Sunday, February 8, 2009

Jam Manufacture Its Theory and Practice or Soul of Southern Cooking

Jam Manufacture - Its Theory and Practice

Author: William C Jago

Originally published in 1919, this is a wonderfully detailed book about the art of producing jam. Although it addresses larger scale production, all of its hints, tips and recipes are equally useful in the smaller kitchen.Contents Include - Raw Materials-Fruits, sugars, pectinous or jelly producing bodies, Citric and tartaric acids, preservatives - Apparatus and Plant-Machinery used for preliminary treatment of fruit and other raw materials, Heat producing apparatus and boiling pans, receptacles, pots and jars, etc., cleaning and sterilising plant for same - Manufacturing Operations-Gooseberries, strawberries, cherries, raspberries, loganberries, black currants, apricots, peaches, oranges {marmalade}, plums, apples, pears, quinces, mixed fruit jams, fruit jellies. - Bottled Fruits- Fruit, bottles bottling, heating or sterilizing process, canned fruits - Packing And General Handling of Jams - Chemical And Biological Examination of Raw Materials and Finished Substances - Other Preserved Fruit Products and Allied Manufactures- Mince Meat, table jellies



Book review: Better than Take out or 500 Best Value Wines in the LCBO

Soul of Southern Cooking

Author: Kathy Starr

This spellbinding cookbook from the heart of the Mississippi Delta collects a fine black cook's recipes from a hard-scrabble heritage. It recounts rituals of surviving and enduring while rejoicing in the family ties that bind and in the magic of creating hearty meals from make-do ingredients. The foods described by Kathy Starr rise out of the common experiences of Deep South blacks, who established a distinct kind of cooking. Its "soul," the author confides, comes from the art of simmering. Its heritage is preserved here in a fascinating collection of recipes that capture the essence of black foodways in the American South.



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