Betty Groff's Pennsylvania Dutch Cookbook


Book Description

Betty Groff has gathered together from friends and relatives over 300 family and kitchen-tested recipes to create the definitive book on this very American cuisine. The day-to-day lives and seasonal celebrations of Lancaster County's Mennonite, Amish, Moravian, Brethren, and Quaker families are filled with foods that mirror the bounty of the farming year. Rich in history, this warm book contains all the classic favorites with an eye toward limiting their salt, cream and butter content while preserving their homemade goodness. Includes Sunshine Squash Soup, Moravian Sugar Cake, Box Panned Oysters, and much more.




The Pennsylvania Dutch Cookbook


Book Description

This is a new release of the original 1948 edition.




Betty Groff Cookbook


Book Description

The author of several best-selling cookbooks, Betty Groff writes and speaks from the heart and soul, passing on Pennsylvania cooking traditions she knows like no one else. In this new book with all new recipes, Betty also relates childhood memories from her life in Pennsylvania Dutch country with the 'plain people'. Tested by groups of guests invited to her kitchen and by diners at her bed and breakfast, the recipes in this book continue Betty's culinary tradition, providing the tastes her legion of fans have come to expect. Illustrated with full-colour photographs of the Lancaster countryside by Blair Seitz.




Dutch Treats


Book Description

Internationally known food historian William Woys Weaver presents a richly photographed gastronomical journey into the heart of Pennsylvania Dutch food traditions, with more than 100 heritage recipes and the colorful stories behind them - including Shoofly Cake, New Year's Pretzels and the original Snickerdoodles. Dutch Treats shines a much-anticipated light on the vast diversity of authentic baked goods, festive breads and pastries that we call Pennsylvania Dutch (named for the German-speaking immigrants who settled there starting in the late 1600s).




Pennsylvania Dutch Cooking


Book Description

Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine is the typical and traditional fare of the Pennsylvania Dutch. According to one writer, "If you had to make a short list of regions in the United States where regional food is actually consumed on a daily basis, the land of the Pennsylvania Dutch-in and around Lancaster County, Pennsylvania-would be at or near the top of that list," mainly because the area is a cultural enclave of Pennsylvania Dutch culture. Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine reflects influences of the Pennsylvania Dutch's German heritage, agrarian society, and rejection of rapid change. It is common to find Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine throughout the Philadelphia/Delaware Valley region.




The Pennsylvania Dutch Cookbook


Book Description

This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions that are true to the original work.




Pennsylvania Dutch Cookbook


Book Description




Pennsylvania Dutch Cook Book


Book Description

Visitors to the Pennsylvania Dutch country in Pennsylvania are usually delighted with the unique food tradition that survives there among the hills and small, well-tended farms. Ultimately based on the rich cookery of the peasants and small townspeople of the Rhineland and Switzerland, "Dutch" cookery has expanded into the new foodstuffs and materials that America has to offer, and it is one of the gastronomic treats of the country. Dishes such as apple soup, baked bananas, Dutch liver dumplings, spaetzle and braten, walnut shad, and oyster peppers are enjoyed by almost everyone. One of the difficulties about Dutch cookery, however, is that is always has been a home cooking style within a closely knit community, and it does not go by cookbooks. Until this book appeared, the best that one could do was to try to cadge an occasional recipe from a Dutch acquaintance or a local inn. Mr. George Frederick, one-time president of the Gourmet Society of New York, was in an unmatched position to record the delights of Dutch cookery. Himself a native Pennsylvania Dutchman, with access to countless kitchens and family cooking secrets, he was also a gourmet of international stature. He has gathered together 358 recipes that show the Dutch tradition at its strongest, all dishes with the unique savor that distinguishes them from their occasional counterparts in other cooking systems. His book is so good that it in turn has been taken over by many Pennsylvania resorts as the official cookbook. To list only a few of the mouthwatering recipes that Mr. Frederick gives in clear, accurate recipes that you can prepare: Dutch spiced cucumbers, raspberry sago soup, pretzel soup, squab with dumplings Nazareth, shrimp wiggle, Dutch beer eel, sherry sauerkraut, cheese custard, currant cakes, and many fine dumplings, pancakes, and soups . All types of food are covered.