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Made from Scratch: A Memoir by Sandra Lee Msc

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The true story of how celebrity chef Sandra Lee went from being raised on food stamps to starring in her own TV show, Semi-Homemade Cooking, on the Food Network. This powerful, emotional, and astonishing story will inspire anyone who has faced adversity to overcome challenges and persevere. Sandras candid account of her personal journey offers a rare glimpse into the life of the woman behind the phenomenal success of Semi-Homemade. Smart, witty, and moving, Made From Scratch is an uplifting tale of determination and survival. Sandra is stunningly open about her abusive childhood and the responsibility thrust upon her at an early age to be the caretaker of her family.

Audio CD

First published November 6, 2007

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About the author

Sandra Lee

139 books32 followers
Sandra Lee Christiansen, known professionally as Sandra Lee, is an American television chef and author. She is known for her "Semi-Homemade" cooking concept, which Lee describes as using 70 percent packaged and 30 percent fresh products. She received the Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lifestyle/Culinary Show Host in 2012 for her work and her show. As the partner of former New York Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, she served as the de facto First Lady Of New York from 2011 to 2019, when the couple ended their relationship.

Librarian's note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.

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5 stars
149 (19%)
4 stars
246 (31%)
3 stars
249 (32%)
2 stars
95 (12%)
1 star
38 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 128 reviews
Profile Image for Cindy.
54 reviews1 follower
July 25, 2008
Here I thought Sandra Lee was just another privileged blond bimbo who made it rich because of people she knew and her looks. Little did I know about Sandra Lee. She had a difficult childhood and is truely a survivor. Quite an inspirational success story.
Profile Image for Margaret.
1,173 reviews6 followers
July 12, 2022
A fast read. I actually didn't realize that I borrowed this book having no idea who Sandra Lee was. I think that I was confusing her with Sandra Dee, the actress. I know, silly to make such a mistake. Most of her book was interesting especially the beginning relating her childhood. Her business ventures were boring and thank goodness she didn't go into lengthy detail. As much as I usually enjoy the author reading her own book, in this case I would have enjoyed it better if a different narrator was enlisted. Lastly, I appreciate her faith being threaded throughout this memoir.
Profile Image for Antoinette.
222 reviews17 followers
October 7, 2008
In my years of culture snobbery I have learned a great many things. I have been shown time and time again that even though a title is on a best seller list it can still be a good read. I have discovered the joys of paperback fiction, and the thrills of celebrity memoirs. I have learned to appreciate pop music, country music, world music, and a variety of other musics I once found untouchable. I enjoy big dogs and little dogs equally, and I some of the finest people I have met have less than a high school education. However, Sandra Lee's memoir Made From Scratch is a gigantic piece of ass crap.

It is amazing to me that she not only managed to get this published and make best seller lists, someone requested that she write it in the first place. Though her childhood was not exactly pleasant, I didn't exactly find it unpleasant. Her worst claim of abuse was a sexual assault that almost happened. Her mother was barely in her life, but she did have several devoted relatives that helped raise her. She jumps back and fourth from different time periods several times per page, her emotions (no matter what they are) leave her with tears streaming down her face. There are several grammatical errors, and sometimes entire words are left out. The ghost writer must have been enjoying one too many of Sandra's famous cocktails.

Just in case you are still thinking about reading this book, here are some quotes of sections I feel represent her merit as storyteller...

I explained to Harvey that my demographic was made up of women I call semi-homemakers who are between the ages of 35 and 54 and are generally running their households. A semi-homemaker probably has kids and goes to church. She plays host at the holidays and is the center for family and friends. She is a stay-at-home mom or a working woman. Of course, most of us know that all moms are working women. She's the one in charge, although she makes her husband believe that he is.

It seems as though Sandra is encouraging some sort of repressed, '50's housewife mentality. She imagines her readers playing up the importance of their husbands? Why are they all married? As a lesbian college student (and fan of Lee's) I found that whole section terribly offensive.

(her future husband has request she sign a prenup) As I read through the document, my fairy tale quickly became crushed by the act of one attorney, I was shocked that my future husband made such a request and stunned by the aggressiveness of his attorney. I put up a fight for a while, but then I decided to give in and sign the agreement. I was secure in the relationship...

She later refers to the prenup as a document that ended their marriage before it began. It was...awful to read that she had abandoned her beliefs and signed something she didn't believe in. It was handled with such nonchalance. In fact, her entire marriage seemed suspiciously unimportant.

What is the point of this book? If it was not about baking and designing, then it was supposed to be about her life. I guess we should assume that Sandra Lee is an emotionally unavailable twit. I cannot BELIEVE I read this entire thing, and I despise the fact that it has made so much money. She had better make some damn good casseroles next season!

*I just remember something else awful about this monstrosity! There are quotes from Kafka, THE BIBLE, and Nietzsche thrown about randomly in every chapter. Somebody is trying hard to be an intellectual, aren't they?
Profile Image for Paula.
329 reviews
May 21, 2008
I read this book in one afternoon/evening. I have never done that before. I just felt like I wanted to know how it turned out, even though I pretty much already did. I had always thought she was a Dr.'s wife or something that just had to entertain and have parties. After seeing part of her chefography show on Food Network, I learned otherwise. My mom happened to have this book so I was excited to read it when she was finished. What a life Sandra had and what an inspiration she is/could be to girls who think they have no one to help them.
Profile Image for Lorie.
43 reviews6 followers
January 19, 2014
Embarrassingly I thought I was reading about Sara Lee for the first hour or more - not that I knew anything about either of them, I just like to discover people by reading their books so I try not to read the description too thoroughly so as not to spoil the fun. Nice outcome this time!

Sandra Lee's story proves that your destiny is earned. She has a remarkable story that is inspiring and uplifting in a way I had not expected. I love stories of people who make something with nothing but stay true to themselves.

She reads the audio version herself which I especially like.
Profile Image for Jody.
24 reviews
February 8, 2020
Always thought she was amazing. After reading this memoir, my opinion hasn't changed however the book covers areas of her life that just enhanced my admiration for her and all that she accomplished in her life regardless of what life threw her way. I love bios regardless. She remains one of my favorite people. A beautiful person inside and out.
Profile Image for Victoria.
231 reviews13 followers
February 26, 2008
A fast read. Not particularly well-written, but a decent rags-to-riches story. I have not been a fan of her TV show, but now that I know how hard she worked to get where she is I think I'll give it a second chance.
Profile Image for Angelar.
46 reviews
April 16, 2008
Apparently "overcoming adversity" means the following: growing up with your Laurence Welk fan of a grandmother who thinks the angels save people parking spots at the grocery store, enduring some abuse at the hands of your parents and having to take more responsibility around the house, and then becoming insanely rich making as-seen-on-TV gadgets for hanging revolting curtains and writing books about how you can substitute Cool Whip mixed with vanilla extract for actual whipped cream because the real thing is "too much work."*

I read this for my own amusement because, to me, Sandra Lee is the face of food horror. There are some entertaining "food" anecdotes and blatant misinformation within -- describing Costa Rica as "South America," &c. -- but this would be a far more satisfying memoir if it were less emotionally detached, if it weren't so goddamn money-worshipping, and if it didn't feel like it was written for a 6-year-old. Self-awareness be damned! I suppose that's what you get when the author dropped out of college after a few years of living next to a sorority house. Sorry about your abusive family, Sandy, but maybe you should have spent more than 6 weeks writing this piece of garbage -- or just bought a pre-made memoir at the grocery store and dumped a can of apple pie filling into it. Once you come to terms with your own lesbianism and alcoholism and write a scandalous new memoir, we'll talk.

*This is why grocery stores carry whipped cream in a can. Just sayin'.
Profile Image for Meg Powers.
157 reviews61 followers
October 5, 2009
Ugh. I wish I could give this a half star. Her autobiography was co-written. This probably has to do with a lack of any real personal voice. Reading the dust jacket, I'm going to assume that this is a pretty common thing for vapid sort-of celebrities who can't write for shit.

I suppose I have to clarify I knew this would be awful, but I just LOVE the train wreck that is Sandra Lee,and I thought it would be a good goof. I did consider that MAAAYBE reading her autobiography would humanize her to a point where I could no longer yell at the screen as she churns out another 1940s Disney idea of Chinese culture themed "tablescape", and as her pendulous boobs dip into her latest taco seasoning/soup mix casserole slop without feeling a little guilty. She's had a hard life of hunger and troubled household-hopping. HOWEVER, her narration is self-absorbed, self-congratulating dreck, and when she does talk about how difficult her life has been, it's in the vaguest and inhuman way, leaving me completely cold.

No, this was not a good goof. The only funny bits in this book are the constant cheesy quotes, which are obviously taken from a book with "inspirational" written all over it, and the climax where she talks about the incredible and, once again, INSPIRING, poem "Footprints in the Sand." Sandra Lee's autobiography was uncomfortable and downright boring. For good wince-inducing Sandra Lee, stick with the t.v show.
Profile Image for Yvonne O'Connor.
1,075 reviews8 followers
June 2, 2021
Sandra Lee is best known for her Food Network show "Semi-Homemade" where she cranks-out themed parties/dinners out of 70% pre-made items. Who would have guessed that she had a ridiculously difficult childhood and wasn't this "perfect" homemaker from television? The book tells of how Sandra's teenage mom left her and sister Cindy for 5 years, then uprooted them, forced her to raise her 4 other siblings and physically abused her all along the way. Then Sandra went to WI with her father, but that was only for 3 years and she was then on her own. She created Kurtain Kraft and made a fortune, lost it all an then began Semi-Homemade and is richer than ever!

Although this autobiography suffered from lack of a good style editor (every sentence began with "I"), the story is compelling. I can't imagine being on your own as a teenager and having so much responsibility for children when you are only 10 years old! some issues were glossed-over in the book (like her relationship with her stepmother, why she and her (ex) husband never had children and many gaps in the life/work timeline). I appreciate what she went through, but wonder if portions are downplayed due to her own unwillingness to confront those demons?
242 reviews1 follower
June 15, 2017
I wanted to read this book because I had heard there was a lot more to Ms Lee's background than one would think. She's beautiful, famous and successful, so I didn't know what to expect. I was surprised to learn that she was the product of a neglectful home, and her mother dropped her and her sister off at her grandmother's and didn't come back for years. That was actually the bright spot of Ms Lee's childhood, because living with her grandmother she had structure, affection, guidance and love. Unfortunately, after her mother remarried she wanted her daughters back, and started adding more children to the mix. By the time Ms Lee was 12, her mother was having depressions and becoming abusive. Even at that young age, she was responsible for cleaning, cooking, grocery shopping and watching the younger children.

There's a lot more to the story, and it's an interesting one. It also shows what you can overcome by working hard and believing in yourself.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
1,146 reviews10 followers
February 28, 2008
I read this book purely for the snark value, and it did not disappoint! :P The writing- even with the assitance of a ghost writer- is horrendous. There's no real timeline, as Lee jumps from one event to another with really no way of knowing when or where it's taken place. The details of her businesses are skimpy at best, and it's hard to know where exactly she made and lost and made her fortune again. (For instance, she says she was able to pay off enormous student loan debt by selling her crafts for three weeks at a fair, but yet she had to sell her car for less than $4000 just a few months later to finance her next enterprise? And I'm still confused about how she ended up almost being kicked out of a fair for selling stun guns! I thought she was there selling "krafts"??!!??)

At any rate, this book is a lot like her show on TV- disjointed, confusing and filled with booze.
Profile Image for Sherri.
1,571 reviews
September 6, 2018
I watched numerous TV network shows of Semi-Homemade. This gave me an insight into her upbringing and her career before the show stardom. Harsh days. It's a rags to riches story that is probably not far off from so many others who make it successful in their chosen career. It is unbelievable how she was all of a sudden in the right place at the right time and wasn't afraid to speak to people as she started her home business and trade show circuits.

I think there were too many details that didn't need to be there; more of just filling time. It was unbelievable how she could be this "Suzy homemaker" while jet-setting to Paris, St. Tropez, L.A. and New York all the time. It didn't seem believable that she could relate to the stay-at-home or working woman; only remembering her childhood with her grandma's recipes and decorating.

I did the audio version and Lee was the narrator.
1,203 reviews
March 20, 2023
I never saw her shows and did not know much about her. I had to read a book about someone who works in the food industry. This was one of the recommended books. It was so well done and real. She portrays to me a women who has it all. She is beautiful, talented and a huge success. Reading her memoir made me realize you can still smile and be kind even though life is a mess underwater. You don't have to show that part, only to those you know will respect it. She went thru a divorce and I had a lot of the same feelings. It was a well done book and a good read.
1 review
January 14, 2020
This book was an easy read and was interesting in the sense that it gave an inside look at a TV personalities life that would otherwise go unmentioned - most likely. I found the entrepreneurial aspects of her life to be of value but felt it lacked depth in other areas and seemed like it was written quickly.
208 reviews
July 31, 2021
A surface retelling of a pretty hard knock life. Charming, energetic salesy promoter hugely successful despite seeming lack of talent due to energy salessperson personality having great mentors who wanted to help her and ability to identify gaps in the market. Also, met her ceo husband through running her own business.
Profile Image for Leane.
523 reviews36 followers
April 18, 2018
Went in to a LOT of completely unnecessary details. (Retelling the details of room decorations from years ago.)

I like Sandra Lee and I always enjoyed her Semi-Homemade show but the book wasn't anything that great.
Profile Image for Lynnette.
502 reviews1 follower
January 4, 2019
Compelling story that would’ve had more impact if it had been told in a concise manner and if it was better written. Still, if you’ve watched Sandra Lee on TV and if you’re a fan, this book is worthwhile.
Profile Image for jenna ellis.
150 reviews
December 9, 2023
A celebrity chef wrote about her childhood. Everything anyone could have ever possibly not needed to know about Sandra Lee pre-2008. But still fun.

Really I’m just waiting for Ina Garten to release her memoir. Babe wya!!
Profile Image for Kathleen.
17 reviews
July 8, 2017
I enjoyed her show, and had seen a piece about her on Chefography. That is what interested me in finding more about Sandra Lee. She is a strong woman who overcame tremendous odds.
Profile Image for Lydia Opthof.
27 reviews1 follower
September 2, 2021
I have loves watching her on food network for years. it was nice to see a little about why she is the way she is and how she came to create her content. very interesting read
21 reviews
October 10, 2022
I enjoyed this book. You never know what someone else might be going thru in their life. Never judge.
1,578 reviews27 followers
September 24, 2016
I read a library copy of this book five or six years ago and have never forgotten it. At the time, I had never heard of Sandra Lee and Her "Semi-Homemade" cook books or show. I've always been too busy cooking to spend much time reading about it or watching cooking shows. To me, it's just a beautiful, memorable story of a person who lived through a tough childhood and survived and thrived.

The author says at the end of her book that it came as a huge surprise to many people that she had grown up in such awful circumstances and I can see why. She looks like a woman who grew up on an "estate" with horses and servants. But the reality was far different. She was born to a teenage mother who's ONLY act of maternal kindness was to abandon her two little daughters with their paternal grandmother. In her house, Sandy and Cindy learned the value of frugality and hard work in an atmosphere of love, acceptance, and high standards. It was unquestionably the grounding of those early years that enabled the sisters to survive the nightmare they lived through when their violent, neglectful mother choose to reclaim them.

Eventually, the mother gave birth to three more children by her second husband and (after he jumped ship) it was the author who raised herself and her younger siblings. She tells of efforts to stretch food stamps, keep the younger children clean and clothed, and bring in extra money with odd jobs - all the while navigating life with a volatile, angry pill-addict. During her teens, the mother was no longer able to hide the horrible situation and the children were taken from her. Sandra went to live in Wisconsin with her father and his new wife, but he was an alcoholic and eventually went to prison. Amazingly, his daughter managed to finish high school and even attend college for two years.

I found her account of her business career fascinating, although it's not really the kind of thing I'm usually interested int. Although the scars from her early life remain, she learned how to make use of her talents and build a good life for herself. Best of all, she has maintained strong ties with all of her siblings and their partners and children. Social workers who move mountains to keep siblings together know that children in dysfunctional families learn to rely on each other for the strength and support that they don't get from adults. The author and her brothers and sisters are very much a "family" even though their parents failed them.

I recently bought a copy of this book to pass on to a young friend and reread it myself. I'm just as impressed as I was the first time. This is a story of hope that would bring comfort to many people.
Profile Image for Amy.
112 reviews2 followers
June 4, 2010
Okay so I'm giving this 3 stars only because I think I laughed more reading this book than I have reading a book in a long time. That's not necessarily a good thing, but it was hilarious nonetheless. I thought maybe I'd gain some newfound appreciation for Sandra Lee after reading this, but really I just dislike her even more. It's really a riveting book, whether it's the extended explanations of her illustrious career selling stun guns at home shows or when she rewrote what were probably perfectly good recipes from Le Cordon Bleu to make them easier and faster, and no doubt suckier. Also the inspirational quotes (including the one attributed to the Apple Computer commercial...pure poetry) and completely irrelevant chapter titles really added to the reading experience. And we can't forget about those god awful window treatments that made her into a millionaire at 25 (what a difficult life). The name of the product alone was genius: "I went with Kurtain Kraft because I was making curtains as a craft." Thanks for clarifying that. And call me heartless, but I was under the impression she was like...living in a box on the side of the road or something, her life didn't seem to be as awful as they made it seem. Parental issues, welfare, and food stamps aside (note: you're not on food stamps anymore, you can stop cooking like you are), she seemed to have things under control as a kid and plenty of people to help her out later. People have it a lot worse. Unless it actually was worse than it came across and it was just so poorly written that it didn't seem as severe as it was. But I mean. That part about her mom asking her "where the hell" her shoes were and the subsequent rant about the word "hell." Please.
Profile Image for Josephus FromPlacitas.
227 reviews35 followers
books-i-ve-only-thumbed-through
September 18, 2008
Sandra Lee, the personality that could launch ten thousand psych thesis projects.

If you don't know the magic of Sandra Lee's culinary and decorative stylings, I suggest you read every single entry on these two forum pages:

http://www.poe-news.com/forums/sp.php...
and
http://www.poe-news.com/forums/sp.php...

The disaster that is her cooking is as engrossing a six-car pileup on the Interstate; the disaster that is her personality is no less absorbing.

Lee's cooking and memoirs are paragons of un-self-consciousness. The lack of awareness of good taste or good nutrition is central to her cooking. On page 30 there's a perfect example, she's lost her shoes, making the family late for school, and her mother Vickie is "livid."

"Vickie kept saying I was so disorganized and screaming 'Where the hell are they?' I vividly recall the word 'hell' because Grandma Lorraine never swore. Grandma would have hated that word being used in her house. It wasn't Christian. I thought I had done something really terrible for Vickie to be yelling and swearing. Vickie's reaction left a lasting impact. To this day I make it a point to always be organized."

Did you catch that? The thing that left the biggest life lesson and had the most long-term impact on her wasn't "Christian" civility, it was heathen abusiveness. I don't think any recognition that irony comes anywhere near Sandra Lee's empty little head. [Also, I've always been confused by the "Christian-ness" of not using scary, evil, Satan-invoking BAD WORDS.]
Profile Image for Emily.
64 reviews6 followers
July 29, 2008
I was introduced to The FoodNetwork and Sandra Lee while breast feeding my babies in the middle of the night back in 2003. I have to confess, I don't like her show much or her products. It especially bugs that she coordinates her outfit to match her kitchen, to match her "tablescapes" to match the menu. To me it also seems like she gets way too excited about cocktail hour. After browsing some of the other reviews I was curious to note that this has not gone un-noticed by others...
Whatever.
While clearly I'm not a writer myself... and often can't deceiver good from bad writing, I really enjoyed reading about her life. She has ended up being quite the inspiration to so many. Here is a person who has every right to be bitter and angry about the hand she was dealt. I think it is really amazing where she has ended up so far. Her family being front and center. Those brothers and sisters really could have ended up in different and very dire situations... Her love and devotion to them is genuine. A great lesson to us all.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 128 reviews

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