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United States of Pie

Regional Favorites from East to West and North to South

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A "colorful, varied collection" of regional heirloom recipes that "may well be the definitive resource on the all-American pie" (Publishers Weekly).
Before cooking shows and celebrity chefs there were church dinners, community bake sales, and county fairs—events for which regular women made their prized family recipes, especially for that homiest and most American of desserts, pie. In United States of Pie, Adrienne Kane invites you on a journey back in time as she scours the country for—and shares—those recipes: the pies that have come to define culinary traditions from the West Coast to the East Coast, from the Midwest to the South. They showcase the innovative spirit of American home cooks in the era before processed foods and flavorless, imported produce took over grocery shelves, and are tested and updated for contemporary palates with an emphasis on local, seasonal fruit and dairy products. With sweet illustrations, tips ranging from the best thickeners for fruit pies to why home bakers should embrace corn syrup, and insightful essays on pie-making traditions around the country, it's more than a cookbook—it's a must-have baking resource.
"Culled from farmwife cookbooks, bakeshops, church booklets, and newspapers, the recipes are categorized by region, with chapters for the Northeast, South, Midwest, and West and all of their classics: shoefly, Maine blueberry, Key lime, and strawberry-rhubarb, to name a few. These are interspersed with Kane's updated versions of unusual, exotic concoctions such as Chipmunk Pie (stuffed with an apple and nut filling), green tomato pie, and burnt sugar meringue pie." —Publishers Weekly
"A charming recipe collection [that] includes the most thorough instructions we've seen yet on mastering pie dough." —Matt Lee and Ted Lee, authors of the James Beard Foundation Cookbook of the Year The Lee Bros. Southern Cookbook
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 2, 2012
      This colorful, varied collection by a blogger, recipe developer, and food writer may well be the definitive resource on the all-American pie. Culled from farmwife cookbooks, bakeshops, church booklets, and newspapers, the recipes are categorized by region, with chapters for the Northeast, South, Midwest, and West and all of their classics: shoefly, Maine blueberry, Key lime, and strawberry-rhubarb, to name a few. These are interspersed with Kane’s updated versions of unusual, exotic concoctions such as Chipmunk Pie (stuffed with an apple and nut filling), green tomato pie, and burnt sugar meringue pie. Acknow-ledging that many home bakers are intimidated by the dough, Kane (Cooking and Screaming) covers the trickiest part of the process with step-by-step tips on crust making (sift or whisk dry ingredients; cut in fats by hand) and a host of foundational recipes, including rich and buttery cornmeal and leaf lard pie doughs. For the new baker there’s plenty of guidance on blind baking and crust fluting. Masters of the craft will be lured in by new challenges—rendering one’s own lard, for example. In all, this is a sweet and helpful guide. Agent: Alia Habib.

    • Library Journal

      May 15, 2012

      Working with historic sources like cookbooks from Yale's Sterling Memorial Library, Kane (Cooking and Screaming: Finding My Own Recipe for Recovery) compiled this collection of pies from the Northeast, South, Midwest, and West (e.g., Concord Grape, Southern Peach, Browned Butter Butterscotch Meringue, and Avocado). There are no photographs, so Kane relies on descriptive language to communicate the finer points of pie technique. VERDICT Compared to such classic primers as Ken Haedrich's Pie and Rose Levy Beranbaum's The Pie and Pastry Bible, this book is shorter and more focused on history. Recommended for frequent pie bakers interested in new flavors and regional specialties.

      Copyright 2012 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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Languages

  • English

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