Check it out
Few things reveal more about a region than its food, and you can find out
much about American diversity with library cookbooks focusing on regional
cuisine.
You might start your culinary tour with “California Home Cooking,”
featuring 400 recipes that expose a multicultural fusion, interspersed
with lore about the Golden State. From East Asian stir fries to pastas
introduced by Italian immigrants, this is a melting pot of California
cuisine culled from visits to kitchens in small towns, Chinatowns,
barrios and ‘burbs.
Continue your gastronomic trek with “The Border Cookbook,” a celebration
of home cooking of the American Southwest and northern Mexico. A host of
distinct local styles are featured in more than 300 recipes that reflect
the intricate record of contact among Native Americans, Spaniards and
Mexicans.
You can find out about food that brought fame to hometown diners, cafes
and upscale restaurants along America’s “Mother Road” in “The Route 66
Cookbook.” In addition to recipes for the best dishes travelers could
find, enjoy thumbnail histories that will satisfy a taste for a bygone
era in this tribute to eateries along a historic thoroughfare.
Heading south, check out “Chef Paul Prudhomme’s Fork in the Road” for a
different direction in cooking from one of America’s most renowned chefs.
Geared toward producing great-tasting Louisiana favorites with minimal
fat, this collection of recipes and techniques include nutritional data
and serving suggestions for healthful breads, soups, salads, main dishes
and desserts.
Other Southern standbys are featured in “The Lady & Sons Savannah Country
Cookbook,” a short course in replicating dishes from a popular Savannah
eatery. Find easy recipes for such comfort foods as shrimp bisque and
sausage-rice casserole in this collection of down-home Southern family
favorites.
You can learn how to prepare such old-time favorites as spoon bread and
chicken and dumplings in “Roots and Recipes: Six Generations of Heartland
Cookery.” In addition, share treasured family memories in this homage to
pioneer housewives who journeyed from Kentucky to settle in Indiana,
Illinois and Iowa.
A roundup of American cuisine wouldn’t be complete without a look at the
eating habits of our country’s forefathers, featured in “Old Sturbridge
Village Cookbook.” In addition to recipes that will help you re-create
the tastes of yesterday, this American History Collection volume includes
lessons for preserving apples, drying herbs and seasoning cast-iron
cooking utensils.
Consider winding up your cross-country culinary tour with “Welcome to
Junior’s,” a nostalgic look at Brooklyn from the 1930s to the 1990s, with
recipes from a legendary restaurant. Along with instructions for
preparing the popular eatery’s rich cheesecakes, there’s a
decade-by-decade history of Brooklyn’s heyday in this new volume about
the home of the Brooklyn Dodgers, Coney Island and one of the country’s
most famous bridges.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with
Sarah Rosenblum.
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