The Texas Cookbook: From Barbecue to Banquet--An Informal View of Dining and Entertaining the Texas Way

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Product Details
Price
$19.95  $18.55
Publisher
University of North Texas Press
Publish Date
Pages
496
Dimensions
5.57 X 1.07 X 8.47 inches | 1.24 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781574411362

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About the Author
Mary Faulk Koock traveled throughout Texas gathering recipes ranging from down-home cooking to high-class affairs, from regional favorites to ethnic specialties. Scattered among these are the author's anecdotes from her vast and varied encounters with the famous and influential.
Reviews
"Mary Faulk Koock was born with the ability to make people feel at home--good food, good atmosphere, good conversation. This is a great cookbook that captures Mary's gift!" --Ann W. Richards, former governor of Texas, 1991-1995

"Hooray! Mary Faulk Koock's book is back by popular demand. Life will be more interesting with her stories and recipes." --Liz Carpenter, former Press Secretary to Lady Bird Johnson

"Mary Faulk Koock's Texas Cookbook has been a classic since it was published in 1965."--Sharon Hudgins, Dallas Morning News
"[A]s exuberant as the state, and full of amusing information and good recipes from every part of it. . [G]reat fun for Texans and non-Texans alike."--New York Times Book Review
"Here is a collection of recipes as varied and interesting as the state from which they come. . . . Most recipes are given as part of a complete menu, and are clear and easy to follow."--Library Journal
"Mary Faulk Koock's classic The Texas Cookbook was published in 1965 as the definitive resource on Texan cuisine. . . . Famously written with the guidance of the one and only James Beard, Koock's sprawling cookbook divides Texas by geographic region, starting with Austin and spiraling outward from there. . . . In many ways The Texas Cookbook was ahead of its time, offering a more diverse sampling of Texan cuisine that its contemporaries. Koock was dedicated to searching out food beyond the state's famed barbecue and Tex-Mex."--Texas Monthly