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Fry Bacon. Add Onions: The Valentine Family & Friends Cookbook [Kindle Edition]

Kathleen Valentine
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)

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Book Description

(Cookbook/Memoir - 67k words. NOW WITH INTERACTIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS. Please note: the Kindle version of this book contains all of the text and recipes that are in the print version but does not contain all of the family photographs. Please note, this is a FAMILY cookbook with recipes contributed by many people. No guarantees are made.) In this combination memoir and family cookbook blogger and novelist Kathleen Valentine combines 30 posts from her blog with nearly 400 recipes collected from family and friends. Growing up in a "mostly Pennsylvania Dutch" family she collected and recorded recipes from grandparents, great-grandparents, aunts, cousins, friends, etc. which were combined in the first Valentine Family & Friends Cookbook published in 1981.

This was expanded in the 1992 edition and now, in this third edition, nearly 400 recipes combine with essays recording memories of growing up in rural Pennsylvania and photographs from six generations. Essays topics include making sauerkraut and soltz (a German pickled meat loaf), toasting marshmallows and catching fireflies, the old-country Christmas traditions of making stollen and visits from Belsnickle, old world ghost stories, their grandmother's quilts, and more.

Traditional family recipes include schmarn, panhaas, moultasha, a variety of sausage recipes, hassenpfeffer, and liver dumplings, a wide variety of pickles and relishes, as well as keuchels (a type of fried dough), apple dumplings, and rhubarb crisps and pies. Contemporary recipes from the younger generations of the Valentine family expand the collection with everything from dips and cocktails to chowders, cakes and cookies. Among the more popular recipes first featured on Valentine's blog are three maple syrup pies, an apricot-apple crisp with maple cream, caramel peachy-pear pandowdy, a honey & white peach pie, and her own Pennsylvania Dutch hot and sour soup.

Though this collection is a memoir in food of the Valentine family it could be the story of any first, second and third generation immigrant family.

From the book: "Most Pennsylvania Dutch families evolved from immigrants who were peasants in "the Old Country". They learned, out of necessity, to use everything they could to feed their families and they devised ways of preserving those things through the long, harsh winters. Pickling, preserving, smoking, canning were necessary to get a large family through the bitterly cold winter months. As I worked on this cookbook I was continually aware of how so much of the food that was part of family tradition was also making good use of commonly available food sources that were abundant and cheap. My Gram Werner used to say that the reason pigs were so valuable was because you could use every part of them except the squeak. In the cold hill country of Pennsylvania maple trees grew in such abundance, that maple syrup was a frequently used sweetener. Cows were kept for milk, cream, butter, cheese and sour cream. When I read these recipes now some seem so rich and loaded with calories but back then people needed those rich, calorie-laden foods to see them through long days in the fields or the factories or lumbering in the forests."


Editorial Reviews

From the Inside Flap

From the book: "Most Pennsylvania Dutch families evolved from immigrants who were peasants in "the Old Country". They learned, out of necessity, to use everything they could to feed their families and they devised ways of preserving those things through the long, harsh winters. Pickling, preserving, smoking, canning were necessary to get a large family through the bitterly cold winter months. As I worked on this cookbook I was continually aware of how so much of the food that was part of family tradition was also making good use of commonly available food sources that were abundant and cheap. My Gram Werner used to say that the reason pigs were so valuable was because you could use every part of them except the squeak. In the cold hill country of Pennsylvania maple trees grew in such abundance, that maple syrup was a frequently used sweetener. Cows were kept for milk, cream, butter, cheese and sour cream. When I read these recipes now some seem so rich and loaded with calories but back then people needed those rich, calorie-laden foods to see them through long days in the fields or the factories or lumbering in the forests."

About the Author

Kathleen Valentine is the author of two collections of short stories My Last Romance and other passions and love, murder, etc. as well as two novels, The Old Mermaid's Tale andEach Angel Burns. She has also written Fry Bacon, Add Onions: The Valentine Family & Friends Cookbook - five generations of good eating, a memoir/cookbook of memories and 400 recipes from a Pennsylvania Dutch childhood, and The Mermaid Shawl & other Beauties: Shawls, Cocoons and Wraps, a collection of her own lace knitting designs. She also publishes single knitting projects in a series called Knit Your Tail Off.
She currently lives in Gloucester, Massachusetts, America's oldest seaport, and is writing another novel, Depraved Heart and another knitting book, Siren Shawls, Seaman's Scarves and Stories. More information on her work is at KathleenValentine.com.

Product Details


Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
41 of 46 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars eBook version does not make a practical cookbook December 30, 2011
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I have kept a binder full of recipes for many years. It contains tried and true family favorites, recipes that have been given to me by friends, and recipes that I someday hope to try someday. Many are accompanied by notes and comments. The Valentine Family And Friends Cookbook reminds me of my own personal recipe book. But better. Not only does it contain recipes, but it also contains charming notes and stories about the author's life and memories of growing up in a Pennsylvania Dutch family. (And family photos too, if you have the paperback. Sadly, the Kindle edition does not have the photos.)

Some of the older recipes may not please the current generation (smoked liver pudding, anyone?), and some of the more recent recipes are fairly common (for example, chili con queso or spinach dip made with vegetable soup mix). However, collections of recipes of this type are charming and you might even try a few of the recipes. But the Kindle edition is too difficult to use. There is no Table of Contents or Index which means that it is nearly impossible to easily find recipes or quickly scan through them to find one you might be interested to try. The paperback version would undoubtably be more practical.

Because of this, I am only giving the eBook version 2 stars.

(In addition, I wonder if there might be a few errors in some of the recipes. For example, I find it difficult to believe that chicken wings can be baked for 1 1/2 hours at 450 degrees without burning them to a crisp.)
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars I may be a little biased... August 20, 2011
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
I may be slightly biased as I grew up in the Author's hometown of St. Marys, but have not lived there for over 20 years. I miss my hometown, but life has placed me well below the Mason Dixon Line - and too far from the wonderful PA Dutch food.

The Pennsylvania Dutch culture is one that can only be experienced first hand and like many cultures, it revolves around food. My parents' families were quite large and my memories of them are just as grandois. Every Sunday, after Mass, we would gather at my father's "homestead", where Gramma G would serve breakfast; the kids always prayed she had made her apple cinnamon roles, but were happy to settle for "dippy eggs", venision sausage with toasted home-made bread slathered with her Elderberry Jam. My aunts, uncles and Gramma would sit around the table drinking very strong percolated coffee (we tried to keep Aunt Sis from making it), while the children would be out back gathering apples or elderberries for Gramma to turn into wonderful treats. Besides Gramma G always had a special kid size apple pie hidden away for each of us little ones for when the adults went to their "club" meetings at the end of the meal.

The downside to this upbringing is that many, if not all of the recipes were hand me downs from the prior generation. Measurements like a pinch of salt, a handful of flour or a dabble of butter were common - an actual unit of measurement were in cookbooks (which any self respecting woman would not use - well, unless it was for the church cookbook)!. Children would learn at the stove with Mothers, Aunts and Grandmothers - but lack of attention and wonderful adventures outside pulled us away before we committed the recipes to memory.

I have to say, Kathleen has given the world a wonderful gift; she has managed to combine our hometown heritage and give us those wonderful recipes together in one book. My family recipes have not survived but now I have the means to recreate the meals I grew up with, I hope to impart the memories the food are sure to invoke to my own children.

Kathleen, thank you from the bottom of my heart (or should I say stomach?), for putting this wonderful book together!
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Another winner from a master storyteller January 16, 2012
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I discovered Kathleen Valentine with The Crazy Old Lady in the Attic (like a lot of other readers) and now I'm working my way through her books. I think I have four of them on my Kindle.

If you're a cook who wants a cut and dried recipe book organized into types of dishes with an index, go to Walmart. There are a million cookbooks like that.

However, this book will appeal to you if you love memoirs, travel books, and charming newspaper columns about real people with recipes thrown into the mix. The fun of wandering through the pages and discovering the next great story is one of the best things about it. This warm, delightful book is not just about food, but charm, family history, and stories from real flesh and blood folks. Another winner from Ms. Valentine.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Good German cooking
I loved reading the book that is basically a cook book of the kinds of recipes that I grew up learning to cook in my very German home in Indiana. Read more
Published 15 hours ago by Ole Teacher
4.0 out of 5 stars A treasure of comfort food recipes
I very much enjoyed this book. It is full of old time foods that I grew up eating.,Most are made with ingredients that are available and inexpensive. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Nana
5.0 out of 5 stars good recipes and stories
great hard to find recipes and good stories to go along with them.
many of the recipes are old fashion recipes that are unusual and
hard to find. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Robert W. Pelt
4.0 out of 5 stars Delicious Recipes
Have finished half of this book and am writing down receipes to try as I go. So much of it sounds like food I have had as I was a youngster. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Frances J. Porgal
5.0 out of 5 stars A Wonderful Book to Read and Cook From
I'M sitting here finishing a piece of 'Kitchen Sink Bread' toast with my morning tea. Cookbook s that are fun to read, as well as having great recipies are a treasure. Read more
Published 5 months ago by DEastes
5.0 out of 5 stars Interesting and useful
I love to cook and reading is my hobby,this was the perfect combo of both! Thanks for a great book!
Published 7 months ago by Vanessa Gregory
1.0 out of 5 stars What good is a cookbook without interactive index?
This could have the best receipes in the world...but if you can't find them....does not work for me at all!
Published 8 months ago by NLW
5.0 out of 5 stars Fry Bacon. Add Onions
When I found out Amazon had Kathleen's book, I bought hard copies of it for both of my daughters and they love it, as I did, for the short time I had to look through them before... Read more
Published 8 months ago by SlipMahoney
5.0 out of 5 stars One that belongs in EVERY cook's kitchen!
As one who enjoys reading cookbooks.. this one knocked my socks off! It's one of the better written of all the cookbooks I've read over the years. Read more
Published 10 months ago by Mamabear Cherei
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful family cookbook
What a charming cookbook! Family memories interwoven with wonderful, homespun recipes. I didn't expect much when buying this as a free Kindle book, but it's a lovely collection. Read more
Published 10 months ago by K from Seattle
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More About the Author

Kathleen Valentine was born and grew up in the Allegheny Highlands of Pennsylvania. She graduated from Penn State with a degree in The Arts and worked for over twenty years in the art/marketing departments of high-tech corporations. Since 2003 she has run her own design business, Valentine-Design.com. She is the author of "Fry Bacon. Add Onions", a cookbook/memoir of growing up Pennsylvania Dutch, as well as 4 novels, several novelettes and short story collections, and knitting instruction books. She has been listed as an Amazon Top 100 Author in Horror. Her novellas, "The Crazy Old Lady in the Attic" and "Ghosts of a Beach Town in Winter" were Amazon Top Ten Best Sellers in Horror and Ghost Stories for over 20 weeks.

Her blog at KathleenValentine.com has been read by thousands of readers since its beginning in July 2005. She currently lives in Gloucester, Massachusetts, America's oldest seaport, and is writing every day.

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