Publication Date: October 15, 2010 | Series: Cookbook Delights
The Pacific Northwest yields the greatest bounty of huckleberries in the country, from which author Karen Jean Matsko Hood writes and gathers her recipes for Huckleberry Delights Cookbook. Hood has brought together carefully selected huckleberry recipes with easy-to-follow directions for beginner and accomplished cooks alike. These recipes are compiled with readily available ingredients as well as lots of poetry, history, and folklore for the reader to thoroughly enjoy time and time again. This would be a wonderful addition to any cook s cookbook collection.
Living in the heart of Washington brings great appreciation for the huckleberry season. Huckleberry bushes are beautiful! Daily, we enjoy the beauty of the huckleberry bushes and the many stories they have inspired. Many of us have wonderful memories of picking huckleberries in the hot July and August sun and running away when a bear came to claim his territory. Huckleberries are indeed a tasty and delicious food. Huckleberry varieties come in many colors, sizes, and textures. The fruit is great for cooking and is nutritious to eat alone. It is no wonder that huckleberry bush cultivation quickly spread throughout the western United States.
Huckleberries have an interesting history of facts and folklore. Some of this huckleberry folklore is included in this book. As a poet, Karen found it enjoyable to color this cookbook with poetry so that readers could savor the metaphorical richness of the huckleberry as well as its literal flavor. Also included in this Huckleberry Delights Cookbook are some articles on history, cultivation, and botanical information, along with interesting facts about huckleberries.
The Cookbook Delights Series would not be complete without Huckleberry Delights because huckleberries are a common and popular Pacific Northwestern American fruit. We hope you enjoy reading it as well as trying out all the recipes. This cookbook is designed for easy use and is organized into alphabetical sections: appetizers and dips; beverages; breads and rolls; breakfasts; cakes; candies; cookies; desserts; dressings, sauces, and condiments; jams, jellies, and syrups; main dishes; pies; preserving; salads; side dishes; soups; and wines and spirits.
I recently received a review copy of Huckleberry Delights. This is a truly awesome cookbook. I was not aware of the Delights Series [until now] and I am sure my readers are not aware either. I wish the entire series was on my shelf! --Margie Wuebker -Food Editor- The Daily Standard
Huckleberries have to be good for you and all these recipes make them better. Have a great excursion picking berries this season and use Huckleberry Delights to give your family a treat. --Bob Howdy, PhD
This little berry gets complete and undivided attention in Huckleberry Delights, part of the author s Delights series of cookbooks...Hood makes this little berry fun to eat, and she shows an active imagination when it comes to creating recipes --Mark Williams
About the Author
Karen Jean Matsko Hood has always enjoyed cooking, baking, and experimenting with recipes. At this time Hood is working to complete a series of cookbooks that blends her skills and experience in cooking and entertaining. Hood entertains large groups of people and especially enjoys designing creative menus with holiday, international, ethnic, and regional themes.
Hood is publishing a cookbook series entitled the Cookbook Delights Series, in which each cookbook emphasizes a different food ingredient or theme. The first cookbook in the series is Apple Delights Cookbook. Hood is working to complete another series of cookbooks titled Hood and Matsko Family Cookbooks, which includes many recipes handed down from her family heritage and others that have emerged from more current family traditions. She has been invited to speak on talk radio shows on various topics, and favorite recipes from her cookbooks have been prepared on local television programs.
Hood was born and raised in Great Falls, Montana. As an undergraduate, she attended the College of St. Benedict in St. Joseph, Minnesota, and St. John s University in Collegeville, Minnesota. She attended the University of Great Falls in Great Falls, Montana. Hood received a B.S. Degree in Natural Science from the College of St. Benedict and minored in both Psychology and Secondary Education. Upon her graduation, Hood and her husband taught science and math on the island of St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands. Hood has completed postgraduate classes at the University of Iowa in Iowa City, Iowa. In May 2001, she completed her Master s Degree in Pastoral Ministry at Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington. She has taken postgraduate classes at Lewis and Clark College on the North Idaho college campus in Coeur d Alene, Idaho, and Taylor University in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Hood is working on research projects to complete her Ph.D. in Leadership Studies at Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington.
She demonstrates a passionate appreciation of the environment and a respect for all life. Karen welcomes you to blog with her at karensblog.net. She also invites you to visit her websites at karenjeanmatskohood.com and karensbookstore.com.
Product Details
Plastic Comb: 320 pages
Publisher: Whispering Pine Press International, Inc.; First edition (October 15, 2010)
Karen Jean Matsko Hood was born in Great Falls, Montana, where she attended St. Gerard's Elementary School and graduated from Great Falls Central Catholic High School. Hood received scholarships from the College of St. Benedict, St. Joseph, Minnesota, and also attended St. John's University in Collegeville, Minnesota.
After student teaching high school biology in Minneapolis, Minnesota, for four years, she married James G. Hood, her college sweetheart, in her home state of Montana. From there, Hood and her husband moved to St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands, where they both taught junior high and high school math and sciences. They then moved to Iowa City, Iowa, where she worked as a research assistant and a part-time teacher for four years.
In 1980, Hood and her husband moved to Spokane, Washington. She currently lives in Greenacres, Washington with her husband, sixteen children, and foster children. Her many experiences have inspired her to continue to conduct research and write amidst her busy family and professional schedule.
Ms. Hood has continued her education by taking a variety of postgraduate classes at Eastern Washington University, Cheney, Washington; University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; Spokane Community College, Spokane Washington; Spokane Falls Community College, Spokane, Washington; Taylor University, Fort Wayne, Indiana; Lewis-Clark State College, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho; North Idaho College, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho; and University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. She is currently working to complete her Ph.D. in Leadership Studies through Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington.
Ms. Hood is an active child advocate and has worked as a Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) in the Spokane Juvenile Court System. She and her husband have also provided a home for many foster children. Along with their five biological children, they have adopted eleven children into their family from the United States, Korea, India, and Ethiopia.
About the Author:
Karen Jean Matsko Hood began her professional writing career later in life than she expected. She is now a prolific writer of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry for adults and children. Hood's first books of poetry present a distinctive combination of themes and poetic formats. Both her fiction and nonfiction exhibit a unique voice of compassion and purpose. The recurring theme in Hood's nonfiction is providing a voice for those whose struggles are otherwise ignored. Hood's writing is strong-minded yet lyrical. She is a meticulous wordsmith and writes with passion. She is versatile in her writing style and deals with a wide range of themes and topics. Her writing has been published in a myriad of magazines and publications and on an international level.
About the Poet:
Hood's writing reminds us of the importance of our link with nature and the environment in our daily lives. Her blend of traditionalism and modernism brings a current freshness and uniqueness to her poetic voice. Demonstrating common crises essential to our core, her poetry also voices outrage at social injustices, and inequalities. Karen Jean Matsko Hood's poetry brings poignancy to the most hopeless of situations. She is optimistic in her quest for dignity and pragmatic social justice. Hood also writes about personal and spiritual themes, is a passionate feminist and an ardently active child's rights advocate. She writes with a proud regionalism, yet expands her writing to international concerns. Hood reveals her twin hearts in her writing: One is in awe of the beauty of life and nature, while the other struggles with social injustice and inequity in our flourishing meritocracy.
About the Researcher:
As a researcher Karen Jean Matsko Hood places her focus on child abuse and neglect and domestic violence. She also researches to find possible solutions to these growing social problems. Hood has incorporated the studies and findings of research and drug abuse with families in her writings. Hood's research topics include such diverse topics as education, attachment disorder, attachment disorder therapy and treatment, the foster care system, human development, parenting, adoption, health, and historical topics. She is also interested in food and nutrition research, which she uses for her epicurean writing. Hood uses her B.S. Degree in Natural Science along with her research training in her Ph.D. program to conduct research on various plants and animal topics including equine, canine, and botanical research.
About the Cook:
Karen Jean Matsko Hood has always enjoyed cooking, baking, and experimenting with recipes. Hood entertains large groups of people and especially enjoys designing creative menus with holiday, international, ethnic, and regional themes. At this time Hood is working to complete a series of cookbooks that blends her skills and experience in cooking and entertaining. In the Cookbook Delights Series, each cookbook emphasizes a different food ingredient or theme. The first cookbook in the series is Apple Delights Cookbook. Hood is also working to complete another series of cookbooks titled Hood and Matsko Family Cookbooks, which includes many recipes handed down from her family heritage and others that have emerged from more current family traditions. She has appeared on television giving cooking demonstrations. To view some of these, visit www.cookingwithkaren.com.
About the Teacher:
Karen Hood is a certified teacher in Washington and Idaho. In the State of Washington, Hood is currently certified to teach grades 6-12 in the areas of anthropology, psychology, sociology, biology, and comparative religions. In the State of Idaho, she is certified to teach grades 6-12 in the areas of anthropology, sociology, psychology, and biology science. She is especially interested in combining the principles of leadership and finding improved methods in education. She is also passionate about finding ways to improve the current educational system. Hood is also a member for the Center for Organizational Reform (COR), which advocates using leadership skills to bring about positive changes in organizations, companies, and schools.
About the Speaker:
As a speaker Ms. Hood appears on many talk show radio interviews throughout the nation. She has been invited to speak on talk radio shows on various topics, and favorite recipes from her cookbooks have been prepared on local television programs. If you would like to invite Karen Jean Matsko Hood to speak to your group or organization, we invite you to contact Ms. Hood. She would be happy to get in touch with you to set up arrangements for speaking to your group.
About the Child Advocate:
Karen Hood is an avid child advocate. She works with children as a foster parent in the State of Washington as well as a Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) volunteer in the juvenile court system in Spokane County. Hood and her husband have a strong passion to fight for the plight of abused and neglected children and the rights of all children on a local, national, and international level. Hood is also Guardian Ad Litem (GAL) and a CASA volunteer for abused and neglected children in the juvenile court system. Hood is an advocate of literacy for children and has written many articles and books on this subject. She also has written many articles on the rights of children and is currently working on books about the plight of children.
Hobbies:
Karen Jean Matsko Hood resides in Greenacres, Washington, along with her husband, seventeen children, and foster children. Her hobbies include cooking, baking, collecting various collectibles and antiques, photography, indoor and outdoor gardening, and the cultivation of unusual flowering plants and orchids. She enjoys raising several specialty breeds of animals including Icelandic horses, bichons frisés, cockapoos, Icelandic sheepdogs, Newfoundlands, Rottweilers, and a few rescue cats. Hood also enjoys bird-watching and finds all aspects of nature precious. She demonstrates a passionate appreciation of the environment and a respect for all life.