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Baking in America: Traditional and Contemporary Favorites from the Past 200 Years
 
 
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Baking in America: Traditional and Contemporary Favorites from the Past 200 Years [Bargain Price] [Hardcover]

Greg Patent (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)


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Hardcover $35.00  
Hardcover, Bargain Price, November 1, 2002 --  

Book Description

November 1, 2002
This groundbreaking collection encompasses both sweet and savory favorites: yeast breads and quick breads, layer cakes and loaf cakes, doughnuts and fruit desserts, pies and simple pastries. Taking as his starting point 1796, the year the first American cookbook was published, Greg Patent, an accomplished baker, has mined sources from across the country for exemplary baking recipes by and for home cooks. Perusing old cookbooks, journals, and handwritten diaries from libraries and private archives, he has skillfully recreated treasured recipes or used them as inspiration for his own thoroughly up-to-date creations.

Included are historical finds like the original Parker House Rolls; Lindy’s Cheesecake, from the world-famous New York restaurant; and a sensationally easy butterscotch cake that won a national baking contest in 1954. Here as well are hundreds of contemporary standouts, such as Malted Milk Chocolate Layer Cake, Blueberry–Lemon Curd Streusel Muffins, Peaches and Cream Cobbler, and Raised Potato Doughnuts.
--This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Greg Patent, recognizing that many of America's worthiest breads, cakes, and other sweets have disappeared over time, retrieves them in perfected, easy-to-follow form, while also providing a selection of contemporary favorites, in his book Baking in America. From the first American cookbook, American Cookery, published in 1776, to and beyond the works of influential American cookbook writers including Eliza Leslie, Amelia Simmons, and Fannie Farmer, the book serves up such temptations as Mrs. Goodfellow's Dover Cake (a fine-grained, rice flour-based pound cake); Cornell White Bread (an exemplary sandwich loaf developed at Cornell University); and Chocolate and Gold Ribbon Cake (a Pillsbury Bake-Off prize winner). Among the newer delights are Ricotta Cheesecake with Blueberry Sauce, Spicy Icebox Oatmeal Crisps, and Rhubarb Raspberry Crunch Bars. Building upon often-sketchy formulas, Patent has seamlessly bridged past and present to produce a unique collection.

The book's organization--chapters cover topics from savory yeast breads and sweet yeast breads and doughnuts to pound cakes, layer cakes, cheesecakes, fruit desserts, and more--gives some idea of the arc of American baking, which has changed as kitchen technology has advanced. (The arrival of yeast-displacing chemical leaveners, for example, made the layer cake possible.) But American bakers have always been avid experimenters, Patent maintains, and have produced singular delights like Jalapeño, Cornmeal, and Cheddar Bread; Golden Pumpkin Loaf; Persimmon Cream Cheese Cupcakes; and, of course, brownies, for which the book gives variations including White Chocolate Chunk. With amusing advice from old cookbooks and other historical asides, profiles of cooking teachers, and useful glossaries of ingredients and equipment, the photo-illustrated book makes the re-creation of our charmingly homey baking past practical for modern cooks. --Arthur Boehm --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

From Publishers Weekly

In this wonderful collection of baking recipes, Patent (A Is for Apple) takes classics from old American cookbooks and makes them work with modern-day ingredients, encompassing all aspects of baking from Savory Yeast Breads through Pound Cakes to Pies and Tarts. After explaining the ingredients and equipment, he moves on to the recipes, which include timeless treasures of America's baking tradition such as Parker House Rolls, Lindy's Cheesecake and Lady Baltimore Cake. Most recipes have a brief history or description along with full, simply stated instructions that make them suitable for all skill levels. Interspersed are extracts from historical books and pamphlets that add color and create windows into bygone ages. These panels also convey additional information, which, combined with step-by-step pointers at the start of each chapter, enable the cook to produce treats like the subtly flavored Spice Pound Cake or the moist but light Orange Sponge Cake. Some recipes are more modern e.g., Cashew and Golden Raisin Biscotti with White Chocolate Glaze but all have been popular at some point with the American public. By including recipes from so many areas of baking, Patent has produced a volume that will provide a full repertoire for any cook as well as providing superb insight to the traditions and influences that have made American baking so varied and rich.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 560 pages
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin (November 1, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0618048316
  • ASIN: B000YFT0IE
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 8 x 1.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,136,816 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I was born in Hong Kong, eldest son of an Iraqi mother and Russian father, and spent my first 10 years growing up in the bustling metropolis, Shanghai. For many of those years, we lived with Granny, my Iraqi grandmother, and she cooked all our food. She was also a fabulous baker, as was my Russian grandmother, Baba. My grandmothers instilled in me their passion for baking, and I began on my own path at the age of 11 when we immigrated to San Francisco. Although I cooked and baked from that point on, it never occurred to me to pursue cooking as a profession--even after I won a cash prize at the 10th Pillsbury Bake-Off as a teenager! Instead, I pursued science as a career. I have a Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of California, Berkeley, and I held a full professorship at the University of Montana for ten years. Thanks to Carl Sontheimer, who hired me as national spokesperson for Cuisinarts, Inc. more than 25 years ago, I gave up the academic life and plunged headlong into the world of food. I've written articles for most of the major food magazines, and I write two monthly columns for my local paper, the Missoulian. I also contribute food columns to the Missoulian's quarterly magazine, missoula.com. My cookbook, "Baking in America," won the James Beard Award in 2003, and "A Baker's Odyssey" won the 2009 Cordon d'Or Academy Award. His new blog, all about the magic of baking, is at www.thebakingwizard.com.



 

Customer Reviews

19 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (19 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Attractive and all-round practical, November 19, 2002
Patent sifted 200 years of cookbooks, journals and newspapers to select these 250 recipes, tested and adapted for the modern kitchen. Organized by type, from yeast breads to quick breads to doughnuts, pound cakes, layer cakes, pies and tarts, cheesecakes and more, this is a solid all-round baking book, with clear directions. Sidebars sprinkled throughout offer quotes from old cookbooks and advertisements and brief prefaces give the provenance of the original recipe, serving suggestions and a few words about its character. Patent also offers tips on choosing and handling ingredients, and cooking techniques, such as deep-frying doughnuts, pound cake pointers and step-by-step layer cakes.

A section of full-color pictures (Coconut Layer Cake, Lemon Genoise with White Chocolate Buttercream and Raspberries, Rhubarb Strawberry Pie) should be kept away from dieters. From Martha Washington's Currant Cake to Jalapeno, Cornmeal and Cheddar Bread, Patent does justice to the American baking scene.

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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I love this book., August 17, 2003
By 
I really enjoyed reading this cookbook. I learned so much about the history of American baking, the ingredients that were and are used in baking, and about the origins of some of the foods that I bake for my family. I read it cover to cover, like a history book, and thoroughly enjoyed it. Then I started baking from it. The first thing I tried was the honey apple torte, and it was one of the best baked goods I have ever made or tasted. It disappeared in a day--my family couldn't stop eating it. And it is a beautiful cake, too. I am looking forward to baking it for company. Next I tried the lemon sour cream pound cake, and that too was exquisite. I can't wait to try some of the other recipes. I found the recipes very original, and there were many that I haven't seen in other cookbooks. I also enjoyed reading the introductions to each recipe, which give history of the recipe or the ingredients contained in it. After reading (and baking from) this book, I feel like I have a better understanding of American culinary history. This was a very enjoyable cookbook. Thank you, Greg Patent.
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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Cookbook And A Great Collection Of Stories, March 15, 2003
By 
Amy (Las Vegas, NV) - See all my reviews
I own this book and it is without a doubt the best baking book I own and one of the top cookbooks that I have ever seen.

The Introduction alone will get you hooked, with Greg Patent's intriguing preview of how thousands of years of cultures have been combined, modified, and enhanced to create the modern cooking of today.

And what about the recipes? I have tried many and they are flawless. Particularly delightful are the Lemon Sponge Cloud (p. 348), the Boston Creme Cakes -- that's right -- cakes (worth the price of the book on their own -- p. 252), and the irresistable Malted Milk Chocolate Cake (p. 276).

But this is much more than just a cookbook of delicious recipes. It is a culinary geneology full of rich accounts of how the cooking of today came to be.

So while you are waiting for your sponge cake to bake, you can pass the time learning how it used to take 4 hours of beating to produce its predecessor back in the 17th century. And when you bite into that delicious and fluffy treat, you will thank Greg Patent, but you will also appreciate those folks along the way who were part of the evolution of American baking.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
Breads, glorious breads-crusty, chewy, many made with whole grains-were the foundation of a housewife's baking repertoire during the early European settlement of our country. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
lower third position, room temperature until the centers, adjust two oven racks, cup untoasted wheat germ, knock out the excess flour, second layer right side, excess dough hanging, cool completely upside, place one layer upside, scrape the work bowl, coat with cooking spray, attach the dough hook, oven into thirds, cupcakes spring, detach the sides, heatproof rubber spatula, digital probe thermometer, pure coconut extract, upright peaks, teaspoon pure lemon extract, whites form peaks, specialty cookware shops, cooking parchment, scrape the bowl, large wide bowl
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Eliza Leslie, Miss Leslie, Grand Marnier, Amelia Simmons, American Cookery, Flaky Tart Pastry, New York, Parker House, William Woys Weaver, Double Piecrust, Great Valley Mills, Miss Parloa's Kitchen Companion, Elizabeth Goodfellow, Miss Simmons, New England, Single Piecrust, New Orleans, Pillsbury Bake-Off, Rorer's New Cook Book, United States, Lady Baltimore Cake, Makes These, Rorer's Philadelphia Cook Book, The Young Housekeeper's Friend
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