I've gotten so much reading pleasure from the vintage cookbooks I've come across this year that I wanted to tell you about some of them.
What's Cooking at Neiman-Marcus? is a slim volume I'd never even heard of before, and I certainly wish I'd heard of it before I finished writing Dainty Dining, as these recipes would have been ideal for that. I correctly assumed that the store's famous popover recipe would make an appearance, and it did, but it also has recipes for some decadent-sounding desserts like Cappuccino Pie and Praline Parfait. It's hard to imagine a store giving customers a free anything today, much less a cookbook of beloved recipes, so I'm happy to have found this.
On a visit to the antique mall during my recent crafting retreat, I found this large (8x10-inch) comb-bound book titled Bayou Cuisine. It has lots of tempting regional recipes, including a bacon-and-avocado dip I just made, and it has three recipes for teacakes that I'm hoping to try soon, but the real reason I had to have this was because of the sticker on the cover, showing that this once sold for $9.95 at my beloved Rich's!
Also on the crafting retreat, I bought this hardback book titled Miss Daisy Celebrates Tennessee. I have one of Daisy King's tearoom cookbooks, so I figured I would enjoy this one, too, and I did, especially since it celebrated 200 years of Tennessee history in 1996. I'm enjoying the history as much as the recipes.
And speaking of history … the cookbook I'm most intrigued by is this one, Tignall's Famous Recipes, which was compiled by the Tignall P.T.A. in 1951. You know the recipe for Wacky Cake I shared on Friday? It's one of the recipes that was tucked between the pages of this well-loved cookbook. I'd never heard of Tignall, Georgia, until I bought this book, and curiously enough, as I headed to my friend Kathy's house in Statesboro following the craft retreat in Lavonia, lo and behold, we passed right through the small town of Tignall, so I was delighted!
When I see handwritten or typed recipes and others that appear to have come off a can or a bag of flour, I am smitten. This cookbook is so full of stuff that it was packaged in a plastic bag so the various papers wouldn't fall out, and for just $5, this book has already provided me with far more than $5 worth of entertainment! Are you drawn to old cookbooks and/or old recipes too?
Angela, you may not know that Daisy King, author of "Miss Daisy Celebrates Tennessee," passed away in March, at age 80. I went to college in Nashville, and spent many special times with friends and family at Miss Daisy's Tearoom in Franklin, TN. I'm also fortunate to have several of her cookbooks---many autographed---that I have used over and over through the years. I'm glad you were able to find one of her publications, and wish you many happy times with it.
ReplyDeleteWhat treasures! I think old cookbooks are the best. Enjoy your great finds.
ReplyDeleteWow, that cookbook with all the handwritten recipe cards and labels from cans and flour bags looks great! You were sure fortunate to find that one. I do love old cookbooks and community cookbooks, too.
ReplyDeleteYou have found some treasures, for sure!
ReplyDeleteI absolutely LOVE vintage cookbooks and I buy them all the time. Happy huntung Angela! Judy in Australia 🇦🇺
ReplyDeleteOops, I meant happy hunting 😅
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