The Military Wives' Cookbook: 200 Years of Traditions, Recipes, and Remembrances Buy on Amazon
Facebook LinkedIn

The Military Wives' Cookbook: 200 Years of Traditions, Recipes, and Remembrances

10.99 24.99 -56% USD

Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Book Details
ISBN / ASIN 1581826729
ISBN-13 9781581826722
Availability Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Sales Rank #422,215
Category Cooking
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Description
The Military Wives' Cookbook is a collection of recipes, anecdotal stories, and vintage photographs tracing the history and unique contributions of American military wives. Beginning with an Independence Tea Party featuring the foods served by the women of Edenton, North Carolina, at a party on October 25, 1774, it recreates the scenes and foods that recount the stories of the commitments and sacrifice that military wives have given the nation for more than two hundred years.

Presented in menu format, each chapter includes a story related to the recipes of the period ("A Colonial Thanksgiving" and "Christmas in the Confederate White House") and feature foods from around the world, including places like Morocco, Italy, Spain, France, Germany, Japan, and Korea.

The Military Wives' Cookbook is divided into six large sections:

  • Teas and Coffees
  • Buffets, Brunches, and Lunches
  • A Taste of Home: Dinner Family Style
  • Alfresco Dining
  • Over There: An International Affair
  • Home for the Holidays and Other Celebrations.

The women, through whose eyes these stories are told and whose recipes are shared, are truly remarkable. They often balanced the responsibilities of maintaining home and hearth, raising a family, managing a business, and supporting a war effort. In addition, they found time to extend themselves in friendship and hospitality to one another and to women in the places where they were stationed, earning them a well-respected reputation that continues to this day.

Donate to EbookNetworking
Previous Book White Bread: A Social Histo... Next Book Real Food Real Easy
Previous White Bread: A So...
Next Real Food Real Easy