Climb down off your tractor and dig into some old-fashioned, farm-fresh comfort food! We ve got cranberry beef stew simmering on the old wood cookstove and some sweet corn just pulled off the stalks. Try a dab of this farm-churned golden butter on the orange rye bread still warm from the oven. Whether you re a born farmer, or a country-minded city person, you ll enjoy these creative rural American recipes from a time when the food was wholesome and life was full of fresh air and sunshine. These recipes, stores, jokes, advice, farm lore, and illustrations were collected from a wide variety of American agricultural sources from the 1880s to the 1950s.
Having grown up in a large city, visits to elderly relatives in a traditional farmhouse were a treat. Several rickety barns housed the pigs, cows and hens that would supply eggs and milk and, in turn, become diner. This book was a great reminder of those days! The recipes I tried turned out tasty and wholesome, even using healthier vegetable oil instead of lard and fresh or frozen veggies since my urban house doesn't have space for a garden. The jokes, while corny, were entertaining.😃
This book is very entertaining. I enjoyed reading about how things were in our history that many don't know about or forgotten. I love reading and hearing how things were in days of old. Good recipes too.
While there aren’t as many recipes as I was anticipating, this book was still a fascinating peek into historic cooking and life in general. What recipes that are included appear easy enough to make and have a down home, nostalgic quality to them.
I loved this little cookbook!We have a 1900's Woodburning Cookstove in our Breakfast area here at the Hilltop Farm.I wanted to know the history behind how women cooked on the stoves & the recipes.It was a cute book with lots of how to's!