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The classic cookbook from “the first lady of Southern cooking” (NPR), featuring a new foreword by the James Beard Award–winning chefMashama Bailey
Decades before cornbread, shrimp and grits, and peach cobbler were mainstays on menus everywhere, Edna Lewis was pioneering the celebration of seasonal food as a distinctly American cuisine.
In this James Beard Foundation Cookbook Hall of Fame-inducted cookbook, Miss Lewis (as she was almost universally known) shares the recipes of her childhood, spent in a Virginia farming community founded by her grandfather and his friends after emancipation, as well as those that made her one of the most revered American chefs of all time. Interspersed throughout are personal anecdotes, cooking insights, notes on important Southern ingredients, and personally developed techniques for maximizing flavor.
Across six charmingly illustrated chapters—From the Gardens and Orchards; From the Farmyard; From the Lakes, Steams, and Oceans; For the Cupboard; From the Bread Oven and Griddle; and The Taste of Old-fashioned Desserts—encompassing almost 200 recipes, Miss Lewis captures the spirit of the South. From Whipped Cornmeal with Okra; Pan-Braised Spareribs; and Benne Seed Biscuits to Thirteen-Bean Soup; Pumpkin with Sautéed Onions and Herbs; a Salad of Whole Tomatoes Garnished with Green Beans and Scallions; and Raspberry Pie Garnished with Whipped Cream, In Pursuit of Flavor is a modern classic and a timeless compendium of Southern cooking at its very best.
Publisher : Knopf; Illustrated edition (March 26, 2019)
Language : English
Hardcover : 336 pages
ISBN-10 : 0525655514
ISBN-13 : 978-0525655510
Item Weight : 1 pounds
Dimensions : 7.3 x 1.1 x 9.3 inches
Reviewer: Jennifer Guerrero
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Timeless. Simplicity and perfection.
Review: This is an iconic book of living off the land, or whatâs called farm-to-table food. Her recipes are equal measure of simplicity and perfection. She tells stories introducing each recipe thatâll give you an understanding of just why her particular ingredient choice was made, or sheâll tell you about the possible substitutions or variations on the recipe. She has an immediately likeable voice.My thoughts and pics of the dishes we tried:1) Sautéed Wild Mushrooms â p 44. Quickly sautéed with garlic and then finished with lemon juice, salt, and pepper. Wonderfully aromatic.2) Cooked Greens â p 17. Four ingredients including salt and pepper. Itâs neat how much flavor sheâs able to get out of that.3) Baked Sweet Potatoes with Lemon Flavoring â p 46. Okay, I bought whatâs labeled as sweet potatoes at the store. What Iâve made are clearly lemony candied yams. She explains that the orange and purple flesh ones are yams and that true sweet potatoes have a cream color flesh. Iâll need a do-over after I visit the posh grocery store. The yams were delicious, by the way. The lemon makes them taste special and gives them a fresh brightness.Iâll update this as I play in the book more!Some others I have flagged to try: Fresh Garden Peas with Vidalia Onions â p 10 * Creamed Scallions â p 12 * Wilted Lettuce Salad â p 24 * Sautéed Bananas â p 57 * Cheese Custard â p 71 * Cheese Soufflé â p 72 * Roast Chicken â p 79 * Roast Peking Duck with Brandied Orange Sauce â p 103 * Beef Tenderloin with Béarnaise Sauce * Shrimp Sautéed with Butter, Garlic, and Parsley â p 150 * Coffee Cake â p 232 * Mincemeat Tarts with Brandy Butter â p 268 * Apple Brown Betty â p 275
Reviewer: John T Beeston III
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Great recipes
Review: Edna Lewis was a wonderful cook judging from these recipes. Wish I could have eaten at one of her tables!
Reviewer: K. Hemphill
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Takes me back to my childhood
Review: If you want the tastes of rural Virginia back in the day, read this book. I spent a lot of time growing up in the nearby area between Richmond and Williamsburg (both my parents were born in the land where George met Martha and before that Pocohantas met John Smith) and this book took me back. Not just to the food that my grandmother and great grandmother prepared, such as oyster stew, boiled blue crab, ham (Smithfield) biscuits, succotash, navy bean soup, fatback, hot water cornbread, spoon bread, black eyed peas with stewed tomatoes, kale and turnip greens (never collards) fried spots and croakers (local fish) and deserts such as lemon chest pie, pound cake (always with a POUND of butter), and toll house cookies, but back in time to the stories they told about how food used to be. Even as late as the 1980's, it was common to have what was called a "garden" of at least a 1/2 or whole acre with more acreage planted in corn for the "animals" - though as local traveling butchers became a dying breed (which had in turn replaced neighbors getting together to help slaughter), the "animals" were mostly chicken and geese rather than the pigs and steers of my childhood while tractors replaced horse/pony and plow. As I helped shell lima beans, ate sweet white corn raw right out of the garden, ate a just picked tomato like it was an apple, or just sat in the side yard drinking ice water or iced tea out of a mason jar, my grandparents told stories of salting fish in barrels, corning beef, and making wild blackberry syrup for biscuits back in the day. And well into the 1980's my grandparents still canned and pickled vegetables, made wine out of peaches, apples, local grapes and even potatoes (!)(and knew where to buy moonshine...). My grandfather hunted till he was almost 70 - mostly deer, wild turkeys, and using dogs - possum and racoons (boys hunted squirrel and rabbit) and of course EVERYTHING was shared by the hunters to be eaten (wasn't told that it was squirrel in that stew until AFTER I'd eaten it!). He didn't like to fish but his brother/brother in laws did and of course they shared their fish as he did his game. While I certainly don't romanticize those days (it was seriously hard work and "gardening" and taking care of the animals was done before and after a day's "paying" work and both my grandmother and grandfather had jobs) the flavors of the just out of the garden vegetables; the off the tree sour cherries (whatever the birds didn't get) apples, and black walnuts; free range poultry; hours old eggs; and preservative-free home canned goods will always be remembered and make me wish I could eat that way again. And, not taking food for granted - canning/smoking/pickling what couldn't be eaten fresh and "eating everything from a pig but its squeal" (down to pig tails and souse/"hog's" head cheese) is something that has stayed with me (in homage to my grandparents thrift, I make broth out of my whole roasted chicken carcasses and make what I call refrigerator pasta and refrigerator soup to use up old veggies and bits of cooked meat). As I finish writing this, I see my grandfather as the sun was starting to set finally relaxing on a summer day's end, sitting in his chair in the side yard, waving to everyone he knew as they passed by on the two-lane blacktop "main" road, drinking a big mouth Mickey (beer) or maybe if it had been a particularly hard day a high- ball, while my grandmother called out to us "chillun" as we chased fireflies at dusk, whether we wanted a ham sandwich before it was time to go to bed.
Reviewer: Kay
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Edna Lewis - ICON!
Review: The recipes in this book are much more approachable than in the Taste of Country Cooking. Being originally from the South, living in California since 1972, I find myself returning to the comfort of Southern cooking.
Reviewer: Bernadette Davidson
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Southern style cooking
Review: Bought for a friend who yearns for the food of the south. She loves this book and the descriptions of the original recipes.
Reviewer: david mcsloy
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Came on time in good condition. Good book of receipes.
Review: Came on time in good condition. Good book of receipres.
Reviewer: Ms. Shunda K
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Great cookbook by THE DAME of southern food
Review: This is a great cookbook by this author and I am very happy to have me a copy now. She just seem to be so soft spoken, kept herself up nicely every time I saw something that was with her (many interviews) on YouTube. I have 2 of her cookbooks now (because Iâm a lover of all cookbooks and many cookbook authors but especially my African American cookbooks and their authors. Now owning Mrs Edna Lewisâ cookbooks I am very very thankful. Great cookbook by This Southern cooking Dame. Thank you Mrs Edna Lewis and may you continue to rest in love and heaven.
Reviewer: hwl
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Genuine
Review: I trust the voice here. I don't feel compelled to go out and buy expensive ingredients. She offers an honest guide to regional cuisine.
Reviewer: Jared Purdy
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Ms. Lewis was practically an institution in her own right before her passing a number of years ago. This book is a treasure trove, and a joy to read. My only regret is that I never got to meet her. I've already made a number of recipes from this book and there will no doubt be many more.
Reviewer: John Seward
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: This was recommended and the great recipies and stories from the author are a treat.Well wort adding to your culinary collection.
Reviewer: Marva c Dempster
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: I love this cookbook, really nice recipes in it, read some things I did not know about certain vegetables. I like everything about this book, will be enjoying some more of the recipes. Thanks.
Reviewer: Miss B
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Love this woman and her wholesome approach to food.
Reviewer: Bettie Baer
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: The recipes are not the traditional Southern recipes I had hope for.
Customers say
Customers find the recipes delicious and true to southern cooking. They also describe the book as inspiring, honest, and a great storyteller. Readers mention the recipes are approachable and perfect.
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