Cooking with Mrs. Faye: Southern Hospitality


Book Description

Cooking with Mrs. Faye Book #2 Southern Hospitality My Grandmother God rest her soul, worked at a cafeteria at a local trade school, where she was a head cook. Every Saturday my grannie and her four (4) friends would take turn going over one another house, they would sit around the tables quilting, eating homemade cakes and coming up with new recipes. My grannie taught my mom and her 3 sisters how to cook. At an incredibly young age I did not really want to go outside and play I wanted to hang out in the kitchen with my grannie (learning how to bake and cook). Generation has repeated itself because I have taught my 2 daughters and their daughters how to bake and cook everything from scratch as I was taught. I have decided to share these irresistible recipes (book #2) with the ones who wants a home cook meal but do not have the time to spend in the kitchen, I have made these recipes simple but fun for your entire family. This Southern hospitality cookbook has 100 mouthwatering recipes and some pictures. Contact me at [email protected] (website) www.cookingwithmrsfaye.com Phone# 1-800-780-8819 This is cookbook number 2 of 5.




Cooking with Mrs. Faye


Book Description

My grandmother and her friends worked in the cafeteria at a local trade school. When they got together for their quilting circle, they would eat teacakes and talk about ideas and trade recipes to try out. They would try it out as a featured item at home and if it got good reviews then it stayed. My grand mother never wrote her recipes down, but she taught her daughters, how to cook who then shared the cooking experience with me. When I got old enough to reach the stove, they both helped cultivate my desire to stay a part of the kitchen. I in turn taught my kids and my granddaughter. I have decided to share these recipes with those who want them. This cookbook is for those who are craving the irresistible taste of Southern Cooking, but may not have the time to spend in the kitchen preparing the different meals. Here are 80 recipes that will appeal to the armature in today’s kitchen. Contact me at [email protected] is cookbook number 1 of 4. For 100% homemade receipts from this book order Book 4 which will be coming soon, or e-mail Brenda.




Recipes


Book Description

This 1916 chuch cook book was published by the Ladies' Aid Society of the Grandview Congreagational Chuch of Grandview, Ohio. In addition to recipes, it contains a short, humorous essay on "How to Preserve a Husband."




Away


Book Description

"These accounts are not `interviews' in the sense of structured sets of questions and answers. Rather, time and time again, as I introduced myself and my subject by explaining something about the theme of leaving home in Maritime history, some kind of chord was struck in the self-understanding of those I spoke with, and we then spent an hour, an afternoon, or a day recording a conversation about the place of leaving home in their lives and in their thinking." from the Preface In Away, Gary Burrill presents the voices of Maritimers in exile as they talk about their decisions to leave home, their experiences moving to and establishing themselves in new areas, and the way their exile from the Maritime provinces of Canada has shaped their views of themselves, their adopted communities, and their native homes. Each of the book's three sections deals largely with the experiences of a generation. From the turn of the century to the 1920s and 1930s, Maritimers looked primarily to Boston for work when they made their decision to leave home; during the economic expansion that followed the Second World War, southern Ontario was the destination of choice; when western Canada experienced an "oil boom" in the 1970s and early 1980s, a younger generation of Maritimers was drawn to Alberta. Taken together, the reflections and autobiographical reminiscences of these Maritimers provide a broad geographical and generational picture of the experience at the centre of post-Confederation life in the Maritimes -- exile, out-migration, going away.




Entertainment Cook Book


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The Jane Austen Cookbook


Book Description

Jane Austen wrote her novels in the midst of a large and sociable family. Brothers and sisters, nieces and nephews, friends and acquaintances were always coming and going, and eating and drinking. Fortunately one of Jane's dearest friends, Martha Lloyd, lived with the family for many years and recorded in her Household Book over 100 recipes enjoyed by the Austens. This family fare, tested and modernized for today's cooks, is reproduced here, together with some of the more sophisticated dishes which Jane and her characters would have enjoyed at balls, picnics and supper parties.




My New Shirt


Book Description

Joe Matthews Bought A shirt but unbeknown to him it was possessed. An earthbound spirit determined to break the curse that trapped it, sends Joe on an adventure he will never forget.




The Book of 1000 Recipes


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Our Favorite Recipes


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Seven for a Secret


Book Description

One of The Wall Street Journal’s Ten Best Mysteries of the Year “Amazing...This is a series for the ages, it’s so spectacular.”—Gillian Flynn, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Gone Girl 1846: In New York City, slave catching isn’t just legal—it’s law enforcement. Six months after the formation of the NYPD, its most reluctant and talented officer, Timothy Wilde, learns of the gruesome underworld of lies and corruption ruled by the “blackbirders,” who snatch free Northerners of color from their homes, masquerade them as slaves, and sell them South to toil as plantation property. When the beautiful and terrified Lucy Adams staggers into Timothy’s office to report a robbery and is asked what was stolen, her reply is, “My family.” Their search for her mixed-race sister and son will plunge Timothy and his feral brother, Valentine, into a world where police are complicit and politics savage, and where corpses appear in the most shocking of places…