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Quick-Fix Southern: Homemade Hospitality in 30 Minutes or Less [Bargain Price] [Paperback]

Rebecca Lang
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (29 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 8, 2011
In Quick-Fix Southern, Rebecca Lang, cookbook author and contributing editor for Southern Living magazine, promises homemade hospitality--Southern style--in 30 minutes or less. Lang dishes up 115 recipes grouped in 10 themes ranging from Rise and Shine breakfasts to Sipping on the Screened Porch beverages, Girls' Night In party pleasers, and Southern Sweets desserts. In addition to photography, the book features cooking and preparation time for the effortless recipes.

The ultimate goal of Quick-Fix Southern is to present novice and experienced cooks with authentic homemade dishes reflective of New South cuisine that are delicious, fast, and easy to prepare. From Three Cheese Grits, Peach Yogurt Parfait, and Spiked Lemonade and Lime Mint Juleps to Fried Green Tomatoes and Roasted Tomatoes and Parmesan Grits, Benne Seed Sugar Cookies, and Lazy Girl Berry Cobbler, the delectable flavor combinations offered up inside Quick-Fix Southern transition to any setting. So, whether you're cooking up a side for a church potluck or preparing a main course for Sunday dinner or a Sunday spent at a sporting tailgate, Quick-Fix Southern promises to be your go-to guide for every occasion.


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Quick-Fix Southern: Homemade Hospitality in 30 Minutes or Less + Southern Plate: Classic Comfort Food That Makes Everyone Feel Like Family + At My Grandmother's Knee: Recipes & Memories Handed Down By Women of the South
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Editorial Reviews

Review

Rebecca Lang shows how easily--and deliciously--we can turn many of the South's long-winded recipes into a breeze without sacrificing flavor. But that's not all. Lang, who on top of everything else, is a Contributing Editor at Southern Living, also dishes up some clever fast-forward recipes of her own along with plenty of insider short-cuts. --cookbook author Jean Anderson on jeanandersoncooks.com

About the Author

As a contributing editor for Southern Living, Rebecca Lang is featured in weekly cooking segments on the nationally syndicated show Daytime, which reaches 85 million households. She is a contributing editor for myrecipes.com and writes a monthly column, "Girls' Night In," for the site. Her food writing has appeared in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution Flavors Magazine, Edible Atlanta, and Legacy Magazine. Having taught hundreds of classes, Lang is an accomplished cooking instructor and travels the country teaching classes in cooking schools and to groups as large as 1,200 students.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Andrews McMeel Publishing; Original edition (March 8, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1449401104
  • ASIN: B0055X4CRO
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 7.4 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (29 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #218,910 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Rebecca Lang is the author of Around the Southern Table (Oxmoor House, 2012), Quick-Fix Southern (Andrews McMeel, March 2011), Southern Entertaining for a New Generation (Cumberland House 2004) and Mary Mac's Tea Room (Looking Glass Books 2005). She is a Contributing Editor for Southern Living and has been featured in over 50 cooking segments on the nationally syndicated show Daytime. She is a Contributing Editor for myrecipes.com and is the author of the popular column, "Girls' Night In," on the site.
Her food writing has appeared in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Disney's Family Fun magazine, Flavors Magazine, Edible Atlanta, Legacy Magazine, and Athens Magazine. She has also written for several other newspapers throughout the South, including the Fernandina Beach News Leader and the Athens Banner-Herald. Her blog has been featured on the James Beard Foundation's blog as well as the Food News Journal.
Rebecca has worked on the editorial aspect of over 30 books. She began her editorial career as an assistant food editor for Oxmoor House. She also worked as a freelance project manager and text designer for Looking Glass Books.
Having taught hundreds of classes, Rebecca is an accomplished cooking instructor. She teaches at various locations in Atlanta and also travels the country teaching classes to groups as large as 1,200 students.
In addition to her work with Southern Living, Rebecca's television appearances include Home Plate and many local and regional appearances including Good Day Atlanta, Better Mornings Atlanta and Fox 42 in Omaha, Nebraska. She also appeared numerous times on the nationally televised show Every Day with Marcus and Lisa. Rebecca has been a guest on Martha Stewart's Everyday Food on Sirius and XM Radio. She has been quoted in Glamour magazine and the London Evening Standard.
Rebecca has been a food stylist and hand model for various print and television commercials. She has worked with Black & Decker, Krystal, LongHorn Steakhouse, Mrs. Smith's, Shoney's, and Good Eats.
Rebecca was an assistant food stylist for Home Plate Cooking and was the editor and indexer for Atlanta Cooks at Home. She has also developed recipes for Weight Watchers Annual Recipes for Success 2004 and the next book in the series in 2005. Her recipes are included in Christmas with Southern Living 2004 and 2009.
Rebecca is a former apprentice of Nathalie Dupree and a graduate of The University of Georgia. She earned a culinary arts degree from Johnson and Wales University. She has served on the board for the Atlanta Chapter of Les Dames d'Escoffier, and is a member of The International Association of Culinary Professionals, The Southern Foodways Alliance, the James Beard Foundation, and Georgia Organics.



Customer Reviews

Everything is so well written and very easy to follow. jared williams  |  7 reviewers made a similar statement
My husband thanks you Rebecca Lang! N. Keck  |  5 reviewers made a similar statement
You will not regret purchasing this book!! Jeffrey Stortz  |  5 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
23 of 24 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Must Have Southern Cookbook February 28, 2011
Format:Paperback
This review comes with instructions: #1. Buy the book. #2. Turn to page 112. #3. Make the recipe "Slow Cooker Pot Roast." Now, to be as un-journalistic as I can be: OMG! If you like pot roast you'll love this recipe. It is so easy to make (as long as you own a slow cooker), and the end result is a truly magnificent braised meal. Perfect for the winter months. The recipe worked to a 'T.' The beauty of this dish for me? All I had to to do was buy the boneless chuck roast ($13.47 at Whole Foods). Happily, I already had the onions, carrots and potatoes from my C.S.A. More beauty? I managed to get three meals from one roast. All the recipes I tried from Quick-Fix Southern worked very well. Author Rebecca Lang knows how to cook and this book reflects her talents.

Lang groups the book's 115 recipes into ten themes including Tailgates and Gatherings, Busy Weeknight Suppers, and Girls' Night In making it easy to locate a recipe that fits the mood. As the title implies the recipes are geared toward meals that take thirty minutes or less to prepare (cooking times may be longer). "Quick-Fix Southern" is fun, light and breezy, and full of food that one wants to eat. Chapter three, Sipping on the Screened Porch is all about drinks to be made for imbibing on hot summer nights on the screened porch, or off. Lang, being a Southerner by birth, throws in stories of her family, and food traditions as well as the history and lore of the South.

To make her format of 30 minutes or less work Lang adds in quick cooking tips, and shortens cooking times and techniques where possible. On page four of the book there's a heading Keys to Quick Cooking. Below it are subheadings, Keep a Running Grocery List, Grocery Shop Once, A Well-Stocked Pantry, Fridge and Freezer with further subheadings all to help you quick-fix the meals in the book. I particularly appreciate the number of slow cooker recipes as I am a recent owner of one. In a busy, busy life the slow cooker has become indispensable to cooking at home (and not going out to restaurants). I'm always looking for more slow cooker recipes. Recipes I'd like to try: Slow-Cooking Stone-Ground Grits, and Slow Cooker Boiled Peanuts (a Southern delicacy). A southern cookbook would not be a southern cookbook without a few classics like Fried Green Tomatoes, Classic Sweet Tea, Lime Mint Julep, biscuits, Quick Icebox Pickles, Blackened Catfish, barbecue, Mama's Baked Beans, and cobblers; all are included in "Quick-Fix Southern."

I've been using this book often since receiving it. It's winter so my C.S.A. deliveries have included many winter vegetables like kale, collard greens, carrots, potatoes, beets, and squash. This book is full of recipes using these ingredients, and I've happily been making them. Two favorites have been the Spicy Mustard Greens and the Little Beet Salad. There are many more recipes to try, and try them I will. Don't forget! Page 112, "Slow Cooker Pot Roast." You won't be sorry!
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72 of 87 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Seems Unfinished July 28, 2011
Format:Paperback
Quick Fix Southern / 9781449401108

At time of writing this review, I'm the only negative voice in a sea of 5-star reviews -- maybe I didn't receive the same book as the other reviewers, but this cookbook was something of a disappointment for me.

First of all, I have something of a rating rule for cookbooks: there has to be a picture for almost every recipe or it can't be a 5-star book for me. If there are no pictures for any of the final products, then the book is 3-star or lower, right off the bat. Is this a fair rule? It essentially means that if Jesus and Gandhi collaborate on a cookbook entitled "World Peace Through Heavenly Cuisine" or something, but they don't include pictures, it won't be getting more than a 3-star rating from me. But I'm okay with that, because for me personally, I need pictures in order to understand (a) whether or not I want to make the dish in the first place and (b) how I can tell when my finished dish is correct. That's just how I roll.

So right off the bat, I have a concern with this cookbook that some readers won't share: there are no pictures in here of any finished recipes. Oh, there are pictures in the book -- monochrome snapshots of the ingredients -- but none of the recipes. For instance, the "Eggs In A Basket" recipe which is eggs and toast has a picture of...eggs. In a basket. The BLTVA Sandwiches recipe has a picture of a single piece of bacon. And so on. If you're the sort of cook who eats with their eyes -- for instance, if you're looking at this book because of the luscious biscuits on the cover -- then this will bother you; if you're not, then that's fine, too. (Maybe the lack of pictures in my version stems from the fact that I was reviewing an ARC... but then the Amazon "Look Inside This Book" feature doesn't show any pictures either.)

The biggest problem with putting out a cookbook these days is trying to distinguish your book from everyone else's -- or, worse, from the plethora of free online recipes. A lot of cooks try to justify the price of the cookbook by including either gorgeous photography (to shine in contrast to the home-photography of most online recipe sites), a personal touch (little stories and vignettes to humanize the recipes), or scientific discussions to help the reader understand the cooking process more thoroughly. "Quick-Fix Southern" takes the second route of little stories and vignettes, but I wish it had taken the first and third options instead. There's not a lot of material here to help understand WHY the recipes work and how to modify them to suit your tastes.

For instance, the pot roast recipe on page 112 is fairly straightforward: brown the meat on both sides and throw it in a crock pot with wine and onions. However, there's no science here, only a recipe to follow from heart, and I find that disappointing. What if you don't want to use the wine or the onions? What will you lose besides those tastes -- will the removal of those elements affect the texture of the meat? If so, how will the meat be affected, and what can the cook substitute in order to retain the texture of the meal while still keeping flexibility on the table? In a day and age where everyone and their dog has food allergies, it's frustrating for me to read recipes that give no explanation, no alterations, and no real understanding of the science involved -- if you don't know what each element is doing, you can't intelligently experiment. Not that every cookbook has to be a science tome, but if all you're giving is a rote recipe, how are you going to distinguish yourself from every other cookbook out there?

The tagline of this book is "homemade hospitality in 30 minutes or less", but I do not really understand why that was slapped on the book because it isn't true. Most of the entree recipes take hours to cook and marinate -- very few of them seem to clock in at under the 30 minute mark for the entire prep from beginning to end. The multi-hour cooking time recipes are at least contained in crock pots, but even these require a couple of factors that someone looking for "30 minute meals" may not have to offer: (1) the slow cooked recipes often require ingredients to be added along the way at certain intervals, so you'd better be working from home on these days, and (2) the slow cooked recipes usually require extensive planning ahead (brown the meat, cut the onions, throw it all in the pot, etc.), so these aren't precisely "get home, get a meal put together" recipes.

A final word about the organization of this book: it seems unfinished. Some of the recipes have little headers like "Serves 8" or "Makes 6" or "Marinating Time: 4 Hours" or "Baking Time: 45 Minutes" or "Chilling Time: 1 Hour", but these headers aren't used on every recipe and there's never really an indication of "from start to finish, about how long can this reasonably be expect to take?" (There's also not any of the fancy "nutritional information" boxes that I'm coming to like in a lot of the newer books on the market.) I'm also rather astonished to realize -- looking back over my notes -- that this book doesn't seem to have a dedicated bread section. I'm puzzled as to which recipe corresponds to those gorgeous biscuits on the cover -- they don't seem to be Sweet Potato Biscuits on page 20 (sweet potato biscuits would have darker color than those, right?) but they're too well rounded and cut to be the Drop Biscuits on page 23. For these to be apparently the only biscuit recipes in a dedicated southern cookbook makes me a little sad somehow.

I like to provide recipe lists with my cookbook reviews since people usually ask in the comments, so here's what this book includes:

RISE AND SHINE
Three-Cheese Grits 13
Peach Yogurt Parfait 14
Soft Buttermilk Waffles 15
Baby Vidalia Frittata 16
Plantation Scrambled Eggs 17
Slow-Cooking Stone-Ground Grits 18
Eggs in a Basket 19
Sweet Potato Biscuits 20
Wild Mushroom Quiche 22
Drop Biscuits 23
Tupelo Orange Smoothie 24
Lemony Figs with Lavender 25

SIPPING ON THE SCREENED PORCH
Spiked Lemonade 29
Lime Mint Julep 30
Magnolia Mimosas 31
Classic Sweet Tea 33 (with Mint Variation)
Peach Daiquiris 34
Key Lime Martini 34
Watermelon Margaritas 35
Blackberry Bubbly 36
Strawberry Kiss 36
Herbed Bloody Mary 37

APPETIZERS AND SNACKS
Slow Cooker Boiled Peanuts 41
Jalapeno Deviled Eggs 42
Spring Vegetables with Lemon Herb Dip 43
Watermelon and Feta on a Stick 44
Benne Seed Shrimp 46
Pepper Jelly Tarts 47
Spiced Pecans 48
Baked Brie with Fig Preserves and Pecans 49
Blue Cheese and Bacon Popcorn 50
Smoked Trout Spread 51

PICNICS AND PACKABLES
Classic Pimento Cheese 55
White Pimento Cheese 56
Chipotle Pimento Cheese 57
Tomato and Black Bean Salsa 58
Quick Icebox Pickles 60
Peach Salsa 61
Marinated Roasted Peppers 62
Texas Caviar 63
Honeyed Tomatoes and Ricotta 64
Pickled Wild Shrimp 66
Pickled Okra and Ham Wheels 67
Appalachian Trail Mix 68
Chewy Granola Bars 69

SALADS, SOUPS, AND SANDWICHES
Sweet Onion Slaw 73
Bacon Vinaigrette with Salad Greens 74
Red Potato Salad 75
Baby Spinach Salad with Blueberry and Lime Vinaigrette 76
Dilled Cucumber Soup 78
Real Tomato Soup 79
Fast Brunswick Stew 80
Chilled Strawberry Peach Soup 81
Little Beet Salad 83
Herbed Tomato Sandwiches 84
Tarragon Chicken Tea Sandwiches 85
Egg Salad 86
BLTVA Sandwiches 87

TAILGATES AND GATHERINGS
Short-Cut Barbecue 91
Ribeyes with Bourbon Pecan Butter 92
Dressed-Up Oysters 93
Skirt Steak with Vidalia Onion Chimichurri 94
Mustard and Sage Pork Tenderloin 96
Stuffed and Baked Chicken 97
Blackened Catfish 98
Pecan-Crusted Racks of Lamb 99
Brown Butter and Pecan Trout 100
Oyster Dressing 101
Mama's Baked Beans 102
Grilled Vidalias 103

BUSY WEEKNIGHT SUPPERS
Soft Catfish Tacos 107
Green Beans and Red Potatoes 108
Oats and Bacon Meat Loaf 109
Spicy Mustard Greens 110
Slow Cooker Pot Roast 112
Quail Skillet 113
Southern Pesto with Pasta 114
Divine Chicken and Dumplings 115
Roasted Acorn Squash 116
Sausage, Vidalias, and Tomatoes 118
Fresh Corn and Tomatoes 119

COMFORTING CASSEROLES
Petite Chicken and Wild Rice Casseroles 123
Double Cheese Macaroni and Cheese 124
Chicken Spinach Burritos 125
Herbed Squash Casserole 126
Christmas Morning Souffle 128
Chicken Boudine 129
Mozzarella Corn Spoon Bread 130
Spinach and Vidalia Souffle 131
Country Ham and Swiss Casserole 132
Warm Curried Fruit 134
Shrimp and Grits Bake 135

GIRLS' NIGHT IN
Boiled Shrimp with Old Bay Sauce 139
Roasted Tomatoes and Parmesan Grits 140
Shrimp and Roasted Red Pepper Quesadillas 141
Fried Green Tomatoes 142
Mini Buffalo Burgers 144
Butter Bean and Bacon Hummus 145
Tomato Panzanella 146
Okra Fritters 147
Stuffed Corn Bread 148
Little Crab Cakes 149
Asparagus Bundles with Bacon 150
Tomato Biscuit Pie 151

SOUTHERN SWEETS
Benne Seed Sugar Cookies 155
Lazy Girl Berry Cobbler 156
Grilled Brown Sugar Peaches 158
Ambrosia and White Chocolate Trifle 159
Blueberry Peach Float 160
Easy Ice Cream 161 (with 3 Variations--Blueberry, Peach, Strawberry)
Double Chocolate Scoop Pie 162
Real Fast Pralines 163
Upside-Down Chess Pies 164
Mini Key Lime Tarts 165

NOTE: This review is based on a free Advance Review Copy of this book provided through NetGalley.

~ Ana Mardoll
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars My new "go to" cookbook April 6, 2011
Format:Paperback
Both of my grandmothers were wonderful southern cooks who started making Sunday dinners on Saturday nights. So even though I have always loved southern food, I thought you had to put in a lot of time and effort for it to be good. Not true! This book completely puts that thought to rest.

The Chicken Boudine is as yummy as it is easy and I can't wait to try the Lazy Girl Berry Cobbler. I keep this book in my car for dinner decisions on the fly. This is my new "go to" cookbook!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars Quick Fix for Novice Chefs
This book is okay thought it was representative of southern foods but didn't stretch the imagintion of my cooking club members. Quick fix was represented accurately. Read more
Published 23 days ago by Rita
4.0 out of 5 stars Great recipes and Interesting read
Great takes on traditional southern foods and recipes easy to follow. Pictures are mouith watering. Highly recommend all recipes for fun and taste.
Published 1 month ago by V. Gunn
4.0 out of 5 stars I'm Loving This Cookbook
I've had this book sitting on the coffee table for a couple of weeks and I still get excited everytime I flip through it! Read more
Published 2 months ago by Miss C
4.0 out of 5 stars Cook Book
I like this cook book. I am trying to be better at cooking and this book appears to be a good one to use.
Published 3 months ago by Joseph W
1.0 out of 5 stars Recipes and types of food was very disappointing.
I guess I was expecting more popular southern style comfort food receipes. The cover of the recipe book was great, but found the selections very disappointing.
Published 3 months ago by Robert Warren Grigg
4.0 out of 5 stars Quick Fix Southern- A must try!
Nothing is as good as Southern Cooking and in Quick Fix, Rebecca Land delivers on some favorites even those from the north could like. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Mystccwby
5.0 out of 5 stars Yummy food and great pictures!
Great recipe book - The recipes were easy to follow and the images of the food contributed to understanding the end result
Published 4 months ago by Virginia D'Aquila
5.0 out of 5 stars Southern Help
This cookbook has some real southern recipes that are very easy to make. It also has great tips to help out for those who may be new to cooking scene.
Published 4 months ago by Katherine Battles
5.0 out of 5 stars Quick-Fix Southern Homemade Hospitality
Great cook book! My husband uses it all the time! He really enjoys the recipes ! the fact that they take less then 30 minutes is great!
T
Published 4 months ago by Nancy J. Hosford
5.0 out of 5 stars Quick-Fix Southern: Homemade Hospitality in 30 Minutes or Less
Nicely done recipe collection, good presentation. Looking forward to trying some of these 30 minute or less recipes. Love those southern recipes.
Published 6 months ago by B. Duffy
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