recipe for cornbread, which means I'll be referring to the book for a long time. And yet it's not so heavy or intimidating that I feel afraid to get the pages smudged with stray batter, or to underline or highlight important ideas, or make notes on a page.So, although I'm not a cook who follows recipes "religiously," I do look forward to "The Cornbread Gospels" to be my guide to a new world of warm, crunchy, buttery goodies that will make many meals all the more savory or delightful. This is early November, which gives me plenty of time to develop some skills before I try to make cornbread dressing or other homemade breads for the holidays.May all your baking experiments turn out to be wonderful successes! Remember, SLOW cooking keeps everything more moist, and helps flavors blend together. Let any anxiety or past "failures" go, and start again (I'm now 60, and just starting cornbread mastery!). Make cornbread as often as you can -- not just as part of "important" meals, but just to practice consistency. Soon we'll all be making lots of cornbread delicacies, and delighting our friends and family with fresh breads that come alive with some butter at the table! Best of everything, -Russell (transplanted from Atlanta to Manhattan).

Reviewer: Amazon Customer
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: on time and as advertised, thanx
Review: on time and as advertised, thanx

Reviewer: Ianne
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: very good indeed
Review: I bought one of these cookbooks for myself, and I liked it so much, that I bought one for my daughter-in-law. It's an excellent cookbook that has a lot of information on corn/cornmeal. I consider the book educational, and it has very good, diverse, recipes. I'm satisfied with what this book has to offer. It's better than I expected. I bought my book from another source, and paid too much for it. I got my daughter-in-law's book from Amazon, and got a better deal for her's...a new book MUCH cheaper than mine. Much cheaper.

Reviewer: Jennifer
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: I love cornbread and waa surprised to find a whole cookbook devoted to it. I was even more surprised to find one written by the author of one of my favorite books (To Take a Dare). It was a match made in heaven. The author includes lovely little notes and helpful tips. Everything you never knew you needed to know about cornbread is here.

Reviewer: Marijke Bosmans
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Cornbreads sind bei uns kaum bekannt und das ist schade. Crescent Dragonwagon, bekannte Koch- und Kinderbuchautorin hat einen wunderbaren Schatz amerikanischer und internationaler Rezepte für das in den Staaten sehr oft gebackenes Cornbread gesammelt. Süd- und Nordstaaten haben alle so ihre eigene Rezepte und es ist schön, die verschiedene Unterschiede zu lesen. Für diejenige die gerne schnell ein Brot backen und auf Sauerteig verzichten wollen, können hier tolle Rezepte finden. Eine echte Empfehlung!

Reviewer: Debbie the book junkie in Ontario
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: I was using this book without a cast iron skillet as I had a pan the right weight, shape and size to substitute. Wonderful recipes. Luckily my husband was able to rescue and recondition two cast iron skillets and now the recipes turn out even better.

Customers say

Customers find the recipes in the book good, easy to make, and perfect for cornbread lovers. They also appreciate the stories and background information. Readers describe the book as excellent, a treasure, and worth the purchase. They praise the author's attention to detail and clear and concise writing style.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

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